Lonergan v. Peebles

81 So. 514, 77 Fla. 188
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedFebruary 18, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 81 So. 514 (Lonergan v. Peebles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lonergan v. Peebles, 81 So. 514, 77 Fla. 188 (Fla. 1919).

Opinion

Ellis, J.

— This is a suit to enforce a mortgage lien given to secure the payment of five promisory notes, brought by the appellants who were complainants below and who are the holders of two of the notes. Each note held by the appellants is for the sum of twelve hundred dollars, dated September 1, 1914, one payable on December 1, 1915, and the other payable December 1, 1916, at Pensacola, Florida. Two of the remaining three notes were for the sum of thirty-eight hundred dollars each, one payable December 1, 1915, and the other payable December 1, 1916. The remaining note was for the sum of five thousand dollars and payable December 1. 1917. Each note was made by J. O. Peebles, and payable to the order of J. H. Smithwick.

In order to secure the payment of these promissory notes J. O. Peebles and his wife, Alice L. Peebles, exe[190]*190cuted and delivered to J. H. Smithwick a mortgage upon a certain tract of land containing six hundred and forty acres located in Santa Rosa county, Florida. The mortgage contained a clause to the effect that if the indebtedness or any part of it should not be paid according to the terms of the notes, then the indebtedness covered by the mortgage should become due and payable within sixty days and the mortgage should become “immediately foreclosable for the sums secured” thereby.

On September 9, 1914, J. H. Smithwick endorsed the two notes for twelve hundred dollars each to Lonergan & Kendrick Realty Company, a corporation, Avithout recourse, and on the 25th day of September, 1915, that corporation, by its president A. B. Lonergan, endorsed the notes to A. B. Lonergan and F. L. Kendrick.

J. H. Smithwick’s endorsement was in the following words: “Pay to the order of Lonergan & Kendrick Realty Company, Inc., without recourse, this 9th day of Sept. 1914. J. H. Smithwick.” The transfer of the notes under this endorsement took place in Birmingham, Alabama.

Some days later the three remaining notes were endorsed by J. H. Smithwick to the Banking, Savings & Trust Company, a Florida corporation doing business at Pensacola. After that transaction, or about the same time, on September 25, 1914, the mortgage was filed for record and duly recorded in the public records of Santa Rosa County, Florida.

. The bill of complaint was filed on April 29, 1916, and alleged that J. O. Peebles failed and refused to pay the note for twelve hundred dollars due December 1, 1915. The prayer is for án accounting of the amount due upon [191]*191the notes and mortgage and that J. O. Peebles be decreed to pay to the complainants and to the Banking, Savings and Trust Company and to J. H. Smithwick whatever sum is found to be due each, together with the costs and attorney’s fees, and in default of such payment that the lands described be sold to satisfy the indebtedness, etc.

A decree pro con-fesso was entered against J. O. Peebles and wife, but the Bank and Smithwick answered admitting execution and delivery of the notes and mortgage, the endorsement of the two notes by Smithwick as alleged, and the transfer to the complainants and the endorsement of the remaining three notes to the Bank by Smithwick and the failure of Peebles to pay, but the defendants averred that when Smithwick. endorsed the notes to Lonergan & Kendrick Company it was understood and agreed between Smithwick and the endorsee the Lonergan & Kendrick Realty Company it was understood and agreed between Smithwick and the endorsee, the Lonergan & Kendrick Realty Company, that if the maker of the notes should fail to pay the same when du'e that the two notes were not to participate in or have any benefit of the lien of the mortgage. The answer was after-wards amended by adding the following averment:

“That the said Banking, Savings & Trust Company at the time of the negotiation by the said Smithwick to the transferor of the complainants of the notes held by the complainants, held, as the complainants and their transferor then knew, prior mortgage made by the said Smith-wick on the property against which foreclosure is here sought; that at the time of the negotiation of the notes held by the complainants they and their transferor were [192]*192informed by said Smithwick, and assented thereto, that the remaining notes were to be transferred to Banking, Sayings & Trust Company,, and were to have a superior right under the mortgage sought to be foreclosed, and that the then existing mortgages in the hands of Banking, Savings & Trust Company would not be cancelled by it unless its rights of priority was preserved; that the said remaining notes were thereafter negotiated to said Banking, Savings & Trust Company, and accepted by it in the belief and with the intent that they should be entitled to priority of security in its hands, and on the faith that it would have a priority it took the said notes and an assignment from said Smithwick of the said mortgage made by the said Peebles in the place and stead of the mortgages then held by it, and in the belief that the priority held by it by reason of such mortgages would be and was preserved to it in taking the notes of the said Peebles, and the assignment of said mortgage from said Smithwick, it therefore cancelled its prior mortgages; that it never was the intention or design of any of the parties to this suit that the cancellation of its said mortgages by said Banking, Savings & Trust Company should pnt it in a worse position than it was prior to such cancellation, wherefore it says that the notes held by it are entitled to priority of security of payment from the'mortgaged property.”

It appears from the pleadings and testimony in the case that Mr. Smithwick who was the owner of the land described in the bill and another tract in the same county desired to sell the same, and to that end employed the Lonergan & Kendrick Realty Company, a corporation doing business in Birmingham, Alabama, to find a purchaser. The Lonergan & Kendrick Realty Company pro[193]*193duced Mr. J. O. Peebles and a trade was made between Mm and Mr. Smithwick. A small part of the purchase price was paid in cash by Mr. Peebles, a portion of it paid by a conveyance of certain lots in Birmingham to Mr. Smithwick, and the remainder of the purchase price which was represented by the five promissory notes was it seems secured by the mortgage described in the bill and another mortgage upon the other tract of land upon which there was some incumbrances held by the defendant bank which Mr. Smithwick was to remove.

The commission earned by the Lonergan & Kendrick Realty Company was paid by the endorsement to it of the two notes mentioned without recourse, and the conveyance to it of certain of the lots in Birmingham.

It is clearly apparent from the circumstances of the transaction why Mr. Smithwick should wish to protect himself against the possible failure of Mr. Peebles to pay the two notes at maturity, because in such an event it might become necessary for him to foreclose the two mortgages to collect the remaining three notes in which case it might become necessary for him to purchase the lands at foreclosure sale, which would leave him practically in the same situation he was in before the sale, with little or no margin of profit after paying all the expenses incident to a foreclosure proceeding except that represented by' the small amount of cash received and the value of the lots in Birmingham, out of which Lonergan & Kendrick Realty Company had received part of their commission as stated.

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Bluebook (online)
81 So. 514, 77 Fla. 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lonergan-v-peebles-fla-1919.