Nicklisch v. Flynn

11 P.2d 1066, 168 Wash. 310, 1932 Wash. LEXIS 842
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJune 1, 1932
DocketNo. 23415. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 11 P.2d 1066 (Nicklisch v. Flynn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nicklisch v. Flynn, 11 P.2d 1066, 168 Wash. 310, 1932 Wash. LEXIS 842 (Wash. 1932).

Opinions

Beals, J.

During the year 1912, defendant Teresa Flynn and her husband, being the owners of a lot in the city of Seattle upon which there had been constructed a hotel, mortgaged the same to Osner & Mehl-horn, Inc., a corporation, to secure a note for $4,000, drawn in favor of the mortgagee, payable in three years. Mr. Flynn died during the following year, and his widow became the sole owner of the property.

The mortgagee assigned the mortgage to one Carl Nicklisch, the assignment being regularly recorded, although it was not drawn to the attention of Mrs. Flynn, who regularly paid her interest to the original payee named in the note, by whom it was turned over to the assignee. Prior to October 6, 1915, the date of maturity of the note, Mrs. Flynn learned that the note and mortgage had been transferred to Mr. Nicklisch, and she personally arranged with him for an extension of the note at a slight reduction in interest, and thereafter for two years she paid the accruing interest to Mr. Nicklisch.

In 1917, the hotel having been destroyed by fire, Mrs. Flynn decided to improve her property, and for this purpose borrowed $12,500 from Osner & Mehlhorn, Inc., giving the company eleven promissory notes ag *312 gregating the amount referred to, secured by a mortgage. August Mehlhorn, Jr., the manager of the corporation, attended to all matters in connection therewith, and out of the proceeds of the new loan paid Mr. Nicklisch the amount due him on the prior mortgage.

Osner & Mehlhorn, Inc., who will hereinafter be referred to as the Mehlhorn Co., sold to various persons the eleven promissory notes secured by the mortgage, Carl Nicklisch 'buying $5,000 worth thereof, but the mortgage securing the notes was never assigned, it remaining of record in the name of the original mortgagee. Mrs. Flynn paid to the Mehlhorn Co. all the interest due on the eleven notes, and testified that she did not know that the company had sold any thereof. Mrs. Flynn always paid her interest in a lump sum, computed upon the whole indebtedness, and did not have in mind the fact that she had executed eleven notes rather than one.

March 7, 1918, Mrs. Flynn executed a second mortgage in favor of the Mehlhorn Co. to secure a promissory note in the sum of $2,000. Interest on this note was also paid to the Mehlhorn Co., which continued to own the second mortgage.

During the month of October, 1922, the Mehlhorn Co. made to Mrs. Flynn a new loan in the sum of $14,-000, evidenced by twelve promissory notes for different amounts aggregating the amount of the loan, all due three years after date. The debts evidenced by the promissory notes secured by the two mortgages above referred to were paid out of the proceeds of this mortgage. Mr. Nicklisch received his money, and immediately purchased $5,000 worth of the new notes.

The'remaining notes evidencing the new loan, aggregating $9,000, were, within a few weeks after the transaction was closed, sold by the mortgagee as follows: To Henry J. Ufen, a $500 note; to C. E. Ahues, a *313 $1,000 note; to G. Kreutziger (the father of plaintiff Charlotte Brydges, to whom the note was assigned in May, 1927), a $500 note; to Andrew Willers (from whom his son, A. J. Willers, derives title), a note for $1,000; to Henry and Theresa Bune, three notes aggregating $3,500; to Henry Auernheimer (predecessor in interest of plaintiff Henry G. Auernheimer), a note for $1,000; and to Adele Edwards (from whom plaintiff George W. Smith, whom Miss Edwards married after purchasing this note, derives his title), a note for $1,500.

All of these notes were endorsed “Without Recourse” by the Mehlhorn Co., which never executed any assignment of the mortgage securing the notes, the mortgage standing of record at all times in the name of the original mortgagee. Mrs. Flynn continued to pay her interest to the Mehlhorn Co., and when the notes secured by the mortgage became due October 25, 1925, it was agreed between Mrs. Flynn and August Mehlhorn, Jr., that the indebtedness should continue to run, which it did, without any definite understanding, until May, 1930, Mrs. Flynn paying her interest to Mehlhorn Co. every three months.

Tower Savings Bank was organized as a banking corporation during the month of September, 1929, Mr. Mehlhorn being one of the incorporators, a stockholder and one of the directors. Early in April, 1930, Mr. Mehlhorn suggested that the bank make a new loan in the sum of $14,000 on Mrs. Flynn’s property, and after investigation, the bank agreed to loan $10,000 thereon. • This matter was explained to Mrs. Flynn, Mr. Mehl-horn stating that he would accept a second mortgage on the property in the sum of $4,000 to make up the difference between the amount which the bank would loan and the amount due on the old notes.

*314 Mrs. Flynn then, at Mr. Mehlhorn’s suggestion, executed an application to the bank for a loan in the sum of $10,000, pursuant to which the bank prepared a note for that amount, together with a mortgage securing the same. These documents Mrs. Flynn signed in Mr. Mehlhorn’s office and delivered to him, he turning them over to the hank. June 7, 1930, the bank sent its check to the Mehlhorn Co. for $9,856.56, being the amount of the $10,000 loan, less expenses. Four days later, Mrs. Flynn executed to the Mehlhorn Co. seven promissory notes aggregating $4,500, together with a second mortgage on the property securing payment thereof.

As part of its investigation of the proposed loan, the hank secured a report on the title of the property, which, among other matters, showed that neither the $12,500 mortgage nor the $2,000 mortgage had ever been satisfied of record. The report also, of course, showed unsatisfied the $14,000 mortgage. The report did not indicate the number of notes secured by these mortgages (the mortgages themselves, however, containing this information), and the hank assumed that the notes secured by the mortgage were all owned by the Mehlhorn Co., the original mortgagee. When the bank transmitted the proceeds of the $10,000 loan to Mehlhorn Co., it requested that company to satisfy of record the three prior mortgages, which Mr. Mehlhorn promised to do, hut never accomplished. Mrs. Flynn and the hank both assumed that all the previous notes had been paid and the mortgages satisfied, and that the entire indebtedness against the property consisted of the hank’s mortgage for $10,000 and the Mehlhorn Co. ’s second mortgage for $4,500.

During the month of August, 1930, plaintiff Carl Nickliseh called at Mrs. Flynn’s home, taking with him *315 Mrs. Flynn’s notes aggregating $5,000, being a portion of the notes secured by the $14,000 mortgage, and requested payment thereof; this being, according to Mrs. Flynn’s testimony, the first information she had of the fact that any of her notes were owned by any person other than the Mehlhorn Co. She at once took the matter up with Mehlhorn, who promised to adjust the matter, putting her off for a few days, when he absconded. It is not contended by any of the persons who purchased Mrs. Flynn’s notes from the Mehlhorn Co. (with the exception of Mr. Nicklisch) that information was ever conveyed to Mrs. Flynn that her notes had been transferred.

Shortly after Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
11 P.2d 1066, 168 Wash. 310, 1932 Wash. LEXIS 842, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicklisch-v-flynn-wash-1932.