Minnesota Loan & Trust Co. v. Busby

275 P. 761, 84 Mont. 373, 1929 Mont. LEXIS 132
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 19, 1929
DocketNo. 6,402.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 275 P. 761 (Minnesota Loan & Trust Co. v. Busby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minnesota Loan & Trust Co. v. Busby, 275 P. 761, 84 Mont. 373, 1929 Mont. LEXIS 132 (Mo. 1929).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff commenced action to foreclose a real estate mortgage, alleging that no part of the principal of the mortgage note for $1,000 had been paid.

Defendant Busby answered, admitting the execution of the note and mortgage to the State Bank of Nashua, Montana, alleging the payment of $600 on the principal and a certain amount of interest money on December 14, 1925, and consenting that judgment for $400, with accrued interest, and such an attorney’s fee as the court should see fit to fix, be entered.

*376 The pleadings and the proof show that the note and mortgage were executed in 1920, the note for $1,000 being payable November 1, 1925, and were assigned by the payee bank in 1921 to one Anna H. Newhart, who duly assigned them to plaintiff in 1922; but, while the assignment from Newhart to plaintiff was recorded shortly after it was made, that from the bank to Newhart was not recorded until February 1, 1926, which was after payment of the $600 was made by defendant to the State Bank of Nashua, and after that bank had become insolvent and gone into the hands of a receiver.

It is undisputed that the note was in the hands of the plaintiff from the time of assignment to it to the time of trial; that all interest was paid up to November 1, 1925, to the Nashua Bank, and the interest coupons were delivered to defendant by the bank, without intimation that it was not the owner or holder of the note, and, prior to the maturity of the note, Busby called at the bank to advise its officers that he would not be able to pay the entire principal on maturity, when, for the first time, he had an intimation that the bank did not own the note—that is, the cashier then told Busby that he would take the matter up with “the company,” without disclosing to what “company” he referred. Thereafter the bank, with the consent of “the company,” extended the time for payment of the balance for one year, on defendant’s payment of the $600 on principal and interest to date of payment.

In their affirmative defense, defendants allege that they made the payment to the Nashua Bank, believing that it was the owner of the principal note and interest coupons, or had full authority to receive and accept the same, and without knowledge, information, or notice that this plaintiff had any interest in the note. They then allege, in the same paragraph, that the bank was the agent of the plaintiff in receiving the payment made.

At the opening of the trial plaintiff moved the court to require the defendants to elect as to whether they would defend, on the theory that the payment was made to the bank *377 as the owner of the note and mortgage, or as the agent of the plaintiff. The court refused to require an election.

During the trial plaintiff objected to the introduction of many communications which passed between plaintiff and the bank respecting this and other transactions of a like character, tending to show a course of conduct from which a reasonable person might conclude that the bank was the agent of the plaintiff. These objections were overruled.

The taking of testimony was completed on June 22, 1927, and the matter “deemed submitted.” Neither party submitted proposed findings of fact in writing at that time, but on August 4, 1927, plaintiff “filed with the court” requested findings, which were not entered in the minutes of the court. In June, 1928, the court made and filed findings of fact and conclusions of law in favor of the defendants. The court, having found that the Nashua Bank was the agent of the plaintiff in collecting the $600 principal, as well as the amounts due for interest, declared as a conclusion of law that plaintiff was entitled to judgment against the defendants in the sum of $400, with interest from December 29, 1926, together with a reasonable attorney’s fee. Judgment was accordingly entered for $425.87, principal and interest, and for the sum of $50 as attorney’s fee earned before offer to confess judgment with decree of foreclosure and order of sale of the mortgaged premises. Plaintiff has appealed from the judgment, assigning 20 specifications of error.

1. The first specification is that the court erred in not requiring defendants to elect. Plaintiff contends that defendants set up two distinct defenses—the one, that the defendants paid the $600 to the bank under circumstances entitling them to believe that the bank was the owner of the note and es-topping plaintiff from asserting the contrary; the other, that the bank was the agent of the plaintiff—and declares that “one defense destroys the other; one is false.”

It will not be necessary to cumber this opinion with a recital of the lengthy allegations of the affirmative defense; it does not contain two separate defenses, separately stated and num *378 bered, as required by statute; but, having denied that the defendants have any knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to the allegations of the complaint concerning the assignment of the note and mortgage from the bank to New-hart and from Newhart to plaintiff, it sets out the facts and circumstances regarding the extension of time secured and the payment made, on which defendants base their allegation that they were entitled to believe, at the time the payment was made, that the bank was either the owner of the note and mortgage, or authorized to receive payment, and then makes formal allegation of agency as the facts were known at the time the answer was filed.

The allegations can hardly be said to constitute two separate and inconsistent defenses, but, even if they do, a defendant is permitted to set up two or more inconsistent defenses (sec. 9146, Rev. Codes 1921), so long as they are not so far inconsistent that, if one be true, the other must necessarily be false (Johnson v. Butte & Superior Copper Co., 41 Mont. 158, 48 L. R. A. (n. s.) 938, 108 Pac. 1057; Advance-Rumely Thresher Co. v. Terpening, 58 Mont. 507, 193 Pac. 752). Here there is nothing so repugnant in the allegations that, at the time the payment was made, defendants believed the bank to own the note and mortgage or had authority to receive payment, and the allegation that the bank was the agent of the plaintiff, as to come within the rule announced under the statute. No error was committed in refusing to require an election. (Howard v. Fraser, 83 Mont. 194, 271 Pac. 444.)

2. Specification 2, and specifications 4 to 13, inclusive, question the correctness of the court’s rulings on the admission of letters referring to the manner of handling collections, renewals, etc., with respect to the’ instant transaction and like transactions between the plaintiff and the Nashua Bank, and parties connected with the management of the bank and the plaintiff company.

We have examined all of the exhibits thus admitted, and find that they were all admissible for the purpose of showing a course of business dealing between the bank and the *379 plaintiff, tending to establish agency. (Parsons v. Rice, 81 Mont. 509, 264 Pac. 396; Commercial Credit Co.

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Bluebook (online)
275 P. 761, 84 Mont. 373, 1929 Mont. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minnesota-loan-trust-co-v-busby-mont-1929.