Trimue v. McCaleb

287 S.W. 740, 172 Ark. 137, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 8
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 287 S.W. 740 (Trimue v. McCaleb) 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
Trimue v. McCaleb, 287 S.W. 740, 172 Ark. 137, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 8 (Ark. 1926).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Appellee recovered a judgment against appellant as the maker of a note for $250, dated January 1, 1920. The note was payable to the order of T. W. Altman, a real estate agent, and by him indorsed to appellee. At the conclusion of all the testimony the court directed the jury to return a verdict in appellee’s favor, and we must therefore view the testimony in the light most favorable to appellant, and, when thus viewed, the testimony may be summarized as follows:

Appellant owned a small farm, which he authorized Altman to sell at a price which would net appellant $3,500 in cash, and Altman procured Moskopp and Haas as purchasers, but they were able to pay only a thousand dollars of the purchase money in cash. A sale to Moskopp and Haas was negotiated at the price of $4,000, of which $1,000 was to be paid in cash. One thousand and nine hundred dollars of the purchase money was evidenced by three notes, two for $633 each, and a third for $634. The balance of $1,100 consisted in the assumption of the payment of a mortgage for that amount outstanding against the land at the time of the sale. The purchase price of $4,000 which Moskopp and Haas agreed-to pay was $500 in excess of the price which appellant agreed to take, and this excess represented Altman’s commission in the sale.

Appellant was unwilling to accept Moskopp and Haas unconditionally as purchasers of the land, so far, at least, as the payment of the commission was concerned, and, in payment of the $500 commission, he executed two notes to Altman’s order, each for the sum of $250, the note here sued on being one of- them, and the first one to fall due. The understanding between appellant and Altman was that the first note for the commission was to be paid when the first purchase money note was paid, and the second note for commission was to be paid when the second purchase money note was paid. As evidencing this agreement, the note here sued on has written in its face this condition: “This note is payable when Moskopp and Haas pay their first land note in favor of J. S. Trimue” (appellant).

At the time of the negotiations for the sale of the land it was understood and agreed by all the parties, including Altman, that, upon the maturity of the outstanding mortgage against the land, Altman would aid' the purchasers, Moskopp and Haas, in procuring a new loan, and for a sum sufficient to pay the mortgage indebt-edness and to discharge another lien against the land for $275 and the interest thereon.

Altman negotiated a new loan in the sum of $1,500 for Moskopp and Haas, and out of the* net proceeds thereof paid the $1,100 mortgage and the accumulated interest and the $275 lien, which, with the interest thereon, amounted to $305'. The small balance remaining was credited equally on each of the three purchase money notes.

The loan company agreed to make this loan only upon the condition that it be given a first lien, and, to accomplish this purpose, it was required, not only that the two outstanding liens above referred to be canceled and satisfied, but also that appellant cancel his vendor’s lien to secure the unpaid purchase money due him, and this he did by indorsement of payment of the purchase money notes on the margin of the record where his deed to Moskopp and Haas was recorded. Thereafter appellant took from Moskopp and Haas a second mortgage on the land to secure the unpaid purchase money due him. Evidencing this indebtedness, three notes of Moskopp and Haas were taken, which gave a more extended time for payment than the original purchase money notes gave.

. Altman was aware of and was a party to all these arrangements; indeed, it was he who negotiated and consummated the new arrangements, and this was done pursuant to an understanding had at the time of the original sale of the land.

Moskopp and Haas were unable to make any additional pajments, either on the purchase money or on the mortgage which they had given to the loan company. Moskopp and Haas had both become insolvent. The court below found the fact so to be, and, if their insolvency is not shown by the undisputed .evidence, it may at least be said that the testimony was sufficient to support that finding. Moskopp testified that both he and Haas were insolvent, that Haas realized his inability to pay anything on the land, and he abandoned it. Moskopp further testified that he, too, was insolvent, and he was. shortly thereafter adjudged a bankrupt, and at the time he gave his testimony at the trial.below he had received his discharge in bankruptcy.

Haas abandoned the land, but joined with Moskopp in reconveying it to appellant in satisfaction of their notes for the purchase money, and-'a quitclaim deed was executed by them for that purpose, and appellant, with the knowledge and consent of Altman, accepted this deed in satisfaction of the debt due him from Moskopp and Haas, but he testified that this was done Only because he knew that Moskopp and Haas were insolvent, and that a suit against them could result in nothing more favorable than a decree foreclosing the mortgage under which the land could be sold, and that he accepted the quitclaim deed to accomplish the only purpose which a foreclosure, suit could accomplish and to avoid the expense of foreclosure. He thus recovered the land, but took it subject to the $1,500 mortgage which Moskopp and Haas had executed to the loan company.

The court below had the view that, when Moskopp and Haas' deeded the land back to appellant and he surrendered to them their notes, this was, in law, a payment, and made the note here sued on due and payable, and, upon this theory, directed the jury to return a verdict in appellee’s favor for the amount of the note, and this appeal is from the judgment pronounced on the verdict so returned.

There is no question in the case about appellee being the holder in good faith of a negotiable note, for value, before maturity. This is true for two reasons. First, according to the testimony on appellant’s behalf, appellee did not acquire the note until after its maturity; and, second, the note was not an unconditional promise to pay money, either on demand of at a fixed or determinable future time. Section 7767, C. & M. Digest.

The question therefore is whether there was such a payment of the purchase money notes as matured and made payable the notes given for the ’broker’s commission.

We think the court was in error in holding that the purchase money notes had been paid, under the circum-' stances herein recited, and, not having been paid, the ■ agent’s commission was never earned.

The doctrine announced in the ‘case of Boysen v. Frink, 80 Ark. 254, 96 S. W. 1056, applies here. In that case the broker had negotiated a sale of a tract of land, under a contract with the owner which provided that the broker should have a commission of seventy-five cents per acre on the land sold, one-half of which was to be paid when one-third of the purchase price had been paid, and the other half of the commission was to be paid when one-half of the purchase price of thé land had been paid the owner. The proposed purchaser was insolvent, and did not pay any of the purchase money notes. The agent recovered judgment for. the full amount of the commissions.

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Bluebook (online)
287 S.W. 740, 172 Ark. 137, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trimue-v-mccaleb-ark-1926.