Seeley v. Security National Bank

235 P. 976, 40 Idaho 574, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 50
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedApril 13, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 235 P. 976 (Seeley v. Security National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seeley v. Security National Bank, 235 P. 976, 40 Idaho 574, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 50 (Idaho 1925).

Opinion

*577 TAYLOR, J.

This action was brought by appellant See-ley to contest and enjoin the foreclosure by respondent Security National Bank of a chattel mortgage upon a crop raised on the lands involved in a contract of purchase between appellant and respondents Hendry and wife. Respondent Morrell is the sheriff who was proceeding to foreclose the mortgage under notice and sale, being in possession of the crop after it was cut and harvested.

Respondents answered denying title in the appellant, setting out certain facts with relation to the loan and mortgage and its execution, and alleging that the appellant was es-topped by the facts and by his conduct, acts and representations from claiming any interest in the crop adverse or superior to the lien of the Security National Bank, and from questioning, denying or contesting the validity of the chattel mortgage. The court found in favor of the respondent bank upon all questions, and entered judgment against the appellant. The appeal is from that judgment.

Appellant’s assigned errors may be grouped as follows: (1) error in reserving rulings upon contested points, and in not thereafter making any ruling upon the points reserved;

(2) error in the admission of evidence; (3) errors in the findings of fact and conclusions of law; and (4) insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the findings and conclusions.

Most of the material facts are either admitted or there is a direct and substantial conflict of the evidence with respect thereto. As to the evidence in which there is a conflict, the court might well have found, as it did, in favor of respondents, and those findings will not be disturbed. (Smith v. Faris-Kesl Construction Co., 27 Ida. 407, 150 Pac. 25; Olson v. Caufield, 32 Ida. 308, 182 Pac. 527.) For a full understanding of the case and to make a concise statement, we will combine those facts found by the court upon evidence in which there is no. controversy and those which might readily be found from the conflicting evidence in favor of respondents.

*578 The appellant had purchased this land under a contract by which he had agreed to assume and pay what may be called the Naser mortgage on the property. On May 15, 1920, he sold it upon contract to respondent Hendry. By the terms of the contract, Hendry paid $5,000 in cash, and agreed to pay $5,000 on October 27, 1920, $5,000 on October 27, 1921, and $2,000 on October 27, 1922, and to assume and pay the Naser mortgage, then amounting to $9,000, upon which a payment of $2,000 would become due January 1, 1921. Time was made “an essential element,” and forfeiture, at the option of Seeley, was provided for in the event of default on the part of the vendee, with a further recital that “ .... Upon the forfeiture of this agreement as aforesaid the relation of landlord and tenant shall immediately exist between the said parties hereto.”

This agreement, with a deed to the premises, was placed in escrow with the respondent Security National Bank on May 15, 1920. The respondent Hendry went into immediate possession of the lands and personal property, and planted some thirty acres of wheat in the fall of 1920. "When the $5,000 payment became due October 27, 1920, Hendry was unable to pay the amount, but did pay $1,900 about November 1, 1920. On November 19, 1920, Hendry and Seeley went to the bank and drew down the contract and deed, and. they were turned over to Seeley. There is a conflict of evidence as to the reasons for this, Seeley testifying that Hendry stated that he could not meet the payments and that they might as well draw the papers down. Hendry testified that Seeley assigned as the reason for taking the papers down that thereby the Utah-Idaho Land & Investment Company, brokers in the sale, would be prevented from gaining possession of them and enforcing payment of their claim for a balance due, which payment, it was stated in the agreement, should be made to them from moneys paid thereunder. Appellant contends that this was a revocation and termination of the contract.

Seeley and Hendry negotiated over a new contract to be drawn in such a way that Hendry could, by reduction of the *579 annual payments, meet them. These negotiations extended at least from November, 1920, through the month of February, 1921. They talked a number of times of the payment becoming due to Naser on January 1, 1921. Seeley suggested that he would write Naser -and see if he could get an extension of time on the mortgage. Hendry received a letter from Naser, and told Seeley in the month of December, 1920, that Naser would insist on his payment, and that he (Hendry) was negotiating at the bank for a loan. Hendry said to Seeley, “We can get the money at the bank on next year’s crop,” and Seeley replied, “If you can raise it, raise it. I cannot get any money. ’ ’ When the payment of $2,000 came due upon the Naser mortgage in January, 1921, Hendry was unable to pay it, and so was Seeley. In the early part "of January, 1921, one West, an officer of the bank, came to the ranch with Seeley and walked over it. West had never been there before. Later that evening Seeley told Hendry, “Mr. West is going to let us have some money.” Hendry answered, “Now, Max, that means a crop mortgage if we get the money,” and Seeley replied, “Get the money.”

Seeley and Hendry went to the bank together. Seeley asked one Haynie, then cashier who had assumed his duties - only about January 1, 1921, if he was going to take care of this loan to Hendry. He continued to talk to Haynie while Hendry and one Housman, -president of the bank, talked in the same room but out of their hearing. Housman an- „ nouneed that as West had commenced the loan he had better make it. The loan, in the sum of $2,175, was made shortly thereafter and on January 21, 1921, to Hendry by West, acting for the bank, -and was secured by the mortgage in question, executed by Hendry and wife, and covering the -following crops of 1921: “30 acres growing wheat, 60 acres growing alfalfa, 100 acres wheat, 10 acres barley, 10 acres oats to be planted, this spring, 1921.....”

'Two thousand dollars of this money was immediately paid by Hendry to* Naser upon the Naser mortgage, the $175 being interest on the chattel mortgage which bore no interest until due. Seeley knew that the money was borrowed and the *580 mortgage given, and that this money was paid upon the Naser mortgage.

On March 18, 1921, Seeley caused to be served upon Hendry a notice that he had failed to pay some $3,478, including interest, due upon the contract in October, 1920, and giving him five days in which to make the payment. Again, on March 28, 1921, Seeley caused to- be served another written notice reciting the previous notice and the failure of Hendry to make payment, and declaring the contract at an end. These notices did not pretend to declare a forfeiture of the contract for any default of Hendry occurring after the making' of the chattel mortgage. After the service of these notices, Seeley told Hendry to pay no attention to them; that they were a mere matter of form; that he could still live on the place; that what he (Seeley) wanted was possession; and that he would not turn Hendry out in the street if he would surrender the place back to him.

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Bluebook (online)
235 P. 976, 40 Idaho 574, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seeley-v-security-national-bank-idaho-1925.