Long v. Taggart

243 N.W. 200, 214 Iowa 941
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 24, 1932
DocketNo. 41406.
StatusPublished

This text of 243 N.W. 200 (Long v. Taggart) 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
Long v. Taggart, 243 N.W. 200, 214 Iowa 941 (iowa 1932).

Opinion

*942 Stevens, J.

The record presents and involves a large number of transactions, a complete narrative of which is indispensable to an intelligent understanding of the controversy, as well as a proper decision of the questions before us. In the fall of 1918, Thomas J. Long, single, conveyed a tract of land consisting of 240 acres, located near College Springs, in Page County, to James T. Taggart for a consideration of $45,000. $1,500 was paid in cash on the date of the sale, $14,000 on March 1, 1919, upon the delivery of the deed, and a first mortgage for the remainder of the purchase price, $30,000, was executed by the purchaser. Both the deed from Long to Taggart and the mortgage from Taggart to Long were filed for record in the office of the recorder of Page County March 12, 1919. The $1,500 payment was made from funds borrowed by Taggart from the First National Bank of College Springs, of which W. S. Farqrrhar was president. In the spring of 1919, Taggart obtained a further loan from the First National Bank of $7,500. This sum constituted a part of the $14,000 paid by Taggart to Long on March 1st. On December 8, 1924, James T. Taggart and wife executed a note for $9,060, the amount of the prior advances, to the First National Bank of College Springs, together with a mortgage upon the 240-acre tract previously referred to, to secure the payment thereof, which mortgage was duly recorded on December 12,' 1924. The notes evidencing this indebtedness, but not the mortgage, were several times renewed by Taggart. The $9,060 at the time of one of the renewals was divided into one note of $5,000, two notes of $1,500 each, and a note of $1,000. At the time of the trial, the $1,000 note was held by the appellee Wyckoif, the $5,000 note by the appellee Citizens State Bank, and the remaining notes by the appellee Page County State Bank, all of Clarinda, Iowa.

On and prior to the first day of March, 1925, Taggart was in default in the payment of interest on the $30,000 note to Long. On the above date, new notes at a reduced rate of interest and a new mortgage were executed by Taggarts to Long. Contemporaneously with the execution of these instruments, the Taggarts also executed a warranty deed conveying the mortgaged premises to Thomas J. Long, which by its terms was subject to the $9,060 mortgage to the First National Bank. This deed, with a written memorandum signed by the Taggarts only, *943 was left at tbe First National Bank to be held by it pending further payments by the Taggarts upon the $30,000 indebtedness. On March 12, 1925, Thomas J. Long, on the margin of the record in the recorder’s office, released the $30,000 mortgage executed on or about March 1, 1919, as security for that portion of the purchase price of the land. Subsequently, and on September 1, 1928, the Taggarts executed a new mortgage on the same real estate to Thomas J. Long, which was filed for record September' 1,1928. The note, however, executed at this time was for $29,500. The difference in the amount resulted from a transaction involving some insurance received on account of the destruction of the dwelling by fire. Neither of the two later mortgages executed by Long referred in any way to the $9,060 mortgage executed in 1924 by the Taggarts to the First National Bank. In June, 1925, the appellee Wyckoff purchased the $1,000 note previously referred to of the First National Bank, paying value therefor. This note was subsequently repeatedly renewed by Taggarts, the last renewal being at the time of the commencement of this action held by Wyckoff. One of the $1,500 notes was transferred to the appellee Page County State Bank January 25, 1927, and the other a few days later. The remaining note of $5,000, which represented a part of the original indebtedness of $9,060, was, on September 12, 1929, transferred to the appellee Citizens State Bank of Clarinda; and on the same day, the original mortgage given to the First National Bank to secure the above indebtedness was assigned to said bank, and the assignment promptly and duly placed of record in the county recorder’s office.

Thomas J. Long died after the trial of the cause in the district court, but prior to the entry of the decree, and the appellant, Robert Long, administrator, was substituted as plaintiff. The petition was filed October 13, 1930. It is in the usual form of a petition in equity upon a promissory note and for the foreclosure of a mortgage upon real estate. All of the appellees are made defendants in this action and each filed separate answer and cross-petition, praying the foreclosure of the original mortgage to the First National Bank.

It is alleged in the petition that W. S. Farquhar was president of the first National Bank and its predecessor, the Farquhar State Bank, and that all of the transactions had by Thomas J. *944 Long with Taggarts were conducted upon the advice and under the directions of the said Farquhar; that each and all of the notes and mortgages, together with the deed and memorandum agreement previously mentioned, ’ were prepared by Farquhar; that Long never at any time read or examined the instruments, but relied upon Farquhar, whom he had known from boyhood, and with whose banking house he had always done business, as possessing the requisite knowledge and information to execute the instruments in due and proper form and with regard to his rights in the matter. The mortgage sought to be foreclosed is the one executed September 1, 1928. It is further alleged that Long first learned of the existence of the mortgage executed by Taggarts to the bank to secure the notes aggregating $9,060 long after the several mortgages previously referred to had been executed by Taggarts to him; that he was not informed by Farquhar or anyoné else that a release of the original mortgage executed to him of record would give apparent priority of the second mortgage held by the bank, and that at no time did he intend to give priority to such mortgage; and that if he had been informed of the facts he would not have released his original mortgage, which he did in the presence of Farquhar, who had arranged to have the release written on the margin of the record. It was further alleged in the petition that the original mortgage given to Long was for a part of the purchase price of the land sold to the mortgagor.

Each of the holders of the notes above described and the assignee of the $9,060 mortgage in their separate answers and cross-petitions set up the facts already stated, alleging priority of the mortgage securing the notes held by them, and prayed the establishment thereof as a first -lien upon the mortgaged premises, together with a decree of foreclosure. Long joined issue upon each of the cross-petitions, denying knowledge of the mortgage referred to therein, repeating the allegations of fraud and deceit on the part of Farquhar, and asking that the mortgage held by him be established as a first lien upon the premises and foreclosed as such. Upon the issues thus joined, a trial was had to the court, resulting in a decree as previously stated.

As appears from the foregoing narrative of the facts, at the time the $30,000 mortgage was executed by Taggarts to Long, it was for purchase money, and constituted a first lien *945 upon the mortgaged premises.

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243 N.W. 200, 214 Iowa 941, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-taggart-iowa-1932.