People's State Bank v. Smith

231 N.W. 141, 120 Neb. 29, 1930 Neb. LEXIS 160
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 12, 1930
DocketNo. 26933
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 231 N.W. 141 (People's State Bank v. Smith) 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
People's State Bank v. Smith, 231 N.W. 141, 120 Neb. 29, 1930 Neb. LEXIS 160 (Neb. 1930).

Opinion

Thomsen, District Judge.

This action is brought to recover on notes signed by defendant and her husband. The debt was originally that of the husband. He died August 27, 1927. Eleven days after his death the present action was begun. The defendant, the wife, had acquired some interest in a relative’s estate in Nebraska. The proceedings were begun by attachment of the wife’s interest in this Nebraska property. The parties were, and still are, residents of Iowa. The defendant entered a general appearance.

[31]*31The husband owed the plaintiff $7,731.30, unsecured, which was past due June 4, 1925. On that date, in consideration of an extension of time for payment, a new note and a mortgage on Smith’s property were signed by both Smith and his wife. This note, when eleven months past due, May 3, 1927, was renewed by the husband and wife, in executing a new note and mortgage for the principal sum, due May 3, 1928, and, in addition, executing, for past due interest, two notes signed by both, one for $400, due June 1, 1927, and the other for $577.95, due August 1, 1927. At the time of the delivery of the renewal note and mortgage, interest on a first mortgage and taxes on the land were past due and delinquent. The interest, $378.15, the plaintiff, to protect its security, paid to the first mortgagee June -23, 1927. The delinquent taxes, aggregating $720.57, were paid by the plaintiff August 10, 1927.

At the time of filing the petition only the two interest notes were due, but the plaintiff claimed maturity of the principal note and1 immediate reimbursement of the other items by reason of an acceleration clause in the mortgage.

In her answer the defendant claims that she received no part of the consideration, signed the notes and mortgage merely as the wife of the original debtor and “for the sole and only purpose of waiving and releasing her contingent right of dower and homestead in and to the real estate aforesaid and in order that said contingent interests might be subjected to the satisfaction of said indebtedness in the event of the failure of her husband to pay the same,” and generally denies the plaintiff’s claims. In substance, the reply of the plaintiff is a general denial. The statutes of Iowa, pleaded by plaintiff, and the effect of which is admitted by the defendant, make her engagements as binding as if she were single. Code of Iowa 1924, sec. 10466; Spafford v. Warren, 47 Ia. 47; Hinman v. Treinen, 196 Ia. 701.

The pleadings and evidence show three defenses offered —want of consideration, immaturity of the principal debt, and nonliability by reason of the purpose for which the defendant’s signature was needed and given.

[32]*32That the defendant received valuable consideration for signing the notes and mortgage, under the conditions, is abundantly established by authority. It is settled law that a consideration is valid though it move to a third party. Restatement of the Law of Contracts by the American Law Institute, sec. 75 (2) ; 1 Williston, Contracts, sec. 113; Violett v. Patton, 5 Cranch (U. S.) 142; 13 C. J. 325. “Value is any consideration sufficient to support a simple contract. An antecedent or preexisting debt constitutes value, and is deemed such whether the instrument is payable on demand or at a future time.” Comp. St. 1922, sec. 4636. The inquiry need be only whether the defendant’s husband, the third party, received benefit. Smith v. Spaulding, 40 Neb. 339; Buffalo County Nat. Bank v. Sharpe, 40 Neb. 123; Watts v. Gantt, 42 Neb. 869; Grand Island Banking Co. v. Wright, 53 Neb. 574; Wilson v. Neu, 1 Neb. (Unof.) 42; First State Bank of Herrick v. Conant, 117 Neb. 562. And in Iowa, where the parties still reside and where the mortgage and notes were made, when the intention of the parties is that the wife should be personally bound when she joins her husband in a promissory note, extension of time for payment of the husband’s debt is sufficient consideration to accomplish that object. American Commercial & Savings Bank v. Kramer, 206 Ia. 49; Commercial Savings Bank v. Carey, 207 Ia. 1060.

The petition shows, and the evidence more clearly establishes, that the causes claimed for accelerating maturity of the debt existed at the time the new notes and mortgage were taken. The taxes paid were for the larger part redemption of tax sales made December 6, 1926, the delinquent taxes of 1925, and the remainder the taxes for 1926, the latter, under Nebraska law, being delinquent May 1, 1927. Comp. St. 1922, sec. 6002. The presumption obtains, in the absence of proof, that the law of Iowa is the same as in Nebraska. Haggin v. Haggin, 35 Neb. 375; Fitzgerald v. Fitzgerald & Mallory Construction Co., 41 Neb. 374; Chapman v. Brewer, 43 Neb. 890; Cook v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co., 78 Neb. 64; Twamley, Son & Co. v. Chicago, G. W. R. Co., 111 Neb. 311. All these delin[33]*33quencies occurred during the time the former mortgage was in force, and information about which was available through records, or inquiry of defendant, at the time the present mortgage was taken. The delinquent interest due to the first mortgage must have been known to the plaintiff. Payment of other delinquent interest had been made by the plaintiff on three different occasions before the present notes were given. These are the causes claimed for acceleration. In view of the prior business relations of the parties and the circumstances, the intention of the parties must be construed to be that the causes for accelerating maturity must arise subsequent to the execution of the papers. If any doubt would exist as to this, the doubt must be resolved in favor of the defendant. The papers were prepared -by the plaintiff; the defendant had no choice in the language .used. Flory v. Supreme Tribe of Ben Hur, 98 Neb. 160; 4 Page, Contracts, sec. 2054. In considerating the mortgage alone, the clause, “if, however, any of these conditions are not complied with, or if there is found hereafter to exist any lien on said realty prior to this mortgage,” must mean, in an interpretation most favorable to defendant, that the causes which would accelerate maturity of the obligation must not exist when, but must arise after, the mortgage is given. •

The interest on the first mortgage and delinquent taxes, paid by the plaintiff, became charges in favor of the plaintiff and against the mortgagors by the terms of the mortgage. But for the mortgage the amounts so paid would constitute mere irrecoverable voluntary payments. A search of the mortgage fails to reveal any right of immediate reimbursement. Such payments became an additional obligation which the mortgage secured, a part of the original debt, and became due when the original debt would become due. The maturity of the original debt would ordinarily be accelerated under thei terms of the mortgage upon the happening of the events we have detailed, but because of the circumstances do not, as we have found, constitute causes for acce’eration. The principal debt is not due; and, the added obligation having lost its founda[34]*34tion for maturity, the payments made cannot be recovered until the principal debt is due.

However, the question of immaturity should not arise, the plaintiff claims, since the defendant failed to take advantage of it by a plea in abatement. Most of the facts recited above are apparent from the pleadings, sufficient, at least, to raise doubt about maturity.

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Bluebook (online)
231 N.W. 141, 120 Neb. 29, 1930 Neb. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoples-state-bank-v-smith-neb-1930.