Rock Island Plow Co. v. Cut Bank Implement Co.

53 P.2d 116, 101 Mont. 117, 1935 Mont. LEXIS 137
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1935
DocketNo. 7,445.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 53 P.2d 116 (Rock Island Plow Co. v. Cut Bank Implement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rock Island Plow Co. v. Cut Bank Implement Co., 53 P.2d 116, 101 Mont. 117, 1935 Mont. LEXIS 137 (Mo. 1935).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendants, the Cut Bank Implement Company, a copartnership consisting of Alfred Klein and Edward Murphy, and the copartners individually, have appealed from a judgment and decree of foreclosure entered against them and in favor of the plaintiff, the Rock Island Plow Company, a corporation.

The record discloses that prior to 1924 the defendants were indebted to the predecessor of the plaintiff, the Northern Rock Island Plow Company, in excess of $19,000, and had turned over to the creditor certain notes of a face value of approximately $16,000 as “collateral security” for the debt. On February 4, 1924, the debtor and creditor entered into a contract in writing whereby the indebtedness was reduced to $12,500, on conditions expressed, evidenced by six notes for $2,083.33 each, bearing interest at six per cent, and providing for an attorney’s fee of ten per cent, in case of suit. As security for the payment of these notes the defendants executed and delivered to the creditor a mortgage on three lots in Cut Bank on which their business establishment was located. These mortgage notes were made payable on the successive dates of November 15 and January 1, after date, the last falling due on November 15, 1927. Only the first of this series of notes having been paid in full, on April 21, 1934, the plaintiff, as assignee and holder thereof, brought action to recover on the five remaining notes and for the foreclosure of the mortgage, and, alleging the inadequacy of the security to satisfy the judgment, petitioned for the appointment of a receiver to take charge of the property and collect rent from a lessee of a building on one of the lots. No mention is made in the complaint of the collateral held at the time the notes and mortgage were executed. The complaint alleges that the defendants have not *120 paid the notes in suit, or any part thereof, except certain payments set up as made in the years 1930 and 1931.

On the filing of the complaint the court issued an order to show cause why a receiver should not be appointed, and, after a hearing on the order, appointed a receiver on May 23, 1934. No appeal was taken from the order appointing the receiver.

On July 1,1934, the defendants answered admitting the execution and delivery of the notes and mortgage, but denying indebtedness and denying the allegation of payments made on the notes. The answer then sets up a number of special defenses, without separately stating and numbering them, as follows: That three of the notes in suit, maturing, respectively, on January 1, 1925, November 15, 1925, and January 1, 1926, “are outlawed under the provisions of section 9029 of the Revised Codes for the year 1921, as this action was not commenced within eight years from the maturity date,” and that the defendants, and no one on their behalf, have ever made a payment thereon, either voluntary or otherwise, within the eight-year period; that the defendants delivered “approximately $14,000” worth of collateral to the plaintiff under promise that the plaintiff would use its best efforts to collect the collateral and thereby retire the notes in suit, and to keep the collateral notes alive by renewals, judgment, or otherwise, or, failing to do so, would return the collateral to the defendants within sufficient time to permit them to keep the notes alive; that no part of the collateral has been returned nor have the defendants been advised of collections made; nor have they received any credit for sums collected; and that it was the duty of the plaintiff “to exhaust the collateral and apply the same on the said notes set out in the complaint before resorting to the security set out in the complaint.” It is further alleged that, by failure to discharge the duties enumerated, the plaintiff has been guilty of gross negligence and laches to the damage of the defendants in the sum of $14,000, with interest for more than ten years ‘ ‘ and is estopped thereby from maintaining this action”; and that the obligation in suit has been “paid in full” by the delivery of the collateral notes and con *121 tracts, it being alleged that such notes were secured by mortgages and conditional sale contracts.

By reply the plaintiff alleges payments on specific dates, within eight years of the commencement of the action, on each of the notes in suit, made by the defendants, and sets up divers letters received within such period acknowledging the debt, and denies generally the allegations of the answer.

The cause was tried to the court, which, in disposing of the matter, made specific findings, closing with the general finding that “all of the allegations contained in plaintiff’s complaint and amended reply are true and correct, and all of the allegations contained in the answer of the defendants * * * are untrue or unsupported by competent evidence. ’ ’ The findings were followed by conclusions of law to the effect that none of the notes and no part of the debt were barred by the statute of limitations and that the plaintiff was not guilty of laches nor estopped from enforcing.its demands, and that the plaintiff was entitled to a judgment for the amounts found due and to a decree of foreclosure. Judgment and decree followed.

The defendants have made numerous assignments of error raising the questions hereinafter discussed. It is first asserted that the court erred in appointing the receiver. The proceedings for such appointment were had preliminary to, and in-pendent of, the trial; the order then made is specifically declared to be an appealable order (subd. 2, sec. 9731, Rev. Codes 1921), and, as this court may, on appeal from the judgment, review any intermediate order, except one ‘ ‘ from which an appeal might have been taken” (sec. 9750, Id.), we are without authority to consider this assignment. (Great Falls Meat Co. v. Jenkins, 33 Mont. 417, 84 Pac. 74; Little Horn State Bank v. Gross, 89 Mont. 472, 300 Pac. 277.)

It is contended that the court erred in depriving the defendants of the right of possession of the premises during the period of redemption. There is no merit in the contention; a mortgagor is entitled to such possession only when he occupies the premises “as a home for himself and family.” (Chap. 150, Laws of 1933.)

*122 On the situation of the parties with reference to the “collateral”: The delivery of the notes to the creditor for collection and application of the proceeds on the debt to which the notes are collateral security constitutes a pledge of the notes (Averill Machinery Co. v. Bain, 50 Mont. 512, 148 Pac. 334; Savage Tire Sales Co. v. Stuart, 61 Mont. 524, 203 Pac. 364), governed by the law applicable to a bailment for hire. Ordinary care only is required of such a bailee. (Shropshire v. Sidebottom, 30 Mont. 406, 76 Pac. 941.) Since the security so delivered is only collateral, the pledgee may waive it, and, without first exhausting the subject of the pledge, maintain an action for the recovery of the amount of the debt, without surrendering or tendering the pledged property, and it is not necessary that the judgment obtained in such action provide that the subject of the pledge be surrendered upon satisfaction thereof. (21 Cal. Jur.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 P.2d 116, 101 Mont. 117, 1935 Mont. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rock-island-plow-co-v-cut-bank-implement-co-mont-1935.