Patrick Land Co. v. Leavenworth

60 N.W. 954, 42 Neb. 715, 1894 Neb. LEXIS 488
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1894
DocketNo. 4580
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 60 N.W. 954 (Patrick Land Co. v. Leavenworth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patrick Land Co. v. Leavenworth, 60 N.W. 954, 42 Neb. 715, 1894 Neb. LEXIS 488 (Neb. 1894).

Opinion

Irvine, C.

William Allen began this action to foreclose a mortgage made by the defendants George W. Melntire and wife to tbe Patrick Land Company, conveying lot 9, block 110, Dundee Place, an addition to tbe city of Omaha, and securing notes amounting to $1,000. This mortgage was [717]*717dated August 1, 1889, and was recorded August 15, 1889, at 4:30 P. M. It was alleged that Allen had become the owner of the notes secured by the mortgage. During the pendency of the action, the Patrick Land Company having become repossessed of the notes, was substituted for Allen as plaintiff. The Kimball-Champ Investment Company filed an answer setting up a mortgage on the property, dated August 1, 1889, and recorded August 13, 1889. The Kimball-Champ Investment Company asked to have this mortgage declared a first lien but did not seek a foreclosure. A. D. Paddock, by answer, set up a mortgage from Melntire and wife to the defendant Partridge and transferred to Paddock, and claimed that said mortgage was superior to all liens except that of the Kimball-Champ Investment Company. Partridge, Wahlstrom & Berglund and the Hussey & Day Company claimed mechanics’ liens for work done and material furnished for erecting a building on the property after the mortgages were recorded. The decree of the district court established the investment company’s mortgage as a first lien, the Paddock mortgage as a second, the Patrick Land Company’s as a third, and the mechanics’ liens as inferior to the three mortgages. From this decree the mechanics’ lienors appeal, claiming that the court erred in subjecting their liens to the mortgages, and the Hussey & Day Company and Wahlstrom & Berglund also claim a right to a personal judgment against the defendant Leavenworth, which was denied by the district court. We shall first consider the question of priorities.

The pleadings and evidence disclose the following state of facts: An arrangement was made by the Patrick Land Company to sell the lot in question, together with nineteen others, to Melntire, Leavenworth in all things claiming to represent Melntire. Their true relations will be referred to on the other branch of the appeal. Melntire was to pay $5,000 in cash and give to the Patrick Land Company [718]*718notes and mortgages to secure the remainder of the purchase money. The mortgages to the land company it was agreed should be subject to a mortgage to be secured for the purpose of obtaining funds for building. Leavenworth piade arrangements with Kimball, Champ & Ryan, acting as loan brokers, for a loan of $44,000, to be secured by mortgages of $2,200 upon each of the twenty lots. This loan having been negotiated from the investment company and all the instruments ready for delivery the secretary of the land company accompanied Leavenworth to the office of Kimball, Champ &Ryan, where Mr. Ryan paid $5,000 directly to the secretary of the land company, who then delivered to him the deeds for the lots. Delivery was then made of the other instruments. There is no evidence that there was any prearrangement between the land company and any one else that the $5,000 should be paid from this source. Indeed, the evidence is positive that the land company did not know in advance of the payment where the money was coming from. There can be no doubt, however, that when the transaction occurred the secretary did know that the $5,000 was a portion of the loan which was to be secured by the mortgage prior to the land company’s. The mortgage to the investment company did not specify the purpose for which the loan was made. Mclntire did, however, contemporaneously with the loan, contract with the investment company to erect within ninety days a two-st.ory dwelling on each of the lots, the contract reciting that the lots were insufficient security for the loan and that the contract was .made for the purpose of fully securing the investment company. In this contract it was agreed that the investment company should pay to Mclntire the amount of his loan in two payments,, one-half when the buildings were roofed, the other one-half upon their completion, reserving sufficient to protect the investment company from liens. As a matter of fact the investment company seems to have paid out a large portion of the loan on orders given [719]*719by Leavenworth to the various contractors, but there is nothing in the contracts of the investment company either requiring or empowering it to see that the loan was applied for the purpose of building. On this state of facts the appellants claim priority both as to the investment company and to the land company, urging the same arguments advanced by the appellants in the case of Hoagland v. Lowe, 39 Neb., 397. The facts of the two eases are so similar that every question presented in Hoagland v. Loioe is properly presented by this record. So far as the questions involved in the former case are concerned we shall not restate them or discuss them anew. Suffice it to say that the rules announced in that case are here adhered to. We can discover but two points on which differences could be suggested in the two cases. The first is that while in Hoagland v. Lowe Mrs. Lowe had no knowledge that the payment upon the lots made to her came out of the loan, there is no doubt that in this case the Patrick Land Company, although without a previous arrangement to that effect, did know when it received the payment that it was a portion of the loan. The second point of difference is that in Hoagland v. Lowe reliance was placed' by the lender upon the lot alone as security. There was nothing more than a verbal promise to build. In this case there can be no doubt that the land company and the investment company both had contracts with Mclntire requiring that houses should be built, and .it was understood that the loan by the investment company was negotiated for the purpose of building, but there was no contract between any parties requiring the money to be so used. Do these distinctions render inapplicable the rule of priorities in Hoagland v. Lowe? We think not. The mere knowledge of the parties that the owner had in view the obtaining of funds to build when he negotiated the loan did not impose upon them the duty of seeing that the loan was applied to that purpose; nor did either mortgagee ever undertake any such duty. There [720]*720was no appropriation of the fund for that purpose by the contract, and if the mechanics obtained any right to have the fund distributed for that purpose it must have been by facts constituting an estoppel. It is very probable that if the investment company had led the mechanics to rely upon its seeing to the application of the loan for' the purpose of their payment, and if the mechanics so relying had entered into their contracts or performed work thereunder and then the investment company had disbursed a portion of the loan for other purposes, it might be estopped from setting up its mortgage as against the mechanics to the extent of the funds so misappropriated. But such are not the facts of this case. It does not appear that either the Hussey & Hay Company or Wahlstrom & Berglund, in making their contracts or doing their work, placed any reliance upon the fact that the loan had been secured. On the contrary, it does appear, as will be hereafter stated, that they advanced credit in reliance on other facts, or supposed facts. It does not appear that they even had any knowledge of the loan when their contracts were made or their work begun. Partridge did know of the loan, and undoubtedly did contract relying on being paid therefrom, but such reliance was due entirely to the statements of Leavenworth.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 N.W. 954, 42 Neb. 715, 1894 Neb. LEXIS 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patrick-land-co-v-leavenworth-neb-1894.