Purity Maid Products Co. v. American Bank & Trust Co.

14 N.E.2d 755, 105 Ind. App. 541, 1938 Ind. App. LEXIS 131
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 10, 1938
DocketNo. 15,785.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 14 N.E.2d 755 (Purity Maid Products Co. v. American Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Purity Maid Products Co. v. American Bank & Trust Co., 14 N.E.2d 755, 105 Ind. App. 541, 1938 Ind. App. LEXIS 131 (Ind. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Kime, J.

— This was an action by an amended complaint in one paragraph filed by appellee, seeking judgment against appellants upon certain promissory notes and for foreclosure of a certain mortgage executed by appellants in favor of appellee upon certain real estate and personal property, which mortgage was given to secure the payment of said notes.

The amended complaint alleged that the Department of Financial -Institutions, by virtue of Chapter 40 of the Acts of 1933, had elected to prosecute this action in the name of the plaintiff American Bank and Trust Company; that the defendant Purity Maid Products Company, by its eleven promissory notes, numbered 140 to *543 150, promised to pay plaintiff $3,311.00; that at the time said notes were delivered to the plaintiff by the defendant Purity Maid Products Company, the other defendants had endorsed each of said notes; that each of said notes was for the sum of $301.00, bore interest at eight per cent after maturity and were all past due and unpaid at the time of the bringing of this action; that the defendant, Purity Maid Products Company, to secure the payment of said notes, executed to plaintiff its mortgage on certain real estate and personal property; that there was due and unpaid on said notes $3,435.00, plus attorneys’ fees of $500.00 and there was a práyer that said mortgage be foreclosed and the real estate sold to pay plaintiff’s judgment. Copies of the respective notes and mortgage were made exhibits to the complaint.

To this amended complaint defendants separately and severally answered in three paragraphs: (1) general denial; (2) “The defendants, for separate andtseveral amended second paragraph of answer to the plaintiff’s amended complaint herein, aver:

“That on the 28th day of March, 1921, and at the time the notes and mortgage shed on in the plaintiff’s amended complaint herein, were executed, the defendant Purity Maid Products Company was indebted to the plaintiff American Bank and Trust Company in the sum of $30,000 for moneys which had theretofore and during the months of December, 1920, and January, February, March, 1921, been advanced by said Bank to these defendants.
“That said sum of money was advanced by said Bank for use and was used by these defendants in the purchase of real estate located at the northeast corner of Twelfth and Market Streets in the City of New Albany, Indiana, and in remodeling and building additions to the improvements located thereon, and in equiping the *544 creamery plant located thereon, and paying other indebtedness of the defendants in connection with said creamery plant.
“That said sum of money was advanced by said Bank as aforesaid under an oral agreement between the said Bank and the defendants Irvin Scharf and Carl H. Thromarshaus, made between them and said Bank, during the month of December, 1920, and the exact date of which these defendants can not state, and in which agreement said Bank agreed to advance money for the aforesaid purposes from time to time as required, with the further agreement that any and all sums of money so advanced should be evidence by a series of notes amortized over a period of time to be secured, by a lien on the property so purchased and improved, and the parties further agreed that interest should be charged on the moneys so advanced at the rate of a fraction over 4% per annum.
“That no notes or other evidences qf indebtedness were executed by any of the defendants evidencing the moneys so advanced, as aforesaid, until on or about the 28th day of March, 1921, at which time said bank prepared and tendered to these defendants for execution a series of notes 150 in number, each for the principal sum of $301.00, one maturing on the 28th day of each succeeding month until all had matured, and which said notes said Bank represented to these defendants were executed in accordance with .said verbal agreement. Whereupon these defendants executed said notes, under the belief that they were prepared in accordance with said verbal understanding.
“That since the principal amount of such indebtedness and interest to accrue thereon on the unpaid portions thereof from time to time was amortized in said notes over a period of 150 months, the calculations of the amounts which should be paid each month in order to *545 pay off such indebtedness, together with the interest on the amount remaining due and unpaid from time to time, involved a long series of mathematical calculations, and that these defendants relying upon the promise and agreement of said Bank to calculate into said notes interest at the rate of a fraction over 4% per annum as promised and agreed as aforesaid, and believing at the time of the execution of said notes that interest on the unpaid balances had been calculated at a rate of a fraction over 4% per annum, executed said notes without making the calculations necessary to determine whether the amount of the principal of said notes represented the money actually furnished by said Bank with interest at the rate agreed upon in said verbal agreement.
“That within a week or ten days after the execution of said notes aforesaid, the exact, date of which these defendants can not now state, these defendants discovered for the first time that interest had been calculated and included in said notes at a rate of approximately 8 % per annum, instead of a fraction over four per cent per annum, as had theretofore been agreed upon between the parties, and immediately called the attention of said Bank to the discrepancy; that thereupon said Bank represented to these defendants that ordinarily and in case of a loan of the character involved, the lending bank would require the borrower to borrow approximately double the amount of money required and leave approximately one-half the sum so borrowed on deposit, and that the agreement to charge interest at the rate of a little over a fraction over four per cent per annum, was predicated upon such an arrangement, and that since these defendants were not being required to borrow more money than actually required and were not being required to leave any money on deposit with *546 said bank, interest had been calculated at the rate included in the series of notes.

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Bluebook (online)
14 N.E.2d 755, 105 Ind. App. 541, 1938 Ind. App. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/purity-maid-products-co-v-american-bank-trust-co-indctapp-1938.