State National Bank v. Temple Cotton Oil Co.

50 S.W.2d 980, 185 Ark. 1011, 1932 Ark. LEXIS 232
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 13, 1932
Docket4-2601
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 50 S.W.2d 980 (State National Bank v. Temple Cotton Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State National Bank v. Temple Cotton Oil Co., 50 S.W.2d 980, 185 Ark. 1011, 1932 Ark. LEXIS 232 (Ark. 1932).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This suit was begun in June, 1931, by the Temple Cotton Oil Company, hereinafter referred to as the oil company, to foreclose a deed of trust executed to it by Sanderson & Orton on January 22, 1923. The State National Bank, hereinafter referred to as the bank, held a deed of trust on the property described in the oil company’s deed of trust, and for that reason was made a party defendant. It was alleged that the oil company’s deed of trust secured four notes as follows: One dated January 22, 1923, for $4,903.96, due December 1, 1925; one dated June 1, 1926, for $1,844.35, due November 1, 1926; one dated July 31, 1927, for $1,568.44, due ninety days aftep date; and one dated April 1,1930, for $1,178.8-2 due November 1, 1930. The court decreed that the note first described was barred both as to Sanderson & Orton, and as to the bank also,'but that the other three notes were secured by the deed of trust to the oil company, and that this deed of trust was prior to that of the bank, and decreed its foreclosure as a prior lien. From that portion of the decree holding that said three notes were secured by the oil company’s deed of trust and constituted a lien superior to that of the bank, the bank has appealed. Sanderson & Orton have not appealed. The oil company has' cross-appealed from that part of the decree holding that the note for $4,903.96 was barred.

Sanderson & Orton were large cotton planters, and operated two gins, ginning for themselves and for the public, and, in connection with their ginning business, they bought cotton seed, which they sold to the oil company. They entered into a written contract with the oil company on October 10, 1922, whereby they agreed to sell the oil company all cotton seed owned or controlled by them up to the close of the season of 1923-1924, at a price $5 per ton in excess of the prevailing street prices. The contract provided that the oil company might apply this $5 bonus to any indebtedness then owing to the oil company or which might thereafter be incurred, and that the contract might be extended by mutual agreement in writing to cover subsequent ginning seasons. The parties extended this agreement orally, but not in writing, from season to season thereafter, and continued to operate under the oral extension until the close of the ginning season of 1930-1931.

Prior to the execution of this seed purchase contract, Orton owed the predecessor of the oil company $5,500, and he and Sanderson were indebted to the G-ullett Grin Company in the sum of about $9,000. To refinance these debts, Sanderson & Orton, on January 22, 1923, executed two notes for $5,000 each and a third for $4,903.96, due, respectively, December 1, 1923, 1924 and 1925, and, as security therefor, executed the deed of trust here sought to be foreclosed. The note for $4,903.96 matured on the date last named.

Beginning in 1925, Sanderson & Orton borrowed money from the bank for use in their farming operations, and executed deeds of trust each year to secure these advances. These deeds of trust included the gin properties described in the oil company’s deed of trust and other property, both real and personal, in addition, and each of these deeds of trust executed previously to 1931 to the bank by Sanderson & Orton recited the priority of the oil company’s deed of trust as to the gin properties therein described.

In February, 1931, representation was made to the bank by Sanderson & Orton that the gin properties were no longer subject to the oil company’s deed of trust, and a new deed of trust was then taken by the bank from Sanderson & Orton which contained no reference to the oil company’s deed of trust. This deed of trust was given to secure a large balance then due the bank, and an additional advance of $2,000, which the bank agreed to make and which was later made; in fact, the subsequent advances by the bank to Sanderson & Orton largely exceeded that amount. This deed of trust, executed in February, 1931, embraced not only the gin properties but a large amount of other property, both real and personal, owned by Sanderson & Orton.

In the meantime, Sanderson & Orton were buying and selling seed to the oil company under their seed contract. Pursuant to this contract the oil company made large advances of money, which were not fully repaid by seed delivered under that contract, and the notes above referred to, dated June 1, 1926, due November 1, 1926; July 31, 1927, due ninety days after date; and April 1, 1930, due November 1, 1930, were executed to cover deficiencies arising out of the purchase of seed. The two notes for $5,000 each, specifically described in the deed of trust to the oil company, due, respectively, December 1,1923 and 1924, were paid, but the note due December 1, 1925, for $4,903.96, was not paid. However,- on November 18, 1930, the oil company indorsed on that note a credit of $89.62 which it contends it was authorized to do, as having on that date that balance on hand to the credit of Sanderson & Orton. The oil company also contends that the $4,903.96 note had been kept alive by the repeated acknowledgments of its validity by Sanderson & Orton and by their repeated promises to pay it, in consideration for which promises the date of payment had been extended.

We have therefore for decision the following questions: Was the $4,903.96 note barred? Were the advances made subsequent to the execution of the seed contract secured by that contract alone, or were they secured also by the deed of trust from Sanderson & Orton to the oil company? Did the oil company’s deed of trust secure advances made after December 1, 1925? Conceding that the oil company’s deed of trust was intended to secure," and did secure, the three notes of Sanderson & Orton executed in 1926, 1927 and 1930, was the right of foreclosure not barred as to the bank?

Other facts will be stated in the discussion of these questions. Separate answers were filed by both the bank and Sanderson & Orton, but they present a common defense.

The agreement referred to as the seed contract contemplated the advancement of large sums of money by the oil company to Sanderson & Orton, which were made during each of the years it continued in effect, and all parties agree that it was extended orálly and was in effect until the termination of the relations out of which this litigation arose. The said contract was dated October 10,1922. Tbe deed of trust was dated January 22, 1923. The deed of trust specifically described the two $5,000 notes above referred to and the note for $4,903.96, due December 1, 1925.

The deed of trust further recited that “This deed of trust shall also be a security for any other indebtedness that the first parties may now or may hereafter owe to the third party; and shall also be security for any notes, drafts, accounts or debts of whatsoever kind that the said third party may hold against the first parties herein, by purchase as an assignee thereof, or otherwise, and for all future advances during the life of this trust.”

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Bluebook (online)
50 S.W.2d 980, 185 Ark. 1011, 1932 Ark. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-national-bank-v-temple-cotton-oil-co-ark-1932.