Smith v. Wallace National Bank

150 P. 21, 27 Idaho 441, 1915 Ida. LEXIS 77
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJune 1, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 150 P. 21 (Smith v. Wallace 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
Smith v. Wallace National Bank, 150 P. 21, 27 Idaho 441, 1915 Ida. LEXIS 77 (Idaho 1915).

Opinion

MORGAN, J.

— Since the appeal in this case was taken the respondent, Mary A. Smith, died. Her death has been suggested of record and by stipulation of the parties Nora Smith, her executrix, has been substituted as respondent.

This is an action commenced by Mary A. Smith against the Wallace National Bank and H. F. Samuels, president thereof, appellants, and against D. E. Keys, vice-president, F. C. Norbeck, cashier, and Thomas McCabe, assistant cashier of said bank, for damages for failure to record a certain mortgage given to secure the payment of a promissory note for $3,000 due to her and for procuring the same to be released when recorded, whereby her security was lost and said prom[445]*445issory note became valueless. Norbeek failed to answer or otherwise appear in the case and the trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the other defendants. An order was entered granting a new trial as to the bank and Samuels from which order this appeal is prosecuted.

Norbeek, who was a nephew of Mrs. Smith by marriage, on about June 1, 1908, visited her at her home in Tacoma, Washington, and on that occasion urged her to place in his hands to be loaned the sum of $3,000, which amount of money she had on deposit in a bank in Tacoma. Upon his return to Wallace, Idaho, he wrote a letter which, while addressed to a daughter of Mrs. Smith, was intended for her information. It is in part as follows:

“Am all ready for the $3,000 if you will send it to me at once. Can get you 1% per month and will mail you a draft for $30 each month on any date you say for the interest. This will last for three months sure, and then I think I can get you a little better than that, so you are certain of $30 per, at least. Send the draft payable to the Wallace Natl Bank, our new name, and I’ll fix up the note, etc. and will guarantee everything to you as well.”

Thereafter and about June 20, 1908, Mrs. Smith mailed to Norbeek a draft for the sum of $3,000 payable to the Wallace National Bank. He placed the money to his own credit in the bank and immediately thereafter loaned it to one Herman Rogell, who was a customer of the bank and who was at that time indebted to it. Rogell applied a portion of the $3,000 in payment of his indebtedness to the bank and paid Norbeek $200 for procuring the loan for him. As evidence of the indebtedness to Mrs. Smith, Rogell gave his promissory note to Norbeek in the sum of $3,000 and, to secure the payment of the same, he and his wife made, executed and delivered to Norbeek a mortgage, in which Norbeek was named as mortgagee, upon real property situated in the village of Mullan, Idaho. The mortgage was not recorded until March 10, 1910, and after its execution and before it was recorded Rogell deeded a portion of the property covered by it, by way of mortgage, to an innocent purchaser or encumbrancer [446]*446for value and thereby, about one-third of Mrs. Smith’s security was lost. On about September 9, 1910, Rogell was heavily indebted to the bank and, at the urgent and insistent request of its officers and directors that he reduce his indebtedness, he sold to one Sarah Flood the remainder of the property covered by the mortgage. When it was discovered by Mrs. Flood’s attorney that the mortgage was of record against the property, Norbeek released it, thereby depriving Mrs. Smith of the remainder of her security. Mrs. Flood paid $2,125 for the property which was applied toward the payment of Rogell’s indebtedness to the bank. Thereafter Rogell was adjudged to be a bankrupt and Norbeek was convicted of a violation of the United States banking laws and was sent to the penitentiary.

It is contended by the respondent that said bank and its officers and agents, in order to protect and prolong the credit of Rogell and without any regard for the rights of Mrs. Smith wrongfully and fraudulently neglected and refused to record the mortgage until after a portion of the property had been disposed of as aforesaid, and wrongfully and unlawfully released and discharged the lien of said mortgage in order that the remainder of it might be sold to Mrs. Flood, thereby depriving Mrs. Smith of her entire security, to her injury and damage in the sum of $3,606.

The appellants contend that in procuring the money from Mrs Smith Norbeek did not act as an officer or agent of the bank, and that in making the loan to Rogell and in neglecting to record the mortgage and in releasing it after it had been recorded he acted, not as the agent of the bank, but as the agent of Mrs. Smith; that none of his said acts were within the scope of his authority as cashier of the bank and that none of the officers of the bank, except Norbeek, knew anything about any -of the transactions above related; that all of his acts with respect to the loan were committed without any knowledge of the rights of Mrs. Smith upon the part of any of the officers or agents of the bank, except himself.

Our attention is directed to the fact that appellants’ brief contains no assignment of errors. Rule 45 of the rules of [447]*447practice of this court is, in part, as follows: “The brief of the appellant and the plaintiff in error shall also contain a distinct enumeration of the several errors relied on.” The purpose of this provision is to require the appellant to inform the respondent and this court what action of the trial court is relied upon for a reversal of the judgment or order appealed from. While appellants’ brief does not contain an assignment of errors in the usual form, it is therein stated that the appeal is from the order granting the plaintiff a new trial, and since no other action of the trial court is complained of, neither the respondent nor this court has been misled or left in doubt as to the error relied upon by appellants and the appeal will be considered upon its merits.

The trial judge has not indicated the ground upon which his action in granting a new trial was based. A careful examination of the record fails to disclose a single error committed during the course of the trial. The court’s rulings as to the admissibility of evidence are correct and the instructions given to the jury fully and clearly state the law applicable to the case. The only material conflict in the evidence is between the testimony of the witness Rogell, for the plaintiff, upon the one hand, and that of a number of witnesses for the defendants supported by documentary evidence upon the other, as to the knowledge of the directors and officers of the bank, other than Norbeek, relative to the loan of $3,000 to Rogell, the failure to record the mortgage and placing of record the release after the mortgage had been recorded. The jury, by its verdict, viewed in the light of the instructions given to it by the trial judge, found that Mrs. Smith sent the money to Norbeek, not to the bank, to be loaned; that Norbeek, not the bank, acted as her agent; that none of its officers, other than Norbeek, knew of the transaction, and that neither the bank nor its officers procured him to withhold the mortgage from record or, with knowledge of Mrs. Smith’s loan, to release it after it was recorded.

Without quoting from the testimony and without indulging in comment upon the apparent credibility or lack of credibility of any of the witnesses, we may say these questions of [448]*448fact could not well have been resolved otherwise than they were by the jury in its verdict, for the great preponderance of the evidence supports the contention of appellants.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
150 P. 21, 27 Idaho 441, 1915 Ida. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-wallace-national-bank-idaho-1915.