McConnell v. American National Bank

103 N.E. 809, 59 Ind. App. 319, 1914 Ind. App. LEXIS 206
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 9, 1914
DocketNo. 8,639
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 103 N.E. 809 (McConnell v. American National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McConnell v. American National Bank, 103 N.E. 809, 59 Ind. App. 319, 1914 Ind. App. LEXIS 206 (Ind. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Lairy, C. J.

Appellee brought this suit to reinstate a certain mortgage on real estate owned by Leslie C. Hunter in his lifetime. The case was tried by the court and appellee prevailed. The court made a special finding of facts from which it appears that on December 27,1909, Leslie C. Hunter purchased a part of lot 44 in Owensville from John C. Kendle for the price of $3,000 and that as a part of the purchase price he executed a note to Kendle for $2,000 and secured the same by a mortgage, on the lot purchased, signed by himself and his wife, Lasia L. Hunter; that on January 3, 1910, Kendle sold this note to appellee bank for the sum of $2,000 cash; that the mortgage was recorded by Kendle but that it was not assigned to the bank. The note was endorsed by Kendle in blank.

Shortly before the note became due Kendle called upon the bank -and requested that when the note was paid he should be informed of the fact. After the note became due and after Leslie C. Hunter had been three times notified by the bank, he wrote a letter to the bank requesting it to send him a note for the amount of $2,500 due in one year and promising to get one Harry O. Pollard to sign it as security. In response to this letter the bank sent this note to Leslie C. Hunter, who returned it to the bank on January 25, 1911, signed by himself and purporting to be signed by Harry O. Pollard. The bank investigated the financial standing of Harry O. Pollard and found that he was solvent and that his signature to the note would make it good. On January 26, 1911, the bank, believing that the name of Harry O. Pollard [322]*322signed to the note was his genuine signature, accepted the note in payment of the note of $2,000 secured by mortgage and endorsed to the bank by Kendle, and notified Kendle by letter that the note had been paid, whereupon Kendle on January 2, 1911, released the mortgage of record. The remainder of the proceeds of the $2,500 note, after deducting the amount of the $2,000 note and accrued interest, was credited by the bank to the checking account of Leslie C. Hunter. The name of Harry O. Pollard as signed to the $2,500 note was not his genuine signature but was a forgery. On January 17, 1912, Leslie C. Hunter committed suicide and on January 25, 1912, appellant Abner D. McConnell was appointed administrator for his estate which is insolvent.

The court, further finds that on March 23, 1911, after the mortgage securing the $2,000 note had been released by Kendle, Leslie C. Hunter borrowed $2,000 from the Citizen’s Trust and Savings Bank of Princeton and, to secure the same executed a mortgage in which his wife joined, on the real estate which he had formerly mortgaged to secure the note sold by Kendle to appellee bank. On April 10, 1911, Leslie C. Hunter borrowed $400 from Elza Mounts and on September 18, 1911, he borrowed $2,650 from the First National Bank of Poseyville, and, on October 10, 1911, he borrowed $275 from the Owensville Building and Loan Association. For each of the sums so borrowed he executed his note and each of the notes so executed bears the name of Harry O. Pollard as security and the $2,650 note also bore the name of Harvey Knowles as surety, but the names of the sureties to all of these notes are forgeries. These notes have all been filed and are pending as claims against the estate of Leslie C. Hunter.

We have not set out the facts as fully as they are shown in the finding of the court but have stated only so much as is necessary to a proper understanding of the case.

Upon the facts found the eourt stated as its conclusions of law that the American National Bank of Princeton was the [323]*323owner and as such was entitled to the same rights in the note and mortgage sought to he reinstated as was possessed by Kendle prior to the assignment; that the note and mortgage should each be reinstated and should be in full force and effect; that the mortgage so reinstated should be a lien on the real estate described therein, inferior to the lien of the mortgage in favor of the Citizen’s Trust and Savings Bank and superior to any claims of Elza Mounts, The First National Bank of Poseyville and the Owensville Building and Loan Association.

1. 2. The sale of the note by Kendle to the bank amounted to an equitable assignment of the mortgage given to secure it, and thereafter Kendle held the mortgage as a trustee for appellee bank. Burton v. Baxter (1844), 7 Blackf. 297; Reeves v. Hayes (1884), 95 Ind. 521; Thomson v. Madison Bldg., etc., Assn. (1885), 103 Ind. 279, 2 N. E. 735. The debt evidenced by the original note was not paid by the forged note delivered by Hunter and accepted by the bank. The bank accepted this note with the belief that it was genuine and its officers were thereby misled and induced to notify Kendle that the original note of $2,000 had been paid and relying on such statement he cancelled the mortgage. After the cancellation of this mortgage, the Citizen’s Trust and Savings Bank loaned $2,000 to Hunter and took a mortgage on this same real estate as security for the loan having no notice of the fraud that had been practiced in procuring the release of the former mortgage and believing that such mortgage had been in fact satisfied.

3. [324]*3244. [323]*323As between a mortgagee whose mortgage has been discharged of record solely through the act of a third party which act was unauthorized by the mortgagee and for which he was in no way responsible, and a person who has been induced by such cancellation to believe that the mortgage has been cancelled in good faith, and has dealt with the property by purchasing the title or accepting a mortgage thereon [324]*324as security for a loan, the equities • are • balanced. In such case the rights will be settled in the order of time and the prior mortgage must remain despite the apparent discharge. Harris v. Cook (1877), 28 N. J. Eq. 345; De St. Romes v. Blanc (1868), 20 La. Ann. 424, 96 Am. Dec. 415; 27 Cyc. 1225. If, however, the mortgagee is in any way responsible for the mortgage being released of record or, if the release of record is procured through the neglect, incaution, credulity or misplaced confidence of the mortgagee, a different rule will govern in determining the equities between the-mortgagee and one who has innocently dealt with the-property in the belief that thé mortgage was satisfied. In such a case the mortgagee is estopped in equity from asserting the priority of his -mortgage. When one of two innocent parties must suffer loss, it must fall upon that one who by ineaution or misplaced confidence occasioned it, or who placed it in the power of a third party to perpetrate the fraud which occasioned the loss. City Council, etc. v. Ryan (1884), 22 S. C. 339, 53 Am. Rep. 713; Heyder v. Excelsior Bldg., etc., Co. (1886), 42 N. J. Eq. 403, 8 Atl. 310, 59 Am. Rep. 49; Wittenbrock v. Parker (1894), 102 Cal. 93, 36 Pac. 374, 41 Am. St. 172, 24 L. R. A. 197; 27 Cyc. 1226.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 N.E. 809, 59 Ind. App. 319, 1914 Ind. App. LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcconnell-v-american-national-bank-indctapp-1914.