Morton v. Lovell Bldg. Co.

297 P. 799, 43 Wyo. 81, 1931 Wyo. LEXIS 6
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1931
Docket1683
StatusPublished

This text of 297 P. 799 (Morton v. Lovell Bldg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morton v. Lovell Bldg. Co., 297 P. 799, 43 Wyo. 81, 1931 Wyo. LEXIS 6 (Wyo. 1931).

Opinion

RiNer, Justice.

This is a suit to foreclose á real estate mortgage and to recover a deficiency judgment upon the indebtedness *85 claimed to have been secured thereby. Plaintiff, S. E. Morton, obtained a decree in her favor below, against the defendant Lovell Building Company and interveners H. J. Bies and L. S. Strahan. The interveners only, bring the record here by direet appeal for review.

The facts are very little, if at all, in dispute, and, so far as material to the disposition of the ease in this court, are substantially as follows:

On or about the 12th day of June, 1916, the Lovell Building Company, hereinafter generally referred to as the “Building Company,” was incorporated under the law of this state. It had a capital stock of $40,000, which was divided into 400 shares of the par value of $100 each. W. B. Snyder and J. M. Snyder of Lovell, Wyoming, each held 120 shares of this stock and the remainder, or 160 shares, was owned by H. J. Bies of Billings, Montana. The object of the company was, as expressed in its certificate of incorporation, “to carry on, conduct and engage in a general real estate investment business, and as incident to such business hold and acquire real estate and personal property and to carry on such transactions and do and perform all acts necessary and incident to the proper carrying on and conducting of said business.” The directors of the corporation were three in number, and the stockholders already mentioned were selected to serve in that capacity for the first year of the corporation’s existence and apparently until the commencement of this action, on July 5, 1928, remained the same. At the inception of its corporate existence, H. J. Bies became the Building Company’s president, holding that position until 1925 or 1926, when W. B. Snyder, who had previous to that time been its vice president, took the office. J. M. Snyder has always been its secretary and treasurer. W. B. Snyder had charge of the active management of the company affairs, at least since 1920 and 1921, and he and his brother J. M. Snyder, as secretary, then customarily signed the Building Company’s papers where loans were negotiated for it.

*86 On or about October 24, 1917, Mr. Ries, the president of the company, with the concurrence of the Snyders, negotiated a loan of $15,000.00 to the Building Company by Diekerman Brothers of Duluth, Minnesota. This was evidenced by a note for that sum, secured by a first mortgage upon the corporation’s real estate property. Ries, in like manner and about the same time, also arranged for a loan to the Building Company by the Montana National Bank for the sum of $10,000. This loan was represented by a note for that amount and a second mortgage on the property aforesaid. Subsequently this second mortgage loan was paid off.

From the years 1920-1921 until a comparatively short time before the trial of this action, Ries ceased to be active in or at all concerned with the affairs of the Building Company. Since those years he never attended any corporate meetings of either the stockholders or directors of the company and no notice of such meetings was ever given him. He never came to the Snyders or to the office of the company at all for the purpose of inquiring about the business of the company. In all that time he never even wrote to them to learn of the condition of the corporation; never asked for a statement regarding its matters or took any interest whatsoever in it. As Mr. W. B. Snyder testified: “I haven’t heard from Mr. Ries for years. He just seemed to have lost all interest.” He lived in Billings, “until his banks failed and then he was worse than broke, and he went to Oregon.” He seems to have negotiated a personal loan for $5800 — just when the record does not show — with the First National Bank of Cheyenne, Wyoming, and to have given his note for that amount with his aforesaid 160 shares of stock as security. This note appears never to have been paid.

W. B. Snyder and his brother exercised complete control and management of the Building Company’s affairs after Ries ceased to give them his attention. They borrowed money from the First National Bank of Cheyenne, incur *87 ring an indebtedness of $1,000, for wbicb tbe Building Company’s note was given. This note was subsequently paid off. W. B. Snyder testified: “The First National Bank in Cheyenne was quite helpful to the Lovell Building Company. It financed the Lovell Building Company when they needed money. ’ ’

Under date of January 4, 1924, a note was executed payable to the order of the Lovell Building Company for $20,000, due July 5, 1924 at the First National Bank, Cheyenne, Wyoming, bearing interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum, the note being signed “Lovell Building Company, by W. B. Snyder, Vice President, Attest J. M. Snyder, Secretary,” and was indorsed exactly as signed. This paper was then delivered by W. B. Snyder to the First National Bank aforesaid and the Building Company received in exchange therefor sundry notes also totalling $20,000 in face value, but which were known at the time by Snyder to be “slow paper” and which thereafter proved to be worthless. The latter’s testimony indicates, as he says, that the note may have been taken by the bank “partly” in order to help out that institution, which thereafter, sometime during the period from January 4, 1924 to January 26, 1925, failed. A directors’ meeting was held by the Snyders to authorize the $20,000 note transaction, but no notice was given Bies thereof and he knew nothing of the matter.

Thereafter the plaintiff herein, Sarah E. Morton, purchased said note from the First National Bank, before that institution passed into the hands of a receiver. She testified on the trial of this ease concerning the purchase that she paid face value for the paper- — $20,000; that she bought it before maturity; that she did not know then that anyone connected with the Building Company disputed the authority of the Snyders to execute the note; that she presumed the Building Company received pay for the note; that the First National Bank official, Mr. Abbott, who sold her the note, assured her “it was gilt edge security;” and that she *88 “never bought anything past due in paper.” The note was delivered to her without any indorsement on it on the part of the bank. Her testimony just summarized concerning these matters stands in the record undisputed.

When this obligation became due, the Snyders advised the plaintiff that it could not be paid, and they arranged with her to continue it. Consequently, on January 26, 1925, a renewal note was given, payable to her order for the sum of $21,684.44, due three years after date with interest at six per cent per annum — said renewal note being signed “Lovell Building Company, by W. B. Snyder, Vice Pres., J. M. Snyder, Secretary.” At the same time, and to secure the payment of this indebtedness, she received a real estate mortgage recited as subordinate to the Dickerman Brothers’ mortgage already mentioned upon the real estate property of the Lovell Building Company. This mortgage was signed “Lovell Building Company, by W. B. Snyder, Vice President.” The corporate seal of the company was affixed, attested by J. M. Snyder, Secretary. The instrument was duly acknowledged by W. B. Snyder and J. ,M.

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Bluebook (online)
297 P. 799, 43 Wyo. 81, 1931 Wyo. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morton-v-lovell-bldg-co-wyo-1931.