Moran v. Williston Cooperative Credit Union

420 N.W.2d 353, 1988 N.D. LEXIS 50, 1988 WL 18918
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 7, 1988
DocketCiv. 870289
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 420 N.W.2d 353 (Moran v. Williston Cooperative Credit Union) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moran v. Williston Cooperative Credit Union, 420 N.W.2d 353, 1988 N.D. LEXIS 50, 1988 WL 18918 (N.D. 1988).

Opinion

ERICKSTAD, Chief Justice.

Williston Cooperative Credit Union (Credit Union) appeals from a district court judgment dismissing its counterclaim against Shane Moran. The district court ruled that two promissory notes made by Shane Moran at the age of seventeen were void, not voidable, and therefore Credit Union could not collect the debt represented by the two promissory notes from Shane. We affirm.

This dispute began when Shane Moran sold one bull and received a check made payable to him and Credit Union. Credit Union refused to endorse the check and Moran commenced an action in which he asserted Credit Union wrongfully refused *354 to endorse the check. 1 Credit Union filed a counterclaim alleging that Moran defaulted on two promissory notes made in March of 1980.

A two and one-half hour bench trial produced the following facts regarding Moran’s execution of the two 1980 promissory notes. Shane’s father, Walt Moran, began doing business with Credit Union “approximately” in 1965. Walt Moran had a checking and savings account at Credit Union, but most of his business dealings with Credit Union involved loans for the purchase of feeder cattle.

In 1980 Walt Moran became convinced that he needed to buy and raise more cattle to pay off his existing loans to Credit Union. He decided to purchase some steers and lease the steers out as rodeo livestock. Walt Moran testified that Credit Union’s loan officer told him that Credit Union’s lending committee would not extend additional credit to him. He further testified that the loan officer suggested a plan whereby he could receive additional credit. The plan required Shane, then seventeen years of age, to become the maker of two promissory notes and for Walt to sign the notes as a co-maker. 2

Walt testified that Shane was sitting in Walt’s pickup outside Credit Union’s building when the loan officer and Walt discussed the plan. Shane was later brought into the building and instructed to sign several documents by the loan officer. Shane admits he signed the loan application, promissory notes, and checks issued to him. Both Walt and Shane testified that the notes and loan applications were completed by one of Credit Union’s employees.

Walt further testified that the checks issued to Shane never left the loan officer’s office, that Shane endorsed the checks, that the loan officer deposited the checks in Walt’s checking account, and that Walt used the money to purchase rodeo livestock. Shane lived and worked on the farm, but the cattle were bought and sold by Walt. Shane was not authorized to draw checks on Walt’s checking account. However, Shane took the accrued interest on the notes as a deduction in his 1982 personal income tax return.

The trial court described the transaction as a “shenanigan” and concluded that “this was an arrangement that [the loan officer] figured out to accommodate Walt and they used Shane to accomplish their mission. ...” In its findings of fact the trial court further declared that Shane did not have possession or control of the money that was loaned or the cattle which were purchased by Walt with the money. In its conclusions of law the trial court ruled that the two promissory notes “are void contracts pursuant to Section 14-10-09 of the NDCC and are not merely voidable in that they were executed by [Shane] when he was under the age of eighteen (18) years and related to personal property not in [Shane’s] immediate possession or control.”

The parties disagree about the interpretation of section 14-10-09, N.D.C.C., which reads:

“14-10-09. Minor’s disability to delegate power and to contract relating to real property. A minor cannot give a delegation of power. A person under the age of eighteen may not make a contract relating to real property or any interest therein, nor relating to any personal property not in his immediate possession or control. ” [Emphasis added.]

Credit Union contends that the promissory notes were voidable, not void, and that the notes are now valid as Shane failed to disaffirm the notes within the one-year period provided in section 14-10-11, N.D.C.C. Credit Union argues Shane Moran has unduly “isolated” section 14-10-09 from other sections of the North Dakota Century Code, and that section 14-10-09 must be interpreted with section 14-10-11 and the *355 general rule that contracts of a minor are voidable, not void. Section 14-10-11 reads:

“14-10-11. Minor’s contracts — Disaf- firmation. In all cases other than those specified in sections 14-10-12 and 14-10-13, the contract of a minor may be disaf-firmed by the minor himself, either before his majority or within one year’s time afterwards, or in case of his death within that period, by his heirs or personal representatives.”

In support of its contention, Credit Union relies on our earlier decisions in Campbell v. Costello, 56 N.D. 60, 215 N.W. 913 (1927); Casement v. Callaghan, 35 N.D. 27, 159 N.W. 77 (1916); and Luce v. Jestrab, 12 N.D. 548, 97 N.W. 848 (1903). Credit Union also contends that if section 14-10-09, N.D.C.C., governs the transaction, then Shane must be deemed to have had “immediate possession or control” of the checks as he endorsed them. Thus, Credit Union argues that section 14-10-09 does not invalidate Shane’s promissory notes. We are not convinced.

Credit Union relies too heavily on Casement, Luce, and Campbell, supra. In those decisions we concluded that promissory notes made by minors under the circumstances of those cases created contracts which were voidable rather than void. In all three cases, however, it was clear that each minor was entering into a legitimate contract for the minor’s benefit. Moreover, in all three of those cases, the minor received possession or control of the consideration which induced the minor to make the promissory note.

In Casement, supra, a minor over the age of 18 3 made a $400 promissory note for the acquisition of several horses. The minor received possession of the horses but failed to pay the note. Finally, the horses died while in the minor’s possession.

In Luce, supra, the minor signed a note for a team of horses, which he used to farm 640 acres. The minor was over the age of eighteen and “[h]is contract, therefore, ... was not void, but, as we have seen, was voidable at his option.... ” Luce, supra, 97 N.W. at 849. In Luce, the horses were used by the minor to the extent that they were in poor condition when he attempted to return them. The minors in both Casement and Luce were over the age of eighteen and in possession of the horses. Both of these facts were relied on in Casement and Luce to reach the conclusion that the contracts were voidable rather than void.

In Campbell, supra, the minor was also over eighteen years old when he made a promissory note for $100.

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Bluebook (online)
420 N.W.2d 353, 1988 N.D. LEXIS 50, 1988 WL 18918, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moran-v-williston-cooperative-credit-union-nd-1988.