Koppler v. Bugge

11 P.2d 236, 168 Wash. 182, 1932 Wash. LEXIS 829
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 9, 1932
DocketNo. 23442. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 11 P.2d 236 (Koppler v. Bugge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Koppler v. Bugge, 11 P.2d 236, 168 Wash. 182, 1932 Wash. LEXIS 829 (Wash. 1932).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

The consideration of this case has been delayed somewhat out of its proper order on account *184 of the magnitude of the record and briefs and its importance to the parties.

This action was brought by respondent Koppler and eleven others to reestablish, as a valid and subsisting lien, a certain mortgage given by appellants Bugge to Osner & Mehlhorn, Inc., as mortgagee, alleged to have been wrongfully satisfied by August Mehlhorn, Jr., an officer of the mortgagee corporation, and to have the mortgage established as a lien prior to a later mortgage executed in favor of Calvin Philips & Company, a corporation, and assigned to The Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company, a corporation, subsequent to the satisfaction of the Osner & Mehlhorn mortgage.

Appellants Bugge and wife pled payment. Appellant The Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company, which wall hereinafter be mentioned as Penn Mutual, pleaded affirmatively, first, payment and satisfaction by Bugge ; second, purchase by it of the Calvin Philips mortgage in good faith and without notice; third, estoppel as to respondents; and fourth, agency between Osner & Mehlhorn, Inc., and respondents, and that payment to Osner & Mehlhorn, Inc., was payment to the note owners.

The case, being one in equity, was tried before the court, without a jury, who made no findings, but filed a memorandum opinion which is here set out:

“The court reaches the following conclusions respecting the principal issues presented on the trial:
“(1) The twenty serial Bugge notes of February 9,1926, secured by the Osner & Mehlhorn mortgage are negotiable notes, the plaintiffs are bona fide purchasers for value in due course, and, as such, are pro tanto owners and holders of the mortgage which secured them.
“(2) Payment to Osner & Mehlhorn was not payment to plaintiffs. Where one advances money to an alleged agent of the holder to satisfy a mortgage and *185 the notes which snch mortgage secures, it is his duty at his peril to see that the person whom he pays as agent is either (a) in possession of the instruments, or (b) has special authority to receive payment, or (c) has been represented by the owner and holder of the securities to have such authority.
“No evidence was introduced tending to establish (a) or (c). As to (b), the course of dealing on the part of the respective plaintiffs with Osner & Mehlhorn as shown by the evidence was insufficient to constitute that company the agent of the plaintiffs to collect the principal of the notes here involved without the possession of the instruments themselves.
“ (3) Calvin Phillips & Company had notice of facts sufficient to put it on inquiry as to outstanding obligations and as to whether they were held by third parties.
“The recital on Plaintiff’s Exhibit A, ‘Delivery of all notes guaranteed,’ taken in connection with the admissions of Mr. Stutfield, the assistant secretary of the company, the knowledge which the company had of the nature of the Osner & Mehlhorn business, the trade custom in this class of transaction among mortgage concerns in this community, and the reference in the prior mortgage to the existence of serial notes should have sufficed to put any lender of money on inquiry as to where the notes were and as to who were the owners and holders of them. This is all the actual notice required. Where it exists, the one paying over money to have a prior mortgage released is responsible for seeing that it reaches the actual owners and holders of the notes.
“(4) Calvin Phillips & Company was the agent of Mr. Bugge for the purpose of seeing that the Osner & Mehlhorn mortgage and notes were satisfied, and the failure of his agent to pick up the notes is attributable to him. Mr. Bugge, therefore, is liable to the holders of the notes.
“(5) The transactions between Penn Mutual Life Insurance Co. and Calvin Phillips & Company were such as to constitute notice to Penn Mutual that there were or might be outstanding obligations superior to Penn Mutual’s mortgage.
*186 “While the two companies at all times were meticulous in keeping the form of their relationship that of vendor and vendee, the circumstances show that in substance there was at least a limited agency on the part of Calvin Phillips & Company to represent Penn Mutual in certain particulars in connection with the release of outstanding obligations and in the recording of assignments.
“The letter of February 28,1928 (Plaintiff’s Exhibit I) from Penn Mutual’s manager of mortgage loans to Calvin Phillips wherein it is stated ‘that it has been made a requirement that we hold with each loan purchased a receipt signed by the borrower acknowledging the receipt of the funds’ is only one of a number of circumstances tending to show that Penn Mutual’s position in this case is not strictly that of a mere vendee.
“The fact that Calvin Phillips & Company was the authorized agent of Penn Mutual to record the assignment is apparent. This they did on June 22, 1928. After they executed and recorded the assignment, Calvin Phillips & Company necessarily had continuing authority for certain purposes. In the opinion of the court, the agency which they exercised on June 22 was sufficiently broad to charge Penn Mutual with what Calvin Phillips & Company learned eleven days later on July 3 and to charge it with notice of the ‘ delivery of all notes guaranteed’ provision of the receipt which Mr. Stutfield accepted on that day, all of which was prior to the time that Penn Mutual parted with its $25,000.
“The fact that on June 22, when Calvin Phillips & Company recorded the assignment, the Osner & Mehl-horn mortgage with its reference to the serial notes was still on record unsatisfied, the long established usage among the large loaning companies in connection with re-financing deals to take receipts guaranteeing that the old notes would be surrendered, — a custom which must be deemed to have been known to Penn Mutual after dealing in mortgages here for more than twenty-five years — are additional circumstances which lead to the conclusion that Penn Mutual had both constructive *187 and actual notice sufficient to bring home to it the fact that the notes were outstanding and to prevent its claiming the privileges of a bona fide purchaser of real estate without notice.
‘ ‘ Having sufficient notice, the defendants had it within their power to prevent any loss to plaintiffs by merely insisting upon the surrender of the notes. They ignored the notice and paid at their peril in apparent reliance upon the guarantee of Osner & Mehlhorn. Their negligence in this regard brought about the loss, and this loss must fall upon them rather than on the plaintiffs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 P.2d 236, 168 Wash. 182, 1932 Wash. LEXIS 829, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koppler-v-bugge-wash-1932.