Weiser Loan & Trust Co. v. Comerford

238 P. 515, 41 Idaho 172, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 90
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 10, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 238 P. 515 (Weiser Loan & Trust Co. v. Comerford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weiser Loan & Trust Co. v. Comerford, 238 P. 515, 41 Idaho 172, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 90 (Idaho 1925).

Opinion

*175 BRINCK, District Judge.

— Plaintiff brought this action to foreclose two mortgages, one upon real property and one upon chattels, each given to secure the payment of the same note for the principal sum of $15,000 dated May 20, 1922, and due two years after date; the note and the real estate mortgage being signed by S. C. Comerford and wife, Belle Comerford, and the chattel mortgage being signed by S. O. Comerford alone. S. C. Comerford having died on November 25, 1922, the action is brought against the surviving wife as administratrix of his estate. The complaint contains two causes of action, the first being upon the real estate mortgage, the second upon the chattel mortgage. The facts were stipulated. Judgment was rendered against the plaintiff on each cause of action, adjudging that plaintiff had no lien under either mortgage on the property described in them. Plaintiff appeals from the judgment.

The complaint alleges, and the stipulation of facts shows, that on the day of the execution of the note and mortgages, the deceased entered into a written agreement with plaintiff, which, after reciting that deceased was then indebted to plaintiff and would thereafter be borrowing from plaintiff varying amounts on short time notes, and incurring other obligations to it, and that deceased desired to keep plaintiff secured, provided that the amount due on the note for $15,000 should be the sum which deceased was then owing to plaintiff or might thereafter become obligated to pay, whether by renewal notes or new loans; and that if at any time prior to the release or satisfaction of the mortgages any indebtedness due plaintiff from deceased were not paid jwhen due, then plaintiff might declare all of the indebtedness owing from deceased immediately due, and that such sums then due or declared due, not exceeding the amount due on said mortgages, should constitute the amount due on the note secured by the mortgages, and that plaintiff might foreclose for such amount.

This agreement, which we will refer to as exhibit 2, was duly executed by plaintiff and deceased, but not by the wife of deceased; it was not acknowledged by either party.

*176 At the time these instruments were executed, deceased was indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $6,000; and thereafter, during his lifetime, he received from plaintiff additional advances aggregating $34,500, executing to plaintiff for each advance a separate note, due on demand, for the amount thereof, and he made payments to plaintiff during that time aggregating $26,500, receiving back his canceled notes for the amounts so paid plaintiff; so that at the time of his death he was owing plaintiff $14,000, represented by five separate notes, dated at various times from June 5, 1922, to August 28, 1922, inclusive. This indebtedness of $14,000 represented by the five notes mentioned is the indebtedness upon which plaintiff seeks foreclosure of the mortgages.

After the mortgages were made, and prior to the advance represented by the note of June 5th, deceased had received from plaintiff at various times, in addition to the $6,000 indebtedness existing on May 20, 1922, advances aggregating $19,000, and had repaid $8,000; so that on June 5, 1922, when he received the advance represented by the note of that date, he was already owing plaintiff a balance of $17,000.

The $15,000 note was never entered in the books of the bank, but the various advances and the notes given therefor, and the amounts repaid, were so entered.

The real estate mortgaged was community property. It is shown ■ by the stipulation that Mrs. Comerford had no knowledge of the agreement, exhibit 2; that deceased was a general contractor, doing business on a large scale, and seldom informed her as to the details of his business; that she was accustomed to sign whatever documents her husband presented to her without any personal investigation, and had no information or knowledge with respect to the $15,000 note and the real estate mortgage and the consideration therefor, other than was contained in the note and mortgage themselves.

The defense to the cause of action upon the real estate mortgage is based upon the theory that because the wife must sign and acknowledge a mortgage of community real estate, and because she was not a party to the agreement for future *177 advances, the real estate mortgage was without consideration save as to the $6,000 indebtedness existing at the time the mortgage was executed; and that said $6,000 having been repaid, the mortgage was satisfied and discharged. The defense to the cause of action upon the chattel mortgage is upon the theory that prior to the making of any of the specific advances which are still unpaid, deceased had received moneys under exhibit 2 aggregating the full amount of $15,000 specified in the mortgage; that further advances were in excess of the debt limit designated in the mortgage, and were not secured thereby, and that the first $15,000 received under exhibit 2 having been repaid, the mortgage is satisfied and discharged.

■ The further contention is made by respondent upon this appeal that the agreement, exhibit 2, constituted an extension of the mortgages to secure a debt not named therein and that it was invalid because not both in writing and acknowledged, under C. S., see. 6356, which provides that a mortgage can be created, renewed or extended only by writing executed with the formalities required in the case of a grant of real property; and that as to the real estate mortgage, it was under that statute invalid, because not executed and acknowledged by both deceased and his wife as is required for encumbering community real estate under C. S., sec. 4666.

The rule is well settled that it is not necessary that a mortgage express on its face that it is given to secure future advances; it may describe as the debt secured a specific sum, leaving the true nature of the transaction to be shown by parol proof, and it will then be security for a debt including future advances, to the amount named, if such is the agreement of the parties. (1 Jones on Mortgages, 7th ed., sec. 374; Jones, Chattel Mortgages, 4th ed., sec. 96; DuBois v. First Nat. Bank, 43 Colo. 400, 96 Pac. 169; Westheimer v. Goodkind, 24 Mont. 90, 60 Pac. 813; Shirras v. Craig, 7 Cranch (U. S.), 34, 3 L. ed. 260; Hendrix v. Gore, 8 Or. 406; Tully v. Harloe, 35 Cal. 302.) Nor is the lien of the mortgage in such case necessarily limited to the first ad *178 vanees equaling the sum specified. Where the parties so intend, a mortgage conditioned for the payment of future advances, in an amount specified, has been held to cover the balance, not exceeding the sum specified, remaining unpaid of a total, amount of advances larger than the sum named in the mortgage (Lawrence v. Tucker, 23 How. 14, 16 L. ed. 474; In re York, Fed. Cas. No. 18,138, 3 N. B. R. 661; Courier Journal Job Printing Co. v. Shaffer Meyer Brew. Co., 101 Fed. 699, 41 C. C. A.

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Bluebook (online)
238 P. 515, 41 Idaho 172, 1925 Ida. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weiser-loan-trust-co-v-comerford-idaho-1925.