Tradesmens National Bank of New Haven v. Minor

190 A. 270, 122 Conn. 419, 1937 Conn. LEXIS 296
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 4, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 190 A. 270 (Tradesmens National Bank of New Haven v. Minor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tradesmens National Bank of New Haven v. Minor, 190 A. 270, 122 Conn. 419, 1937 Conn. LEXIS 296 (Colo. 1937).

Opinion

Brown, J.

In this action to foreclose a mortgage for $7000 upon real estate in North Haven, the following undisputed facts are established by the finding: June 15th, 1933, the plaintiff by assignment became the owner of a debt due from the defendant husband on two notes, secured by certain stock pledged as collateral and by the $7000 mortgage here sued on, which had been given as additional collateral. The stock was indorsed over by him to the plaintiff, and the mortgage was assigned to it together with the two notes. June 25th, 1933, this defendant executed a new demand note to the plaintiff in collateral note form for $17,624.06, in lieu of these two original notes, this being the amount then due. During April, 1934, with the defendants’ approval, the plaintiff converted certain of the stock held as collateral into other issues with a higher income yield, and continued as it had before to apply the dividends against the interest on the indebtedness. April 19th, 1934, the defendant husband quitclaimed the mortgaged real estate to the defendant wife.

Pursuant to an agreement with her, but made without consideration, the plaintiff, to help the defendant husband carry his loan, on or about February 1st, *421 1935, reduced the interest rate to 5 per cent., and after that date sold more of the collateral, and purchased with the proceeds higher yield stocks, crediting a balance of $88.45 to interest on the loan. As of March 1st, 1935, there was due the plaintiff from the defendant husband $17,624.06. Interest thereon at 5 per cent, per annum totaled $871.50, while the annual dividend yield on the collateral then held by the plaintiff amounted to $800.00. March 13th, 1935, the plaintiff’s cashier gave the defendant wife a memorandum showing these interest figures and the shares held by the plaintiff as collateral. The plaintiff, its officers and directors, were cognizant of the conversion of collateral by the sales and purchases above narrated.

From the time that the plaintiff acquired it, the account had not been in good condition, and the dividends on collateral credited were insufficient to cover the interest on the loan. Prior to March 16th, 1935, the bank examiner had criticised the account and classified it in the “doubtful” column, and the plaintiff’s president recommended to its board of directors that the collateral be sold, since the loan was “under water” and should not be continued in an unbankable condition. This the board ordered done. Accordingly, of the stocks purchased by the plaintiff from the proceeds of the collateral sold in 1935 as above stated, on March 16th, 1935, the plaintiff sold a lot of twenty shares within eleven days after such purchase thereof, and similarly ten shares within twenty-one days, twenty-five shares within one month, and on April 29th, 1935, thirty shares within about two months, all of the proceeds being applied to the reduction of the loan. The plaintiff computed interest on the original indebtedness only and not upon the note secured by the mortgage. The debt at the date of judgment was *422 $7568.38 and the market value of the property foreclosed, the only remaining collateral, was $3500.

The further finding by the court that the plaintiff’s president telephoned the defendant husband that his stock was to be sold because of the unbankable condition of his account, is attacked by the defendants’ assignment of errors, first, because the time of this notice is not found to have been early in February prior to the conversion of the collateral, and second, because as found it is not supported by the evidence. The testimony of the witnesses Smith and Kirkman is sufficient to support the finding as made, without the qualification as to time urged by the defendants. The same is true of the further facts found in this connection not attacked by the assignments of error, that the plaintiff’s president by this telephone conversation made clear to the defendant husband that the collateral must be sold unless the loan was put in shape, that neither he nor the defendant wife as his agent made any attempt to do this, but on the contrary they failed even to consult with the plaintiff’s officers at all, until shortly before April 29th, 1935, when but thirty-five shares of the collateral remained unsold. The defendants are entitled to no material correction of the finding.

The only other errors assigned which the defendants rely upon, are the court’s overruling of their claims that: (1) the plaintiff had “failed to act equitably in its relations with the defendants and hence was not properly before a court of equity,” and (2) the plaintiff was “estopped from foreclosing the instant mortgage by virtue of its conduct and representations to the defendant, Mabel P. Minor, concerning the conversion of the stock of the defendant, Waldo H. Minor.” In support of their first claim the defendants rely upon the equitable maxim that he who *423 seeks equity must do equity, their contention being that the plaintiff having failed to accord to them all of the equitable rights to which they are entitled with respect to the subject-matter, it should be denied relief in this equitable action of foreclosure. 21 C. J. p. 174, § 152. More specifically, their contention is that the reduction of the interest rate on the loan to 5 per cent, on February 1st, 1935, followed by the conversion of the stock into other issues with a higher yield, all pursuant to the defendant wife’s agreement with the plaintiff’s cashier Smith, and his delivery to her on March 13th, 1935, of the memorandum showing the net balance to be paid above the dividends anticipated under this arrangement to be $71.50, led the defendants to reasonably infer that the plaintiff would continue to carry the loan, and that therefore the plaintiff, in proceeding to sell all of this stock between March 16th and April 29th following, was guilty of inequitable conduct within the above principle.

As the finding shows, there was no consideration for the agreement between the defendant wife and the plaintiff’s cashier, and it was not a binding legal obligation. Nor do the defendants suggest that it was. Neither can they claim upon the facts found that legally the plaintiff had not full right to sell the collateral and apply the proceeds to reduce the debt, for as they state in their brief, the defendant husband “had executed the usual collateral note which entitled and empowered the Bank to sell the collateral at such time as it felt that the defendants’ loan was insufficiently secured.” The gist of their argument is reduced to this, that the plaintiff acted inequitably in selling the stock as it did “without asking for additional security,” “without any notice whatsoever of its intended action,” and without affording the defendants any opportunity to make “some efforts or proposals” to satisfy it. The *424 reasonable interpretation of the court’s finding makes clear that this argument fails for lack of the facts essential to support it. The finding further shows that the history and condition of this loan, together with the bank examiner’s suggestions regarding it, afforded the plaintiff cogent reasons for adopting the course which it did. Upon this record we cannot say that the court erred in overruling this claim of the defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
190 A. 270, 122 Conn. 419, 1937 Conn. LEXIS 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tradesmens-national-bank-of-new-haven-v-minor-conn-1937.