Jensen v. Lewis Investment Co.

58 N.W. 100, 39 Neb. 371, 1894 Neb. LEXIS 38
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1894
DocketNo. 5236
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 58 N.W. 100 (Jensen v. Lewis Investment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jensen v. Lewis Investment Co., 58 N.W. 100, 39 Neb. 371, 1894 Neb. LEXIS 38 (Neb. 1894).

Opinion

Norval, C. J.

The appellant, the Lewis Investment Company, is a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Iowa and engaged in the business of making loans upon real estate security, its principal place of business being at Des Moines. Rasmus P. Jensen made an application to the investment company for a loan of $1,200 on certain real estate owned by him and situate in the city of Omaha. After receiving [372]*372notice that the application was accepted, he, with his wife, Mary Jensen, executed and delivered to said company two mortgages covering said real estate, one for the sum of $1,200, due in five years from date thereof, with seven per cent interest, payable semi-annually, and the other for the sum of $60, payable in ten equal payments. Both mortgages were duly recorded in the office of the register of deeds of Douglas county. Subsequently, Jensen sold and conveyed the premises to Ole Oleson, warranting the title against incumbrances. About two years afterwards, Rasmus P. Jensen and Ole Oleson brought this action in the court below to cancel the mortgages, alleging in their petition, as a ground therefor, that the investment company had not paid to Jensen, nor to any one for him, the money agreed to be loaned, but had wholly failed and refused to pay the same, or any part thereof, and that it refused to surrender said mortgages or to discharge the same of record. The investment company filed an answer and cross-petition, making Mary Jensen a party defendant, praying a foreclosure of the mortgages. Upon the hearing the district court found the issues in favor of the plaintiffs, and rendered a decree in accordance with the prayer of the petition.

For convenience we shall hereafter designate Rasmus P. Jensen as “plaintiff,” and the Lewis Investment Company as “defendant.”

The record discloses that one L. A. Stewart, on and prior to March 17, 1887, was engaged in the loan business in the city of Omaha, and had submitted numerous applications for loans to, and procured loans to be made by, defendant and other loan companies. On the date aforesaid plaintiff applied to Mr. Stewart for a loan of money, and signed and left with him a written application for a loan of $1,200, which application was forwarded by mail by Stewart to the company at Des Moines. In due time the application was approved, papers were prepared by defendant and sent to Stewart, which were subsequently executed by plaintiff. [373]*373The money to pay out on the loan was given by the defendant to Stewart, and it is undisputed that the latter never paid any part of the $1,200 to the plaintiff, but absconded without accounting for the same to the defendant.

The only question presented for consideration is: Was the payment of the money to Stewart, in law, a payment to the plaintiff? In other words, was Stewart the agent of the plaintiff in negotiating the loan and receiving the money? A consideration of the evidence in the record satisfies us that the answer should be in the negative, and that the defendant should bear the loss occasioned by Mr. Stewart’s dishonesty. That Stewart for a long time prior to the transaction in question had been the agent of the defendant in negotiating loans for it in the city of Omaha there is no room for doubt.

George P. Russell, who was Mr. Stewart’s clerk and had charge of his loan office, testified as to the manner in which the business was conducted, as follows:

Q. Were you familiar with the method of transacting business between L. A. Stewart and the Lewis Investment Company ?

A. Yes, sir.

Q,. State to the court the manner of conducting the business between them.

A. You refer to his negotiating loans?

Q. In regard to this loan business, you say they were in correspondence ?

A- Yes, sir.

Q. State the manner of conducting this business.

A. 'Well, sir, we received the application for a loan on one of the Lewis Investment Company’s blanks, which we furnished the party making the application. We then made gn examination of the property, procured an abstract and forwarded it to the Lewis Investment Company for their approval. If approved,we received draft, mortgages, notes, and instructions from the company.

[374]*374Q. Did you have an appraisal made ?

A. Tes, sir; that is provided for in the blank.
Q. When was that made ?
A. Made before the papers were submitted to the investment company.

Q,. Who chose the appraisers ?

A. As a general thing, Stewart. If he didn’t, the investment company did.

Q. Where were the mortgages made out and prepared ? A. At the office of the company in Des Moines.

Q,. What rates were they getting at that time ?

A. Their rate was eight per cent.
Q. That is, eight per cent per annum ?
Q. During the course of the loan?

Q,. Usually for five years ?

Q,. Two mortgages were made out, were they not ?

Q,. The principal mortgage was to secure the principal amount of the loan, was it not?

Q,. What rate of interest would that mortgage draw ?

A. If the loan was eight per cent, as a general thing, the first mortgage was made at six per cent.

Q,. How was the other two per cent evidenced ?

A. By a second mortgage, which ran sometimes one, two, or five years, as agreed.
Q. Who filed these mortgages with the register of deeds? A. L. A. Stewart.
Q. Was there any custom as to the order in which these two mortgages were filed ?

A. The instructions were to file the first mortgage first. Q. So it would show on the record that it was the prior of the two mortgages?

[375]*375A. Yes, sir.

Q. What commissions did L. A. Stewart get for doing this business?

A. There was a general understanding on eight per cent mortgages that two per cent of the face of the mortgages was to be the commission to be paid by the Lewis Investment Company to L. A. Stewart — two per cent of the face of the loan.

Q,. When were these commissions paid?

A. They were paid at different times; as a general rule, once a month.

Q,. Were they paid with each loan or at stated periods?

A. Sometimes the draft was made out to include commissions; sometimes not. It might be left for several loans to accumulate and paid then or whenever it was asked.

The Court: State whether the borrower ever paid Mr. Stew.art the commission outside of these papers.

A. No, sir.

Q. Mr. Davis: What was the usual custom in making these second mortgages as to whom the second mortgage ran?

A. I am inclined to think, as a general rule, to the investment company.

Q,. You spoke of the second mortgage being equal to two per cent for the entire term of the loan?

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Bluebook (online)
58 N.W. 100, 39 Neb. 371, 1894 Neb. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jensen-v-lewis-investment-co-neb-1894.