Krause v. Cox

181 N.W. 611, 105 Neb. 728, 1921 Neb. LEXIS 94
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1921
DocketNo. 21360
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 181 N.W. 611 (Krause v. Cox) 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
Krause v. Cox, 181 N.W. 611, 105 Neb. 728, 1921 Neb. LEXIS 94 (Neb. 1921).

Opinion

Dorsey, C.

The defendant, Frank Cox, borrowed $800 of the plaintiff, and on September 5, 1911, he and his wife and codefendant executed a note therefor and a mortgage covering a house and lots in Walthill, Nebraska. This appeal is from a decree foreclosing said mortgage. The defense was that the mortgage had been satisfied by the payment of the debt to Farley Brothers, real estate agents at Walthill, who were alleged to have been agents of the plaintiff to receive payment.

The defendants are Indians of the Omaha tribe and had built a house on the lots in question. There were mechanics’ liens pressing for payment, and Farley Brothers had advanced the defendant several small loans, and he applied to them for a loan on the property. They, in turn, applied to the plaintiff, who was in the loan business at West Point, and he examined the premises and consented to loan $800 thereon. The mortgage and note sued upon, after being executed by the defendants, were forwarded to the plaintiff through Farley Brothers, and the plaintiff sent them the $800, out of which they paid off the mechanics’ liens, deducted what was owing to themselves, and paid the remainder to the defendant Frank Cox. The [730]*730latter neglected the interest and taxes until February, 1914, when the. accumulated interest was collected from him by Farley Brothers, who remitted it to the plaintiff.

Later on, the interest and taxes again fell into arrears and the loan ran on in that condition until the summer of 1917. The plaintiff called the attention of Farley Brothers to the default and enlisted their services to induce the defendants to pay up. Unpaid interest, taxes and insurance premiums, together with the principal of the loan, amounted in 1917 to about $1,200. The note was payable on demand, and the plaintiff had the option to declare the whole amount due in case of default. The plaintiff considered the whole amount due and urged Farley Brothers to see the defendant about it.

Farley Brothers held a note for $770, signed by the defendant as surety, and, besides that, they testified upon the trial that the defendant was indebted to them for about $600 more upon other obligations, making in all about $1,400. The defendant denied that he owed them anything except his surety obligation on the $770 note.

The defendant Frank Cox had an interest in certain Indian land, and Caryl Farley, one of the firm, persuaded him to sell this, for which he realized $3,000, which sum was to his credit in the hands of the Indian agent. They had several interviews in which Caryl Farley tried to induce the defendant to draAV $2,700, which would have been enough to cover the indebtedness claimed by his firm, as well as the amount due on the plaintiff’s loan. Farley, hoAvever, was unable to persuade the plaintiff to draw and pay him more than $1,200, and in August, 1917, they drove over to the agency and the defendant drew that sum and paid it to Farley.

The defendant testified that he intended and directed it to be applied in payment of the plaintiff’s note and mortgage; that he mentioned the mortgage at the time, and Farley said he did not have it there, but it Avas at his house in Walthill. Farley denied that the note and mortgage were mentioned, and testified that the payment was made on the indebtedness owing to Farley Brothers; that [731]*731lie asked the defendant to go right down to his office and have the money applied thereon, hut that the defendant said there was no hurry and he would be over later. According to the defendant’s testimony, the understanding was that they would go over to Walthill and fix the papers, which he understood to be the plaintiff’s note and mortgage, but that later on, when he did go to Farley Brothers to get the papers, they would not give them to him. Farley testified that he made settlement with the defendant at Walthill and turned over to him the notes representing his indebtedness to their firm; but the defendant denied any such settlement or that he received any such' papers.

It.is argued on the part of the plaintiff that, although he expected and invited Farley Brothers to cooperate in bringing pressure upon the defendants to pay, it must not be taken as if he thereby authorized them to receive the money for him. They were not to assume to collect the money, but to confine themselves simply to inducing the defendants to remit the money to the plaintiff direct. If, as a result of their persuasion, the defendants were prevailed on to entrust money to Farley Brothers for transmission to plaintiff, it must be presumed that they received it, not as his agents, but as agents of the defendant to remit it. If it failed to reach its destination, the plaintiff would not be bound; he could be bound only if the money actually reached him. We think, however, that when a creditor, in order to secure payment of his debt, authorizes a third party to approach the debtor and employ persuasion to induce him to pay, the debtor is entitled to assume that the party so authorized is likewise authorized to receive the money. “The apparent authority of an agent which will bind his principal is such authority as the agent appears to have by reason of the actual authority which he has.” Cooper & Cole Bros. v. Cooper, 90 Neb. 209.

That such ostensible authority is sufficient to establish agency to receive money in payment of negotiable paper, [732]*732though such paper is not in the possession of the alleged agent, has been held in numerous cases in this jurisdiction: Thomson v. Shelton, 49 Neb. 644; Holt v. Schneider, 57 Neb. 523; Faulkner v. Simms, 68 Neb. 295; Walker v. Hale, 92 Neb. 829. The question in the instant case is whether the circumstances were such as to justify the defendant in inferring that it would be safe to pay the mortgage debt to Farley Brothers, as agents, instead of paying it to the plaintiff direct. The circumstances that operated upon the defendant’s mind to convince him that it was safe and proper to do so were attributable to the plaintiff himself, and he set them in motion. He invoked the aid of Farley Brothers to “dun” the defendant for the full amount of the debt, both principal and interest. He was present in person at one time when Caryl. Farley, at his instance, demanded payment of the mortgage debt. These circumstances, coupled with the fact that Farley Brothers had previously dealt with the defendant as the plaintiff’s agents in all matters regarding the loan, reassured the defendant as to their authority, and combined to produce, in his eyes, that appearance of authority which the law treats as equivalent to expressly authorized agency, when brought about by the acts of the principal himself.

The evidence is clear that the plaintiff, Avhen he appealed to Farley Brothers to assist him in collecting the debt in 1917, did not intend to keep the collection of interest distinct from the collection of principal, or to retain the latter in his own hands while authorizing Farley Brothers to collect the former. No other inference can rationally be drawn from the admitted facts except that he expected Farley Brothers to collect both. It was not a question of collecting the past due interest and letting the principal stand. Without doubt the plaintiff considered the whole amount due and was insisting upon payment of principal and interest in full. The plaintiff testified as follows: “Q. You wanted them to collect the interest? A. Yes; if they could. Q. And it was agreeable to you that they should collect the principal, wasn’t it? A. Yes, [733]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
181 N.W. 611, 105 Neb. 728, 1921 Neb. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krause-v-cox-neb-1921.