Thompson v. Kay

80 P.2d 335, 95 Utah 272, 1938 Utah LEXIS 44
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 1938
DocketNo. 5936.
StatusPublished

This text of 80 P.2d 335 (Thompson v. Kay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Kay, 80 P.2d 335, 95 Utah 272, 1938 Utah LEXIS 44 (Utah 1938).

Opinion

LARSON, Justice.

Plaintiffs sued defendant in the District Court of Salt Lake County on a promissory note and recovered judgment. Defendant appeals. The note, dated October 9, 1933, is for the sum of $600.00 payable $200.00 per year with interest payable semi-annually at the rate of 6% per annum from date until paid. The maker also agreed to pay a reasonable attorney’s fee. The note, which was signed and delivered by appellant, included the following provisions:

“The holders shall have the right to declare this note due and payable for default in payment of interest * * * It is also understood and agreed that the entire amount of this note shall be canceled providing a certain loan is approved as applied for by Joseph Thompson on property located in Hobble Creek Canyon, Utah, which property has now been sold to S. E. Cassity of Salt Lake City, Utah. In case said loan is not made on or before one year from date hereof, the maker of this note agrees to secure the above mentioned sum with a good and sufficient first mortgage on property located at 1005 Major Street, Salt Lake City, Utah.”

The note was part of a three-sided agreement, involving Respondent Thompson, Appellant Kay, and S. E. Cassity, by *275 which the parties exchanged properties. Oliver Hansen acted as real estate broker for the parties. Originally appellant exchanged his Salt Lake property for Thompson’s Hobble Creek ranch. Preferring city property, appellant then transferred the ranch to S. E. Cassity for the latter’s Salt Lake property. It was conceded by all parties concerned in the first exchange, involving Thompson’s ranch and Kay’s city property, that the ranch was worth $600.00 more than the city property, so appellant owed Thompson this difference. Appellant agreed to make the note in question, containing the provision concerning the approval of the loan, by which method Thompson might secure his $600.00. Since Cassity is not a party to the note and the transaction with him is not involved in this case, we must not indulge in conjectures as to just what was the agreement with him. This cause involves the effect of a valid non-negotiable note, and necessitates the determination of the following questions: (1) Did the promissory note evidence a present obligation on the maker’s part? (2) Did the recital “which property has now been sold to S. E. Cassity of Salt Lake City, Utah” affect the obligatory terms of the instrument?

The first question must be answered in the affirmative for the obligation of the maker, appellant, to pay the note when due was not affected by the condition contained in the note, namely:

“It is also understood and agreed that the entire amount of this note shall be cancelled providing a certain loan is approved as applied for by Joseph Thompson on property located in Hobble Creek Canyon, Utah, * * * In case said loan is not made on or before one year from date hereof. * * *”

This term in the note was the expression of a condition subsequent to the maker’s liability on the note, which liability arose upon appellant’s signing the instrument and delivering it to the payees, the respondents. It is generally recognized that a note, supported by a sufficient consideration, may be conditioned on its being extinguished by a condition subsequent, which is specified in the note. Kelly v. *276 Eggers, 225 App. Div. 511, 233 N. Y. S. 638; Daugherty v. Preuitt, 113 Okla. 66, 242 P. 529; Miller v. Slater, 154 Wis. 35, 142 N. W. 124; Novak v. Lovin, 33 N. D. 424, 157 N. W. 297. If there had been compliance with the condition subsequent, it would have been available to appellant as a defense to the cause of action when pleaded affirmatively. But since the evidence clearly justifies the finding that the loan in question was not approved, the terms upon which liability on the note might be defeated were not met and the obligations of the maker to pay principal and interest continued in full force and effect. The determination that the instrument took effect upon delivery settles the question as to the interest which likewise commenced to run at the date of its delivery.

The intent of the parties is clearly expressed in the note itself and reference to parol evidence to determine the terms of the transaction only strengthens the view that appellant agreed to pay $600.00, the amount of the note. Appellant’s obligation towards Thompson was probably expected to take the form of either (a) the assumption of an existing $4,400.00 mortgage on the ranch property and the execution of the $600.00 note, or (b) the assumption of the $5,000.00 indebtedness on the property in the event Thompson would be able to secure the loan referred to, whereby the $600.00 due him as the differential in the transaction would be paid from such loan on the ranch property. The first method of payment was actually commenced and was to continue unless replaced by the second method of payment or some other agreement. Likewise, the note in question would continue to be a valid obligation binding the maker unless and until this obligation is extinguished by the occurrence of the condition subsequent, or some new arrangement replacing the former agreement, the note.

The case of Kelly v. Eggers, supra, involved a note for $5,000.00i and to secure its payment the maker had deposited collateral. It was agreed by the maker that (page 640) *277 “this note will be replaced by a note or notes of the company, indorsed by me, as soon as the arrangement above mentioned is completed * * The court held that this term was the expression of a condition subsequent to the maker’s liability on the instrument, saying:

“Since there is no allegation that the note was not founded on a sufficient consideration, but in fact the defendant alleges that Byrne [the payee] paid $5,000, the full amount of the note, to the corporation in which the defendant was interested, and for which he was arranging financial assistance, the only point of defense on which defendant could prevail would be that the recital contained in the letter constitutes a delivery with a condition precedent, upon which the note was to take effect. The defense is that the note of the defendant was to be replaced by a note or notes of the company, indorsed by defendant, as soon as the arrangement mentioned in the letter was completed, and the collateral was to be disposed of according to such arrangement; that Byrne refused to carry out the terms of the arrangement which it is not shown ever had been fixed, and, therefore he was without right to recover the money he had advanced.
“The theory is that the note and collateral were delivered subject to the condition that the note was to be replaced by a note or notes of the company. This does not constitute a condition precedent, as a result of which an instrument does not become effective until the happening of a certain event. It is a condition subsequent, which merely provides for the discharge of the instrument by a provision with respect to the method of substituting notes of the corporation for this note of the defendant. Here the note was delivered absolutely in consideration of the payment of $5,000. The delivery was not conditional.

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Related

Daugherty v. Preuitt
1925 OK 598 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1925)
Kelly v. Eggers
225 A.D. 511 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1929)
Novak v. Lovin
157 N.W. 297 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1916)
Miller v. Slater
142 N.W. 124 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
80 P.2d 335, 95 Utah 272, 1938 Utah LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-kay-utah-1938.