Wallin v. Donnahoe

300 S.W. 428, 175 Ark. 791, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 634
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 12, 1927
StatusPublished

This text of 300 S.W. 428 (Wallin v. Donnahoe) 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
Wallin v. Donnahoe, 300 S.W. 428, 175 Ark. 791, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 634 (Ark. 1927).

Opinion

Kirby, J.

Appellants brought suit to cancel two notes executed by them to S. D. Donnahoe, one of the appellees.

It was -alleged that on December 15', 1923, they leased from Donnahoe certain lands in Crittenden and Cross counties for a period of five years, beginning January 1, 1924, at a yearly rental of $320. That they paid the first three years’ rent in cash in advance and executed two promissory notes, each for the sum of $320, payable, one January 1, 1927, and the other January 1, 1928, for the rent for the years 1927 and 1928. That, at the time of the execution of said lease and notes, the Missouri 'State Life Insurance Company held a deed of trust on the lands included in the lease as security for a $25,000 loan; that, since the execution of the lease contract, default has been made in payments due to the said Missouri State Life Insurance Company, which had filed suit to foreclose the deed of trust; that said Donnahoe was insolvent,- and had stated to appellants that he would make no attempt to pay the amount due the insurance company, but would allow the lands to sell; that appellants had requested him to return the notes given for the rent for the years 1927 and 1928, appellants having been deprived of the possession of the lands by the foreclosure of- the mortgage, but he had refused to do so, and alleged that the notes were in his possession and under his control, and prayed that they he canceled.

Defendants answered, admitting the execution of the lease contract and the payment of the money, hut denied that the payments were for any particular period. Admitted that the lands were incumbered by the deed of trust, and alleged that appellants were informed about it and agreed to make the necessary payments to continue the appellees in possession of the premises; admitted that the lands included in the deed of trust were insufficient to pay the insurance company, and that he was insolvent and unable to pay the company; denied that he had been requested to return the notes to appellees and that he could have returned them, for the reason that he had, on August 15, 1924, transferred said notes to H. Blair in payment of an existing indebtedness, which had been previously incurred for legal services, and that appellee, Donnahoe, was not then the owner or holder of the said notes. Also filed a cross-complaint, stating that appellants were informed about the deed of trust when the lease contract wias made and took it subject to the rights of the mortgagee, and agreed to pay all the money becoming due on said mortgage, if not paid by appellee, as part of the consideration of the lease contract, and that, by mutual mistake, the clause in said contract expressing said agreement was not correctly drawn, and prayed reformation of same to express the agreement actually made.

Appellants answered the cross-complaint on October 31, 1924, denying that defendant had transferred the notes to H. Blair, and alleged that, if they were in fact transferred to Blair, it was without consideration and with full knowledge cn the part of Blair of the failure of consideration for said notes and of the lease contract between the appellants and Donma'hoe, under which they were executed, and alleged that said Blair was not an innocent purchaser of the said notes for vialue, and denied all the other allegations of the cross-complaint.

The court found that the notes were not subject to cancellation in the hands of Blair, unless he- was holding same for the said Donnahoe, and that appellants were not entitled to the cancellation of the entire notes, but only of the amount thereof in excess of $500, with interest from August 1, 19-25, -at six per cent, per 'annum, and decreed accordingly, requiring appellants to pay all costs, and this appeal is prosecuted from this decree.

The undisputed testimony ¡shows that all the parties had' notice of the mortgage of the Missouri State • Life Insurance Company covering the lands leased, when the lease contract was made, and also that H. Blair, the attorney of Donnahoe, to whom the notes were transferred, had knowledge of the mortgage or deed of trust of said insurance company, knew what lands were included in it, and told his clients that they could not lease the lands without the consent of the insurance company. . He also wrote the insurance company what was decided to be done in the way of leasing the lands, 'but .stated that lessee only wanted to pay a nominal consideration therefor, and the company refused to consent to the leíase.

The lease contract was made, and appellants also purchased some timber, Donnahoe not knowing it was included in the mortgage at the time, and being told by turn that he wanted the purchase money of the timber to pay on the mortgage debt.

Wallin, an appellant, testified that no mistake was made in drawing the lease contract; that he made no agreement in consideration of the lease to p-ay any amount due the mortgagee if Donnahoe made default in payment, but he was given the right to make such payment, if he oared -to exercise it, as provided in the lease; -stated that in February, 1924, prior to filing the suit, he had several conversations with S. D. Donnahoe and his -son, F. C., relative to the notes in question, and, when he ascertained that the insurance company was going to foreclose its mortgage, he asked Donnahoe about it, and he told him it was a fact. He then said: “Now, in the event -of the foreclosure you fellows have some of my notes. In fact, I have already paid you three years in advance, given you cash for three years, and you got the notes for the fourth and fifth years. If you are going to be foreclosed, I think you will agree that it would be nothing but right to give me these notes. And he, Forrest, said that was all right, they would fix that up all right. Then I got hold of the old man and we talked about it, and he said, ‘I do not want to give those notes up right now, but do not worry about the notes, because you have already paid uis the cash, and if they foreclose you will lose two years, and you need not worry about the notes; if they foreclose we will not worry you about the notes.’ I asked him if they had the notes, and he said, ‘Yes, we have them, they are all right; you need not worry about the notes.’ I went back to them the second and third time, and talked to both of them the last time, and never got the notes, but they admitted they had the notes lat that time, and I did not file this suit until after they told me they had the notes and refused to give them back to me.” Said the timber contract and the lease were entirely, separate matters, neither dependent upon the other, and that Donnahoe, after showing him a letter from the mortgagee insurance company relative to the lease, said he would take the money paid by him, $1,§20 cash, and pay it on the interest and loan due.

The trade ivas made in the fall of 1923. Witness did mot talk with Donnahoe nor his son about returning the notes until the foreclosure suit.was filed, and never had a conversation with Blair about them. That Davis, his partner, never had anything to do with any of the negotiations. Stated his conversations about the contract were with Donnahoe and his son, sometimes with each and sometimes with both. That, after the foreclosure of the mortgage, he leased the lands from the Missouri State Life Insurance .Company, which purchased them under the sale, and paid them the same amount of rent yearly that he 'had agreed to pay Donnahoe. .

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Bluebook (online)
300 S.W. 428, 175 Ark. 791, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallin-v-donnahoe-ark-1927.