Security Co. v. Kent
This text of 48 N.W. 1047 (Security Co. v. Kent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
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“Smith & Tennant, Westfield, N. Y.
“Deab Sibs: — Inclosed find sat. piece of Michael Ratigan, which please have executed and return. The present owner wants to pay. Here also is Pat J. Collins’ app. for one thousand dollars, five years, on one hundred and twenty-one acres in Dallas county. This is a good app. Have Kent take it with the balance due him on G-albreath cert, and collection on Ratigan loan above.”
May 5, 1885, Creighton forwarded to Smith & Tennant, for Kent, the Collins note for one thousand dollars, with a stated account showing that the amount had been applied therefor from the Ratigan collection and the G-albreath certificate. No money was ever paid by Creighton to the plaintiff or Collins or Kent, and the only theory on which a consideration for the note can be sustained is that the money was so placed in the hands of Creighton, as the agent of the plaintiff or Collins, that Collins is bound thereby. None dispute that the intention was that the money from Kent was to be applied to the payment of the plaintiff’s mortgage, and, if the money actually came into Creighton’s hands to be thus applied, there is much reason to think that fact [35]*35would be conclusive as against Collins; for the agency in that respect is not questioned. But we think the fact is otherwise. The money on the Ratigan claim had all been collected before the Collins application was made, and some of it for two or three years. The G-albreath certificate was also received before the application, and applied by Creighton to his own use some weeks before. Creighton was, during this time, making base misrepresentations to Kent or his agents as to the condition of matters in his hands, and it quite clearly appears from the evidence that, before the application was made by Collins, Creighton had embezzled the certificate and the collections from the Ratigan loan,' and that no part of the proceeds therefrom was in his hands at the date of the Collins note to Kent. This fact being established, Creighton never held the money as the agent of Collins or the plaintiff, nor was it ever placed in his hands for that purpose. That Kent supposed the money was there could make no difference. If the Collins application had not been made, Kent's situation would be the same as to Creighton. At the time of the application Creighton had already applied the money to his own use, and became in. a short time an absconding debtor. The loss had actually occurred to Kent, though unknown, before Creighton became the agent for Collins to make the loan. It is, then, a fact that Kent paid no consideration whatever for the Collins note. It is said that the note and mortgage are an acknowledgment of the receipt of the money, and the burden is with Collins to show why the money did not come into the hands of Creighton. Conceding the burden to be thus placed, we think the testimony abundant to show that fact. In truth, it is hardly open to question, from a fair consideration of the evidence. This view accords with the finding of the district court, and is conclusive as to the claim of the executors.
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48 N.W. 1047, 83 Iowa 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/security-co-v-kent-iowa-1891.