Wagner v. Spaeth

254 P. 123, 36 Wyo. 279, 1927 Wyo. LEXIS 27
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 24, 1927
Docket1274
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 254 P. 123 (Wagner v. Spaeth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wagner v. Spaeth, 254 P. 123, 36 Wyo. 279, 1927 Wyo. LEXIS 27 (Wyo. 1927).

Opinion

*283 Kimball, Justice.

This is an action to foreclose a real estate mortgage to secure a note for $1200. The plaintiff claimed to be the holder of the secured note and the assignee of the mortgage. Defendant Agnes Spaeth, who on her purchase of the mortgaged property had agreed to pay the mortgage, will be called the mortgagor. The First Colorado-Wyoming Joint Stock Land Bank, another defendant, will be called the “land bank.” The defendants claimed that the debt secured by the mortgage had been paid and the mortgage released. The district court gave judgment for the plaintiff, and the defendants appeal.

There is hardly any dispute about the facts. The note and mortgage were given to De Moulin Loan and Investment Company of Hot Springs, South Dakota (herein called the “De Moulin company”), and afterwards assigned by that company to the plaintiff who lives at Dubuque, Iowa. After the assignment, the De Moulin company continued to look after all matters pertaining to the loan, including all collections of interest and principal. The agency of the De Moulin company for plaintiff is unquestioned.

The debt became due in September, 1922. About that time, as appears from correspondence between the De Moulin company and the mortgagor, demands for payment were met by the mortgagor’s promises that she would pay if she were successful in obtaining a loan for which she had applied to the land bank. Her lands were then encumbered by several other mortgages in addition to the one held by plaintiff. To pay all the mortgages would require about $7000, and that was the amount of the loan for which she had made application to the land bank. *284 Her application was approved, and in December, 1922, to secure the money loaned, she executed and delivered to the land bank a mortgage on the lands that had been previously mortgaged to plaintiff’s assignor. .The land bank did not then pay over the money, but retained it for the purpose of paying prior mortgages including the plaintiff’s. The Wyoming State Bank of Lusk, in the county where the mortgagor lived and where the lands were situated, undertook at the request of the land bank the task of paying off the prior mortgages and procuring releases. The Wyoming State Bank hereafter will be called the “state bank.” The amount of the loan was sent by the land bank to the state bank on January 30, 1923, by a check payable to “Agnes Spaeth and Wyoming State Bank.” This check on its receipt by the state bank was endorsed, “Passed to the credit of Agnes Spaeth,” (signed) “Wyoming State Bank by Jno W. Newall, Pres.,” and was paid February 3, by the bank on which it was drawn. The money thus collected by the state bank was not at once “passed to the credit” of the mortgagor, for it was intended that she should receive only the amount left after paying the prior mortgages.

The secretary of the De Moulin company testified that in the early part of February his company received from the state bank a letter stating in substance that the bank had the money to pay the plaintiff’s mortgage, and if the De Moulin company would send on the papers the bank would remit. In response to that letter, the papers which included the note, the mortgage and a release properly executed by plaintiff, were sent by the De Moulin company to the state bank with a letter giving a statement of the amount due, and asking the bank to remit. These letters exchanged between the state bank and the De Mou-lin company were not produced at the trial. The plaintiff, claiming that they could not be found, was permitted to prove their contents by the testimony of the secretary of the De Moulin company. The letter enclosing *285 tbe note, mortgage and release was received by tbe state bank about February 9. On February 27 tbe mortgagor came to tbe state bank wbieb then credited ber account with tbe amount previously received from tbe land bank. Sbe immediately gave tbe state bank a check on itself for tbe amount due plaintiff. Tbe state bank then delivered to ber tbe note and mortgage, and on tbe same day charged tbe cheek against her account and issued and mailed to the De Moulin company a cashier’s check for tbe amount. Tbe release of mortgage was sent by tbe state bank to tbe county clerk for record. Tbe cashier’s cheek was received by tbe De Moulin company in due course of mail, but was never paid, as tbe state bank failed to open for business March 1, and thereafter passed into tbe bands of a receiver.

There is nothing in tbe record to suggest that either tbe De Moulin company, tbe mortgagor or tbe land bank has been negligent in trusting the state bank. None of tbe parties had any reason to suspect that tbe state bank was likely to fail. No fraud is charged. We have tbe unpleasant duty of deciding who of two innocent parties shall suffer by tbe default of an agent.

We shall first inquire whether tbe state bank was tbe agent of tbe plaintiff to receive payment of tbe mortgage debt. It is tbe unquestioned general rule that a bank to which a note or other similar written obligation is sent for collection and remittance becomes tbe agent of the owner or bolder to receive payment. Foster v. Rineker, 4 Wyo. 484; 35 P. 470; Morse on Banks, (5th ed.) Sec. 214; Jones on Mortgages (7th ed.) Sec. 964. In Mecbem on Agency (2nd ed. See. 943) it is said:

“Where tbe principal confides to an agent for delivery securities upon whose delivery money is to be loaned or paid to or for tbe principal, tbe agent, in tbe absence of anything to indicate a contrary intention, would have implied power to receive the money and payment to him *286 would be effective even though through his subsequent default the money never came to the hands of the principal. ’ ’

The secretary of the De Moulin company testified that the mortgage papers were not sent to the bank for “collection and remittance, ’ ’ but for ‘ ‘ remittance ’ ’ only. This was a mere conclusion of the witness. The money could not be remitted until it was collected. The De Moulin company had known for some time that the mortgagor was trying to obtain a new loan to pay the plaintiff’s mortgage. "When it received notice that the state bank had the money to pay the mortgage debt, it must have known that the bank was holding the money for the new mortgagee or for the mortgagor, or for both, and that the money would be applied to the payment of the debt when the note and release of mortgage were delivered. And that was the true situation. At first, the state bank was the agent of the new mortgagee, and, perhaps, the agent or sub-agent of the mortgagor, to pay the prior mortgages. It then received plaintiff’s note, mortgage and release with authority to receive payment and deliver the papers as agent for the plaintiff. Whatever may be said of the advisability of such a custom, we know that it is a common practice for a bank thus to become the agent for both parties in a transaction where it is contemplated that the written evidence of the debt, or the acquittance, shall be delivered on the payment of the amount due from funds already in the possession of the bank as agent for the debtor. The bank is the agent of the debtor to make payment, and of the creditor to receive payment and to discharge the debt by delivering the written obligation or receipt. In 2 C. J. 448, Sec.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
254 P. 123, 36 Wyo. 279, 1927 Wyo. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wagner-v-spaeth-wyo-1927.