Ingstad v. Farmers State Bank of Mandan

237 N.W. 704, 61 N.D. 194, 1931 N.D. LEXIS 266
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 14, 1931
DocketFile No. 5937.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 237 N.W. 704 (Ingstad v. Farmers State Bank of Mandan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ingstad v. Farmers State Bank of Mandan, 237 N.W. 704, 61 N.D. 194, 1931 N.D. LEXIS 266 (N.D. 1931).

Opinion

Biedzelu, J.

Tbe plaintiff brought action against tbe defendant to recover an amount alleged to have been realized by the defendant in tbe course of dealing with certain property upon which the plaintiff held mortgages which were in turn pledged with the defendant as collateral security for an obligation owing by the plaintiff. The relief demanded is a money judgment for an excess alleged to have been received by the defendant over and above the obligation owing by the plaintiff in circumstances pleaded. The action was tried to the court without a jury as a suit in equity and, without regard to the real character of the action, it will be treated as one founded upon the alleged fiduciary relation between the plaintiff as pledgor and the defendant as pledgee of the collateral involved and for an accounting therefor. In the district court the defendant had judgment of dismissal and for costs and the plaintiff appeals, demanding a trial do novo and also assigning certain errors in the trial and disposition in the lower court. The facts, though somewhat complex, are not in dispute. Those that are essential to an understanding of the controversy and the questions presented on appeal may be stated as follows:

In May, 1925, the plaintiff, then Lula Cole, owned a meat market *196 in tbe city of Mandan, also certain real property upon which was located a slaughter house. She sold the market and the real property to one Rassilyer for a consideration of $4,000. She received $2,000 in cash and took from Rassilyer two notes of $1,000 each, secured by chattel and real estate mortgages on the property sold. At that time the plaintiff was indebted to the defendant bank on a note due October 19, 1925, in the amount, with interest} of $1,391.50. To secure this note the plaintiff pledged to the defendant the two Rassilyer notes and assigned the mortgages, which notes and mortgages the bank subsequently held as collateral security for the indebtedness. The plaintiff from time to time renewed her note at the bank. In September, 1926, after the maturity of the Rassilyer notes, Rassilyer absconded. At the time of his disappearance he was indebted to the defendant bank upon past due notes in an amount aggregating $1,514. In September, 1926, the bank brought action against Rassilyer and levied attachments upon the identical personal and real property covered by the mortgages which it held as collateral to the plaintiff’s indebtedness. In this action it recovered a judgment against Rassilyer for $1,634.05, which judgment directed the sale of the attached property. The personal property was sold on execution on December 15, 1926, subject to the chattel mortgage lien. It was bid in by the defendant for the sum of $200. The sheriff duly made a report of the sale and it was confirmed by order of court. In March, 1927, the real property was likewise sold on execution, subject of course to mortgages, the defendant bidding it in for the sum of $100, which sale was likewise confirmed. The defendant at the time of the trial of the instant action was still the owner and holder of the sheriff’s certificate. After the defendant had obtained its judgment in the attachment suit and before the sale, it procured, on or about the 6th day of December, 1926, a renewal of the plaintiff’s note which was then past due. The renewal note was for $1,496.15, including interest to December 6, 1927, and fell due on the latter date. When this note fell due the defendant notified the plaintiff, demanding payment and stating that in the event it was not paid the defendant would foreclose the chattel and real estate mortgages pledged to secure it. Thereafter in July, 1928, the defendant proceeded to foreclose the chattel mortgage, notifying, the plaintiff by registered mail and enclosing notice of the sale. At the sale the property was bid in *197 by a tbircl person in bulk for $600 and, deducting the expense of tbé sale, $486.14 was credited on plaintiff’s note.

In May, 1929, the defendant commenced proceedings to foreclose the real estate mortgage, still held as collateral,' notifying the plaintiff by registered mail, and in the notice informed the plaintiff that the defendant would not bid at such sale more than the amount which she (the plaintiff) was still owing the defendant on her note, to-wit $1,090.41, with interest. "Upon the sale the property was bid in by the -same person who had purchased the personalty, J. A. Timmerman, for $1,238, the plaintiff not appearing or bidding and the defendant applying the proceeds to the payment in full of the plaintiff’s note and thereafter returning the same to her.

The principal contention of the plaintiff and appellant is that in attaching and selling the property covered by the plaintiff’s mortgages, which had been pledged by her to the defendant as collateral to her indebtedness, the defendant was guilty of a breach of faith with respect to obligations arising out of the relation of pledgor add pledgee. More specifically, as we understand the appellant’s argument, it is contended that any attempt by a pledgee to acquire an interest in the mortgaged property in realizing upon a personal indebtedness of the mortgagor to it is so far inconsistent with its obligation to the pledgor that it should be held accountable to her to the full extent of her special property and that particularly is this true in this case- by reason of the fact that the defendant had bid upon property at the execution sales subject to the mortgages; or, in other words, had manifested a willingness to pay the price bid over and above the mortgages. It is said, in substance, that after so bidding the bank, had it been the owner of the first mortgage notes given by Rassilyer, could not have enforced payment as against him; that as it was the bank’s duty to collect the collateral it should not be heard to say that it did not receive the full amount of the mortgages, subject to which the sale to it was made; that as between the bank and Rassilyer there was in legal effect a merger of the mortgage note obligations in the title to his equity which the bank acquired upon the execution sales; that since the plaintiff is the owner of the obligations which as to the defendant are thus in legal effect merged and is also the beneficiary of the trust relation arising out of the pledge, she may properly call upon the bank (the *198 defendant) to pay over to her the difference between the amount due on her note and the amount due on the mortgages pledged.

The argument is both ingenious and ingenuous, but we think when subjected to .analysis it will be found to be without substantial basis, either in law or equity. Rassilyer was indebted to both the plaintiff and the defendant. The indebtedness to the plaintiff was secured by first mortgages on the market and the real estate. The indebtedness to the defendant was apparently unsecured. Rassilyer’s equity in the property above the plaintiff’s mortgages was by express provision of the statute (Comp. Laws, 1913, § 7548) subject to attachment and sale on execution. Second Nat. Bank v. First Nat. Bank, 8 N. D. 50, 76 N. W. 504. The defendant would violate no obligation owing to the plaintiff in attempting to realize upon that equity to satisfy Rassilyer’s obligation to it. It had an equal right with any other creditor of Rassilyer to subject that equity to the payment of his obligation. But on account of the collateral pledged with it by the plaintiff it was bound to take no steps which would interfere with'the plaintiff’s realizing upon that collateral.

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Bluebook (online)
237 N.W. 704, 61 N.D. 194, 1931 N.D. LEXIS 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ingstad-v-farmers-state-bank-of-mandan-nd-1931.