State Trust & Savings Bank v. Hermosa Land & Cattle Co.

240 P. 469, 30 N.M. 566
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 26, 1925
DocketNos. 2893, 2899.
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 240 P. 469 (State Trust & Savings Bank v. Hermosa Land & Cattle Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Trust & Savings Bank v. Hermosa Land & Cattle Co., 240 P. 469, 30 N.M. 566 (N.M. 1925).

Opinion

WATSON, J.

September 28, 1921, State Trust & Savings Bank, as trustee, and Anna W. Hopewell commenced suit against Hermosa Land & Cattle Company, a New Mexico corporation, upon three promissory notes bearing date August 11, 1917, in the principal sum of $25,000 each, maturing, respectively, October 1, 1920, October 1, 1921 and October 1, 1922, bearing interest at 6 per cent., and the usual provision for attorney’s fees. These notes were given by Hermosa Land and .Cattle Company to Willard S. Hopewell, trustee, and were secured by a mortgage given by this company to said State Trust and Savings Bank, as trustee, under its former corporate name of American Bank & Trust Company. In the lower court, defendant was allowed to recoup damages in the sum of $33,635, with 6 per cent, interest from the date of the notes, and judgment was rendered for plaintiffs for the difference between the principal and interest of the notes and the principal and interest of the recoupment, and for 10 per cent, of such difference as attorney’s fees, for the amount of which judgment foreclosure of the mortgage was decreed. Both parties have brought the ease here by writs of error; the cases, Nos- 2893 and 2899, having been consolidated. The parties will be referred to herein as plaintiff and defendant as in the court below.

Some time prior to the execution of the notes and mortgage, Mr. J. A. Wigmore, then residing in New York, desiring to purchase a ranch and cattle, became acquainted with W. G. Hamilton, whom he commissioned to find a ranch for him. Among the properties examined by Mr. Hamilton Avere those of the Hermosa Land & Cattle Company, situated in Sierra county, N. M. At that time plaintiff Hopewell was the majority stockholder in defendant corporation, of which Col. W. S. Hopewell, her husband, was the president.

As the result of negotiationss. between Col. Hopewell representing the defendant corporation, and Hamilton, representing Mr. Wigmore, a contract was signed on June 20, 1917, by defendant corporation, by Col. Hopewell as its president, and by Wigmore, by Hamilton, his agent. The contract provided for the sale by the defendant corporation and the purchase by Wigmore of the ranches and cattle of the corporation for $225,000, of which $10,000 was to be and was. paid in cash, and $90,000 was to be paid upon the delivery of abstracts showing good title to the lands. The deferred payments were to be represented by five promissory notes of $25,000 each, maturing one each year for five years thereafter, and to be secured by mortgage on the property conveyed.

The title to said property proving satisfactory, and the $90,000 having been paid, Mr. Wigmore, through Hamilton, his agent, interposed the objection that he did not wish to' give his personal notes for the unpaid purchase price, and it was thereupon agreed that, instead of a conveyance of the properties in question from the corporation, Wigmore should receive transfer of all of the corporate stock of the corporation, and that thereupon the notes and mortgage in question should be executed by the corporation. This agreement was carried out, and the notes were made payable to W. S. Hopewell, as trustee, for the old stockholders. From that time until the trial, Mr. Wigmore remained the holder and owner of all the stock of defendant corporation, except two shares held by others that they might qualify as directors.

While negotiations were proceeding between Hopewell and Hamilton, the former paid to the latter a substantial sum of money, about $10,000, as an inducement to bring about the sale, Hopewell had knowledge of Hamilton’s agency for Wigmore, but Wigmore had no knowledge of this payment to Hamilton.

The first two of the notes were paid at about the time they matured, together with the accrued interest on all of the notes, but, when the third note matured on October 1, 1920, and payment was demanded, it was refused; it being claimed that, by reason of false representations as to the number of cattle and the quantity of fence, damages had been suffered which must be adjusted before further payments would, be made. Before the maturity and payment of the second note, Mr. Wigmore had learned of the payment of the commission to his agent, and had become satisfied that there was a substantial shortage of cattle, and, as the trial court found, knew, or should have known, that there was a shortage of fence. Mr. Hopewell died August 13, 1919, prior to which time Wigmore had made claim that there was a shortage of cattle, but had never mentioned any shortage of fence; no claim as to the fence having been made until about 2% years after the date of the contract. Further facts and the contentions of the parties, will be hereinafter stated.

The written contract out of which this litigation arises was in form an agreement by Hermosa Land & Cattle Company to sell to J. A. Wigmore certain ranch properties, improvements and cattle. However, in closing the trade it assumed a different form. There was no conveyance of the properties, the subject-matter of the original contract; but, instead, all of the capital stock of the corporation was transferred to Wigmore. The deferred payments, originally to have been represented by Wigmore’s notes and secured by mortgage on the properties to have been conveyed to him, were, in the closing, represented by the notes of the corporation and secured by its mortgage on the properties, the legal title to which was not affected by the transaction.

From the form which the transaction finally assumed, as just stated, counsel, respectively, claim far-reaching results. Defendant contends that, since the corporation received nothing which it did not already possess, there was no consideration for the notes it gave or for the mortgage which it placed on its assets. It contends that the consideration of the notes and mortgage was the transfer of the stock to Wigmore, and that it was ultra vires the corporation to agree to pay his individual debt. On the other hand, it is contended by plaintiffs that, since the assets of the corporation were exactly the same, after as before, the transfer of the stock, any false representations concerning those assets worked no damage to the corporation, but affected only tlie value of the stock, and damaged Wigmore only, and that his damage is not to be considered in a suit solely against the corporation. They contend also that it ivas the corporation that made the representations, through Col. Hopewell, its president, and that, if Wigmore has suffered damage through their falsity, his cause of action, is against the .corporation. If such are the necessary results of the transaction, it is apparent that the parties have involved themselves in a legal maze which it is. hardly to be supposed they intended, and from which it will be difficult, if not impossible to extricate them.

Before proceeding to consider the principle which we think is controlling of these several contentions, let us take note of the substantial rights and the practical situation of the parties. The real subject-matter of the trade was the ranches, improvements, and cattle. While the title to this property did not change, the control and beneficial enjoyment did. Wigmore wanted to buy a ranch. Col. Hopewell wanted to sell one. Those objects were accomplished in practical effect. The trade assumed the final form it did simply because of Wigmore’s objection to becoming personally liable for the deferred payments.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
240 P. 469, 30 N.M. 566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-trust-savings-bank-v-hermosa-land-cattle-co-nm-1925.