Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Steiner

259 N.W. 234, 219 Iowa 785
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 12, 1935
DocketNo. 42645.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 259 N.W. 234 (Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Steiner) 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
Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Steiner, 259 N.W. 234, 219 Iowa 785 (iowa 1935).

Opinion

Powers, J.

Plaintiff-appellant brought its action to foreclose a real estate mortgage executed by the defendants Steiner. Defendant-appellee was made a defendant because of a claimed interest in the subject-matter of the suit. It fi,led an answer setting up an interest in the mortgage. In pursuance of a stipulation, the issues between these parties were first tried in á proceedings to which the maker of the note was not a party. The plaintiff-appellant, the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, will be referred to as the insurance company, and the defendant-appellee, the Annis & Rohling Company, will be referred to as the loan company.

Two questions are involved, first, did the loan company have an interest in the note and mortgage sued upon by the insurance company; and, second, did the loan company have such an interest as that the payment of the note could not be accelerated by the insurance company alone and without the loan company joining in the exercise of the option to accelerate?

I. The question as to whether or not the loan company-had an interest in the note and mortgage being foreclosed by the insurance company depends upon the contract between them. Thai contract, as it relates to transactions of the type here under consideration, was not a formal written contract. It grew out of a course of dealing over a number of years and consists in such course of dealing and in oral and written representations made by one party and consented to by the other. While there is great divergence of view between the parties as to the proper interpretation of the contract, the evidentiary facts are not in serious dispute. The loan company had been acting for many years as a farm loan correspondent of the insurance company for western Iowa. The original arrangement between them contemplated that the loan company would make the loan and sell it to the insurance company. The volume of business became so great that the loan company appears to have been unable to finance transactions handled *787 in that way. A change was then made by which the application for the loan was sent to the insurance company, and if approved by it, the loan papers were executed and forwarded to the insurance company and if found acceptable, the amount of the loan was deposited to the credit of the loan company which then paid the borrower. The loans originally were all for periods of five or ten years at a fixed rate of interest. The loan company charged the borrower a commission which was carried as a second mortgage on the land, payable with the interest on the first mortgage and the amount of it was governed by the amount of interest on the first mortgage.

About the year 1923 or 1924, the insurance company devised a new farm loan plan designed to enable the borrower to pay a part of the principal each year and thereby reduce his indebtedness. These loans were on the amortization plan, and ran over periods of twenty, thirty, or forty years. The insurance company sent out booklets and circulars explaining the plan to the loan company. Its representatives visited the loan company and explained the plan. By representations contained both in the circulars and booklets sent out, and in the statements made by the representatives orally, it appears that it was desired that the loan company submit applications for such type of loans; that no separate commission second mortgage would be allowed in connection with such loans; that all deferred commission payments on account of the loan would have to he included as interest on the first mortgage note. For example, the interest rate to be received by the insurance company was 5 per cent per annum, but the correspondent was allowed to submit loans on the basis of 51-4 or 5Y2 per cent, the difference between such per cent and 5 per cent representing what the correspondent was to receive by way of commission.

The particular loan in question is represented by an extension agreement. The original loan was for $19,700, and was for a period of five years at 5 per cent interest, so far as the insurance company was concerned. Whatever in addition was paid by the borrower went to the loan company as commission for negotiating the loan. The mortgage became due in 1928. It was the suggestion of the insurance company that loans of this type be converted into amortization loans in order that the principal might he progressively reduced. The loan company had instructions from the insurance company authorizing such loans on a 5 per cent basis. When the loan became due, the loan company proposed to the borrower that *788 he pay $1,700 and apply for a new loan on the amortization plan for $18,000, to be paid over a period of thirty years; the interest to be computed on the basis of 51/4 per cent per annum, the 5 per cent to go to the insurance company as interest and the 1/j. of 1 per cent to go to the loan company as commission. Application was drawn accordingly. In transmitting the application to the insurance company, the loan company wrote a letter in which it said:

“Enclosed find application for a loan of $18,000.00 to be secured upon 240 acres in Montgomery county, Iowa, for a term of thirty years under plan No. 1, full amortization, rate 51/4 per cent, out of which we reserve 1/4 per cent per annum under terms of the mortgage. This is a renewal and reduction loan to your present loan X20414 Steiner, $19,700.00.”

The application was accepted by the company and the new loan on the amortization basis effected by means of an extension agreement covering the balance due on the old loan.

When the extension agreement was received by the insurance company, it wrote to the loan company a letter in which it said:

“That you may receive some commission in connection with the loan, you are authorized to retain from the proceeds of the annual amortization payments as same mature and are paid, a sum equal to 1/4 of 1 per cent per annum, computed on the then unpaid balance of principal due, subject to all payments to be applied on principal made in excess of amounts tabulated on the enclosed schedule, Form F. L. 91, listing the annual amounts to be retained by you under this arrangement.”

The insurance company concedes that it was to receive out of the payment to be made by the borrower in pursuance of the extension agreement only 5 per cent interest on the loan, and that the additional amount which the borrower was required to pay as interest, or the % of 1 per cent, properly belonged to the loan company. The insurance company contends, however, that the loan company had only such interest in the payment as had been granted to it by the insurance company, and that the insurance company had granted only a right to retain out of the payments received by the loan company a sum equal to the % of 1 per cent, and that the right, therefore, of the loan company to receive anything out of the loan depended upon its collection of the installments due under *789 the extension agreement.

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Related

Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Sutton
259 N.W. 788 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
259 N.W. 234, 219 Iowa 785, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-life-insurance-v-steiner-iowa-1935.