Porter v. Wold

1912 OK 472, 127 P. 432, 34 Okla. 253, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 391
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 25, 1912
Docket2046
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1912 OK 472 (Porter v. Wold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Porter v. Wold, 1912 OK 472, 127 P. 432, 34 Okla. 253, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 391 (Okla. 1912).

Opinion

Opinion by

ROSSER, C.

This suit was brought in the district court of Alfalfa county by A. Ommundson against Anna S. Wold and others to foreclose a mortgage given by Mrs. Wold to Ommundson. After the suit was brought Jessie M. Porter intervened in the action, and alleged that she was the holder of a note for $1,000, and of a mortgage given to secure it, both executed by Mrs. Wold and her husband to the Winne Mortgage Company. The forms of application for the loan were identical with those set out in the case of Bell v. Riggs, post, 127 Pac. 427. The note is as follows:

“$1,000.00. Alva, Okla. Ter., Feb. 25, 1907. Ten years after date, for value received, I promise to pay to the order of the Winne Mortgage Company one thousand and no-100 ($1,000.00) dollars, at the office of said company in Wichita, Kansas, with interest at the rate of 6J2 per centum per annum from date until, paid, payable annually on March first of each year excepting the last installment, which shall be due and payable with the principal. 'If this note is sent to Waldron State Bank, at Waldron, Kansas, or to any other bank, for collection, I agree to pay exchange and collection expenses, and this note shall not be deemed paid until the funds are actually received by the payee. Interest coupons are hereto attached representing the interest from date of maturity, which with the principal note are secured by a mortgage deed of even date. If any installment of interest be not paid at maturity, this principal note and all interest due thereon shall become due and payable, at the option of the holder of this note. This note is executed upon the condition that partial payment in any amount in one year, will be received at any time, at the office of said company, in Wichita, Kansas, and that *255 the interest will be rebated from the date of such payments. After five years. In event of bona fide sale the company will release the mortgage upon payment in full of principal and interest accrued plus additional twelve months interest, provided the purchaser will not assume the mortgage and the company cannot agree with him in a reconstruction of the terms.”

The facts of the two cases are substantially the same, except in the following particulars: The application for the loan showed that the mortgage was executed to obtain money to pay another mortgage, and also showed that the land was purchased from Ommundson by the Wolds, and that they still owed him $1,000.00. The application was delivered to' Miss Porter at the time she bought the note and mortgage. The assignment of the note and mortgage in this case did not purport to reserve any of the interest, but carried the entire property in the note. No money was paid or offered the Wolds or Ommundson in this case. Miss Porter purchased the note and mortgage through W. W. Burnett, who was acting as her agent to make the purchase. She gave him her check for their purchase price, and he paid the Winne Mortgage Company. The money was never transferred to the account of Winne & Winne. The evidence shows that the Winne Mortgage Company was a corporation of which Scott E. Winne was manager, and that Scott E. Winne was manager of Winne & Winne, and probably sole owner, and that the Winne Mortgage Company and Winne & Winne used-the same office and the same clerical force. The trial court ordered .the note and mortgage canceled, and Miss Porter has appealed.

It is the contention of counsel for Miss Porter that, as Winne & Winne and the Winne Mortgage Company were both managed by Scott E. Winne, the appointment of Winne & Winne as agent was equivalent to the appointment of the Winne Mortgage Company, and thát', when the money was paid to the Winne Mortgage Company, it was really paid to Winne & Winne. In other words, it is the contention that Winne & Winne and the Winne Mortgage Company was the same company, that Scott E. Winne acted for both, and that in the language of the witness Burnett, who acted for Miss Porter in buying the notes, “he *256 acted in all positions interchangeably.” This is a correct statement of his position. At least, he was trying to occupy all positions interchangeably.

The first, second, and third paragraph?' of the application are as follows:

“(1) Application: I, Anna S. Wold of Mendon, Okla., hereby make application to the Winne Mortgage Company for a loan of one thousand dollars for ten years, at ’6J4 per cent, interest payable annually the first of March, at the office of the company - in Wichita, Kansas, but request interest' coupons sent to Waldron State Bank in Waldron, Kas., for collection at my expense as to exchange and charges, and at my risk until payments made are actually received by the company at its office.
“(2) Payments: I apply for the privilege of prepayment in any one year of any amount, at any time, privilege to pay all after five years.
“(3) Security: I offer as security for this loan a first lien upon real estate situated in the township of Parson, county of Wood, and state of Okla. and described as follows: In the event of a bona fide sale the company will release the mortgage, upon payment in full of principal and interest accrued plus an additional twelve months interest, providing the purchaser will not assume the mortgage and the company cannot agree with him in a reconstruction of the terms. N. E. %. section 29 township 28 range 8 containing 160 acres.”

The thirty-first paragraph, by which it is claimed an agency was created in Winne & Winne, is as follows:

“I hereby constitute and appoint A'Vinne & Winne, of Wichita, Kansas, my agents, to procure the necessary abstracts of title to the land, to show a clear and unencumbered title, in fee simple, thereto, at my expense, and to charge me for the same, and at my expense to pay off all liens on said lands and to send the money or draft to make such payments at my . risk. I hereby authorize them to procure the loan herein applied for, from the company to which this application is made, or from any other source from which they can get the sum herein applied for, on the terms contained in this application.”

The application was primarily to the Winne Mortgage Company. The intention of the application was to get a loan from them. Mrs. Wold was applying to them for the money. No other fair construction can be given the application. By no rea *257 sonable interpretation can it be said that the application meant that she was to execute a note and mortgage to the Winne Mortgage Company’which would then be sold by them to some other person or corporation, and the money thus obtained. The language is: “Make application to the Winne Mortgage Company for a loan of one thousand dollars. * * * I offer as security for this loan a first lien upon real estate situated,” etc. There is nothing here indicating that it was the intention that the note was to be sold. The application was for a loan upon the security mentioned. The paragraph which is claimed created the agency in Winne & Winne does not authorize them to sell the note and mortgage.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1912 OK 472, 127 P. 432, 34 Okla. 253, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porter-v-wold-okla-1912.