Iowa Loan & Trust Co. v. Seaman

210 N.W. 937, 203 Iowa 310
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 23, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 210 N.W. 937 (Iowa Loan & Trust Co. v. Seaman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Iowa Loan & Trust Co. v. Seaman, 210 N.W. 937, 203 Iowa 310 (iowa 1926).

Opinions

On March 1, 1921, appellants executed fifteen $1,000 notes to, and payable at, the Farmers Trust Savings Bank of Bouton, securing the payment thereof by a second mortgage, *Page 312 1. PRINCIPAL naming Gardiner and Arthurs, cashier and AND AGENT: president, respectively, of the bank, as authority of mortgagees upon a tract of 120 acres situated in agent: Boone County. The consideration for the notes apparent was a part of the purchase price of the authority to mortgaged premises which were conveyed to collect appellants by Gardiner subject to a prior collateral. mortgage thereon of $12,000 due July 1, 1922. Just prior to the maturity of the first mortgage, appellants, through the Bouton bank, obtained a new loan for $12,000. At the same time, the father of the appellant procured a loan through the Bouton bank of $10,800 on land owned by him, the proceeds of which were also to be applied on the indebtedness of appellants to the bank and to the payment of the first mortgage. All of the proceeds of the two loans were received from the lender by the Bouton bank. The amount was not quite sufficient to pay the mortgage indebtedness, and the deficit was made up of cash, or by other satisfactory arrangement with the bank. The second mortgage for $15,000 was released of record by Arthurs, and all but five of the series of fifteen notes returned to appellants. During all of the time involved in these transactions, the Bouton bank kept an account as a correspondent bank with the Iowa Loan Trust Company, hereinafter referred to as the appellee, and also a similar account with the First National Bank of Perry, hereinafter referred to as the intervener.

Prior to the execution of the fifteen $1,000 notes by appellants to the Farmers Trust Savings Bank of Bouton, the bank became indebted to appellee and also to intervener for money borrowed. To secure this indebtedness, the Bouton bank turned over certain of its bills receivable to the appellee and intervener, respectively. Among the bills receivable turned over to appellee were the two $1,000 notes maturing March 1, 1923. Of the bills receivable turned over to intervener were one each of the series maturing March 1, 1924, and March 1, 1925, respectively. The notes held by the intervener were rediscounted, after being held for a time as collateral. These notes are the subject-matter of this litigation. The exact dates when the notes were received by the respective parties are not shown, but it is not claimed by appellants that it was after their maturity.

Three propositions are urged by appellants: (a) That the Farmers Trust Savings Bank of Bouton was the agent of appellee *Page 313 and intervener to receive payment of the respective notes held by them; (b) that the receipt by the bank of the proceeds of the loans referred to above, coupled with the agreement and understanding on the part of its officers that it would apply the same to the payment of the remaining notes of the series, operated as payment thereof, and to discharge appellants from liability thereon; and (c) that the judgments entered are excessive.

Several of the $1,000 notes were surrendered by the Bouton bank to appellants at the time of, or shortly subsequent to, the receipt of the proceeds of the two loans. Repeated demands were made to the officers of the bank for the surrender of the remaining notes. Excuses were made by the officers for their failure to do so, but they were doubtless unable to secure the return of the notes from the then holders thereof for cancellation and surrender to the makers.

When the proceeds of the loans were received by the Bouton bank, a special account was opened in the name of Will Seaman, and, as payments were made of the $1,000 notes, this account was charged therewith. The items of the special account were not entered upon appellant's pass book, nor did he know thereof until after the bank went into the hands of a receiver.

The evidence relied upon to establish the alleged agency of the Bouton bank to receive payments of the notes for appellee and intervener, in our opinion, is not sufficient for that purpose. It is conceded that the provision in the notes making them payable at the Bouton bank did not make it the agent of the holders of the notes to receive payment. The evidence is without dispute that the Bouton bank was the agent of appellants and the elder Seaman to procure the loans for $12,000 and $10,800, respectively, and to apply the same to the payment of the remaining notes of the series. The record contains no direct proof of the alleged agency, nor is such testimony necessary to the proof thereof. Such agency may be shown by circumstances and by the course of the parties dealing with each other. The burden of proof, however, is upon the one making payment to a claimed agent, who is not in possession of the notes, to prove actual or apparent authority of the agent to receive payment. Bank ofMontreal v. Ingerson, 105 Iowa 349; Huismann v. Althoff, 202 Iowa 70. *Page 314

The Bouton bank furnished appellee collateral to an amount from 15 to 40 per cent in excess of its indebtedness. As the bills receivable of the Bouton bank held by appellee matured, payment was made by the maker to the Bouton bank, and the amount remitted thereby to appellee. Upon receipt of the face of the notes by appellee from the Bouton bank, the notes were returned to it, and, in turn, surrendered to the maker. There was more or less shifting of the collateral to meet the exigencies or convenience of the borrowing bank. The Bouton bank also secured renewals of its notes held by appellee as collateral, and substituted such renewals for the original notes. Neither appellee nor intervener gave appellants notice that their notes were held by them as collateral until after the receiver was appointed for the Bouton bank. The special account opened by the bank in the name of Will Seaman showed a credit balance in excess of $3,000 when the receiver was appointed. The testimony showed that it is the custom of a bank depositing notes with its correspondent as collateral to collect and retain the interest on such notes; hence, neither appellee nor intervener claims that they are entitled to recover for interest paid on the notes in controversy to the Bouton bank. This custom or method of dealing is urged by appellants as a circumstance bearing upon and tending to prove the alleged agency. The testimony, however, on the part of appellee, which is not controverted, is that the Bouton bank had no authority to collect and retain any part of the principal of the notes. The method of dealing in respect to the principal of the notes was, as stated, for the Bouton bank to remit payments to appellee, upon receipt of which the collateral was surrendered and returned to the Bouton bank. The witness called by appellee testified that the Bouton bank did not have authority to either collect or retain payments on notes held as collateral, and that credits were not made thereon or the collateral surrendered until actual payment was made to it. Interest payments made to the Bouton bank did not belong to the holder of the collateral, but to the payee bank. In receiving payment of interest, the bank, therefore, did not act as the agent of the holder of the collateral. The method of dealing between the intervener and the Bouton bank was, to all intents and purposes, the same as between the latter and appellee, but the transactions were fewer.

One additional fact is relied upon by appellants to establish *Page 315 the alleged relationship of principal and agent between the Bouton bank and the intervener. During the trial 2.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Klassie v. Holt
10 N.W.2d 540 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1943)
First Trust Joint Stock Land Bank v. Diercks
267 N.W. 708 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1936)
Ragatz v. Diener
253 N.W. 824 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1934)
Engelke v. Drager
239 N.W. 569 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1931)
Whitney v. Krasne
225 N.W. 245 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1929)
Kalman v. Treasure County
275 P. 743 (Montana Supreme Court, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
210 N.W. 937, 203 Iowa 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iowa-loan-trust-co-v-seaman-iowa-1926.