Wheeler v. St. Paul Crushed Stone Co.

132 N.E. 1, 191 Ind. 75, 1921 Ind. LEXIS 7
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1921
DocketNo. 23,448
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 132 N.E. 1 (Wheeler v. St. Paul Crushed Stone Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wheeler v. St. Paul Crushed Stone Co., 132 N.E. 1, 191 Ind. 75, 1921 Ind. LEXIS 7 (Ind. 1921).

Opinion

Myers, J.

This was an action by appellee against appellant to enforce payment of a certain promissory note executed by appellant and others as makers. Appellant’s co-makers were not residents of this state and were not made parties. The complaint, answer in five paragraphs, and reply, of general denial, formed the issues submitted to a jury for trial. Upon the conclusion of all the evidence, appellant’s .motion to submit the [77]*77cause to the jury under the court’s instructions was overruled, and appellee’s motion to direct the jury to return a verdict in its favor for the amount of the note with interest at six per cent, per annum from date thereof, without credit or discount, was sustained. The jury was then orally directed by the trial court to return a verdict for appellee, which it did, in the sum of $10,850.05. On February 7, 1918, the court rendered judgment against appellant in favor of appellee for $10,850. Appellant’s motion for a new trial, supported by fifty specifications, was overruled. The various errors assigned and relied on by appellant challenged the action of the trial court: (1) in sustaining a demurrer to one of its paragraphs of answer for want of facts; (2) in directing a verdict in favor of appellee; (3) in overruling his motion for a new trial.

After due consideration of this case as presented by the oral argument and briefs of counsel, we conclude that no good purpose will be subserved by a lengthy statement of the pleadings or of the evidence, although the court’s ruling in directing a verdict for appellee was grounded upon the evidence. However, to state the case generally, it appears that appellant and others interested in constructing a motor speedway near the cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minnesota, contracted with appellee for a quantity of crushed stone for use in that work. The stone was furnished and used, and appellee took a materialman’s lien on the property of the speedway company,- a corporation of Minnesota known as the Twin City Motor Speedway Company. That company on November 1, 1915, created bonds of the aggregate face value of $350,000, and, to secure the payment thereof, it executed a mortgage or trust deed on all of its property, payable to and deposited the same together with the bonds with the Minneapolis Trust Company as trustee. On January 15, 1916, appellant and certain [78]*78other persons interested in the speedway enterprise executed to appellee the note which is the foundation of this action. ' At the time and concurrent with the execution of the note, appellant, with others, executed the following instrument:

“Know all men by these presents, that the undersigned hereby transfer, mortgage and pledge to St. Paul Crushed Stone Company bonds of the Twin City Motor Speedway Company, of .the par value of ...........................Dollars, ($9800.00), numbered............. as collateral security for the payment of a promissory note bearing date January 15th, 1916, made by James F. Sperry, Henry E. L. Habighorst, C. W. Van Orsdol and F. H. Wheeler, as makers, to St. Paul Crushed Stone Company, as payee, due July 1st, 1916, in the sum of $9,769.04. In the event of default in the payment of said promissory note, or the interest thereon, the pledgee hereunder may foreclose this pledge and sell the bonds herein described for the purpose of satisfying said indebtedness in the manner prescribed by the Statutes of the State of Minnesota relating to the foreclosure of chattel mortgages.
In the event of payment of said note, by the undersigned Pledgor, or Pledgors, either or any of them, said bonds shall be delivered to the Pledgor or Pledgors, so paying said note and the Pledgee herein is hereby authorized to deliver said bonds to the Pledgor or Pledgors so satisfying said promissory note.
James F. Sperry,.
F. H. Wheeler
By Seymour Avery, Attorney in Fact,
H. E. L. Habighorst,
C. W. Van Orsdol.
In presence of Milford E. Rumble H. M. Smith.”

The mortgage, among other things, stipulated that:

“If default shall be made in the principal or interest of said bonds, or any thereof, and such [79]*79default shall continue for a period of three (3) months * * * the Trustee may elect at its option, or upon the written request of at least twenty-five thousand dollars in amount, of the holders of said bonds then outstanding, that the principal sum of each of said bonds, together with the interest accrued thereon, shall be immediately due and payable, and may enforce payment thereof. * * * It is hereby declared and agreed that it shall be the duty of the Trustee * * * to take appropriate proceedings in equity or at law, to enforce the rights of the bondholders under these presents, in case of any default made in the terms or conditions of this mortgage, or of the bonds or interest secured hereby, which default shall have continued for a period of three months, upon the written request, however, upon said Trustee, of the holders of not less than twenty-five thousand dollars in amount of the bonds then outstanding. * * * ”

On August 16, 1916, appellant and others, holders of more than $25,000 in amount of the series of bonds pledged to appellee, filed with the trustee under the mortgage their written request for its foreclosure by reason of certain defaults of the mortgagor, and on September 12,1916, the trustee instituted a suit to foreclose the mortgage as to all the bonds of that issue. The complaint alleged various defaults of the conditions of the mortgage, request by the holders of more than $25,000 of the bonds outstanding, the election by the trustee to declare all the bonds outstanding due, and its election to foreclose the mortgage. A decree of foreclosure was entered December 29, 1916. The property covered by the mortgage was sold, bid in by the trustee for $250,000, and the sale confirmed by the court on March 5, 1917. 'There was a stipulation in the mortgage that in case of a foreclosure and sale and purchase by the trustee of the mortgaged property, the trustee, after the period of redemption, should take [80]*80the title in fee simple for the benefit of the holders of the bonds. ■

Appellant’s various contentions in support of each assignment of error, when analyzed, all lead to the one question, namely: Was he entitled to a credit of $7,027 on the note? The decision of this question is largely controlled by the written instrument which each of the parties concede to be what its stipulations indicate — a pledge contract. Appellant is basing his defense upon the theory that this agreement and the delivery of the bonds to appellee entered into the consideration for the execution of the note, and the three acts constituted one entire indivisible contract with an inseparable consideration, whereby appellant became bound as surety only for the payment of the bonds which, upon the sale of the mortgaged property, were, as a matter of law, credited with their pro tanto part of the purchase price of the mortgaged property. Citing — Warren v. Fish (1862), 7 Minn. 432 (Gil 347) ; Sergeant v. Ruble (1885), 33 Minn. 354, 23 N. W. 535.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

First Valley Bank v. First Savings & Loan Ass'n of Central Indiana
412 N.E.2d 1237 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1980)
Silver Fleet Motor Express Co. v. New York Central Railroad
188 N.E.2d 829 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1963)
Walner v. Capron
66 N.E.2d 64 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1946)
Bayh v. Ellis, Tr.
200 N.E. 455 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1936)
Wheeler v. George J. Grant Construction Co.
135 N.E. 194 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 N.E. 1, 191 Ind. 75, 1921 Ind. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeler-v-st-paul-crushed-stone-co-ind-1921.