Lingenfelter Bros. v. Bowman

137 N.W. 946, 156 Iowa 649
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 16, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 137 N.W. 946 (Lingenfelter Bros. v. Bowman) 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
Lingenfelter Bros. v. Bowman, 137 N.W. 946, 156 Iowa 649 (iowa 1912).

Opinion

Sherwin, J.

George W. Bowman and Sarah A. Bowman are husband and wife, who were living at the time of the transaction involved herein in Clarke county. George W. Bowman became interested in a stock of goods in Indianola, upon which he gave a chattel mortgage for $5/700 to one Cottingham. He afterwards traded this stock of goods to Lingenfelter Bros., of Collins, Iowa, for a business property located there, which will be hereinafter [651]*651designated as the “Collins property.” It was the agreement. that the stock of merchandise should be delivered to Lingenfelter Bros., free of incumbrance, and, to effect such agreement the Lingenfelter Bros., borrowed $5,700 of the Capital City State Bank of Bes Moines, giving their note therefor, and the money so borrowed was used to pay off the Cottingham claim against the stock of goods. George W. Bowman then gave Lingenfelter Bros, his notes and a mortgage on the Collins property that he had received for the stock of merchandise for $6,400; this amount including the $5,700 paid by Lingenfelter Bros, to Cottingham, and, in addition thereto, $700 on account of sales that had been made from the stock while Bowman was in possession thereof. Sarah A. Bowman signed those notes as surety for her husband at the request of the Lingenfelters. Some time after these notes were given and before their maturity, Bowman was inform! that they were held by the Capital City State Bank of Bes Moines, and in January, 1906, one of the Lingenfelters called on the Bowmans at their home in Osceola, and represented to them that the bank wanted more security for the notes, and asked that the Bowmans give a mortgage on their homestead as such additional security. The Bowmans finally executed and delivered to Lingenfelter such a mortgage, upon the representations and under the conditions we shall hereinafter more fully notice. After this Bowman conveyed the Collins property to one Bowler, who took it subject to the mortgage thereon to the Lingenfelters, and still later the Bowmans, fearing that they would lose their homestead, began an action in equity in Clarke county. for the cancellation of the mortgage thereon. This suit was -dismissed without trial upon a stipulation, which will receive further attention as we proceed. Thereafter the Lingenfelter Bros, and tho Capital City State Bank, as plaintiffs, foreclosed the mortgage on the Collins property, taking a’ judgment on the notes for the amount due thereon. In due time this [652]*652property was sold under foreclosure and was bid in by the Lingenfelter Bros, for $4,000. No redemption from said sale was made by Bowler, and .Lingenfelter Bros, acquired title thereto by sheriff’s deed, and now have the property. After this foreclosure and sale thereunder, the Lingenfelters began an action in Clarke county for the foreclosure of the mortgage on the Bowman homestead. This action was defended on the ground that the mortgage thereon was procured by fraud, and about the same time the Bowmans brought an'action in’,equity for the cancellation of the stipulation of settlement in the case of the Bowmans against the Lingenfelters and the Capital City State Bank, to which we have heretofore referred, on the ground that it was procured by fraud and misrepresentation. These two later cases were consolidated and tried as one, and there was a decree adjudging that the mortgage on the homestead of the Bowmans was procured by fraud and cancelling the same, and further adjudging that the stipulation of settlement in the case of the Bowmans against the Lingenfelters and the Capital City State Bank be canceled. The Lingenfelters appeal. The Capital City State Bank had been eliminated from the litigation by voluntary dismissal before judgment. Sarah A. Bowman was not a party to any of the transactions culminating in the execution of the notes to the Lingenfelter Bros., and she was a surety only on said notes.

i Suretyship* husband ' and wife. When she executed the mortgage on the homestead in Osceola, she simply pledged her interest therein as additional security to the bank for the notes that her husband had given to Lingenfelter Bros, and which they had deposited with the bank as collateral security for their loan. Mrs. Bowman was therefore a surety merely, and she is entitled to the protection of a surety, because she derived no advantage from any of the transactions.

[653]*6533' fraud of [652]*652Where a creditor is about to accept security from a [653]*653surety, it is bis legal duty to “inform the surety of facts within bis knowledge which would have the effect to increase the risks of the undertaking of the surety. . . . The law imposes on the creditor the duty of dealing with the surety at every step of the transaction with the utmost good faith. If the surety applies to him, before entering into the contract, for information touching any matter materially affecting the risk of the undertaking, be is bound, if be assumes to answer the inquiry at all, to give full information as to every fact within bis knowledge; and be can do nothing to deceive or mislead the surety without vitiating the agreement.” Bank of Monroe v. Anderson Bros. et al., 65 Iowa, 692; Barnes v. Savings Bank, 149 Iowa, 367. Here it is clearly shown that Mrs. Bowman .at first refused to execute the mortgage on the homestead, and that she was only induced to do so finally by the representations of Lingenfelter that the Collins property was worth much more than the debt sought to be further secured, and by bis promise that they would see to it that the Collins property brought the amount of the debt and more, and that the homestead would not be called upon to bear any part of the burden. The representations as to the value of this property were false and known to be so at the time they were made. They bad occupied this property for years and were then occupying it and knew its value, and this value they fixed at $4,000 when they purchased, it at foreclosure sale, although they bad represented to Mrs. Bowman that it was worth from $8,000 to .$12,000. It will not do to say that such representations, were the expressions of opinion only, and not binding on the Lingenfelters. The question of the value of the Collins property was very material to Mrs. Bowman, and, without these assurances of, its value for the purpose of paying the debt for wbicb it was security, she would not have pledged her homestead right for the purpose of satisfying the bank. She bad a right to rely upon the repre[654]*654sentations, and it was the duty of the Lingenfelters, under the circumstances, to tell her the truth about the value of the property. We think the court rightly found that the mortgage in question was obtained by fraud and false representations.

3. Attorney and client: ratification

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Bluebook (online)
137 N.W. 946, 156 Iowa 649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lingenfelter-bros-v-bowman-iowa-1912.