Willamette Collection & Credit Service v. Gray

70 P.2d 39, 157 Or. 77, 1937 Ore. LEXIS 109
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 70 P.2d 39 (Willamette Collection & Credit Service v. Gray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Willamette Collection & Credit Service v. Gray, 70 P.2d 39, 157 Or. 77, 1937 Ore. LEXIS 109 (Or. 1937).

Opinion

BELT, J.

On December 24, 1924, defendant A. L. Gray and his wife executed a note and mortgage to the appellant Travelers Insurance Company to secure the payment of a loan of $2,500. The mortgage which was timely recorded constituted a first lien on 71 acres of land in Lane county, Oregon. Gray defaulted in payment of principal and interest and, in 1935, negotiations were entered into resulting in an agreement whereby Gray and his wife were to execute a deed to the Travelers Insurance Company in consideration of their release from liability for payment under the note and mortgage. The insurance company, however, asserts that it was also understood and agreed at such time that, before acceptance of the deed and satisfaction of the mortgage, it had the right to examine the abstract of title in its possession to determine whether the land was encumbered by other liens and mortgages. An examination of the title disclosed, aside from the above-mentioned mortgage, three other mortgages of record, viz, a second mortgage in favor of Commercial Mortgage Security Co.; a third mortgage in favor of the *79 Bank of Commerce; and a fourth mortgage executed by Gray and his wife, on October 6, 1930, in favor of C. L. Dunn, for $601. The insurance company procured a record satisfaction of the second and third mortgages and they are not involved in this, controversy. It is the fourth mortgage which is involved and must be kept in mind.

The deed, dated October 26, 1935, and the satisfaction of the first mortgage, dated November 26, 1935, were executed but not recorded until later as, in order to clear title, it was necessary for the insurance company to secure a release and satisfaction of the Dunn mortgage. Correspondence with Dunn, who lived at Yakima, Washington, resulted in the execution of the release of his mortgage in consideration of the payment of $10. The note and mortgage were not surrendered to the insurance company nor was any request made for Dunn to surrender them. After having obtained the release or satisfaction, the insurance company, on December 4,1935, believing the title clear, recorded the deed to it from Gray, the satisfaction of its mortgage and the other satisfactions of mortgages.

In August, 1931, C. L. Dunn filed his petition in bankruptcy; a trustee, one C. S. Dillon, was appointed; and the note and mortgage designated above as the? fourth mortgage were delivered to such officer without any written assignment thereof. Dunn secured his discharge in bankruptcy and the trustee, in due course, secured an order of the court directing him to sell the accounts and notes receivable in his hands, among which was the Gray note for $601. The order of sale makes no reference to the mortgage securing the payment of such note, but we think the mortgage was included in the sale as incident to the note which it secured. The accounts and notes receivable listed *80 amounted in the aggregate to $13,099, although as a matter of fact they had but little value. These accounts and notes receivable, including the Gray note, were sold for $25.50 to W. H. Blowers who was engaged in the collection business in the city of Eugene. The sale was confirmed and the note and mortgage were delivered to Blowers. Twenty-three days later Blowers, who retired from the collection business, sold and delivered the note and mortgage to the respondent Willamette Collection & Credit Service, a corporation, for the sum of $30, without any written assignment. Respondent ever since has been in possession of the note and mortgage.

It is interesting to note that C. S. Dillon, who was an executive officer and owned all the stock in the respondent corporation, with the exception of qualifying shares therein, was, at time of sale from Blowers to the corporation, still acting as trustee in bankruptcy. However, no fraud or collusion is charged and we pass without further comment that phase of the case.

Shortly after the insurance company filed the deed and releases of mortgages for record, the respondent commenced the instant suit to foreclose its mortgage, asserting it to be a first lien. From a decree in favor of the plaintiff in accordance with the prayer of the complaint, the Travelers Insurance Company appeals.

It is the theory of the respondent that Dunn had no authority to execute a release or satisfaction of the Gray mortgage for the reason that title to the note and mortgage had previously been acquired by it as a result of the assignment by Dunn of his notes receivable to the trustee in bankruptcy and the subsequent sale and assignment by the purchaser at the bankruptcy sale to the respondent. It is further contended by respondent that the satisfaction and release of the Gray *81 mortgage by the insurance company and the acceptance of the deed resulted in a merger of title and that, by reason thereof, its mortgage became a first lien on the property.

The principal contentions of the insurance company are: (1) That it had a right, in the absence of any notice of assignment of the mortgage, to rely upon the record that Dunn was the owner thereof and was authorized to satisfy the same; (2) that it is a subsequent purchaser for value without notice of any assignment and therefore the satisfaction of the mortgage by the record owner, by virtue of the statute (§ 54-109, Oregon Code 1930) operated to free the land of the mortgage lien; that, if the above statute is inapplicable and plaintiff has a valid lien, the mortgage of the appellant insurance company should be revived and foreclosed as a superior lien.

It appears from the uncontradicted evidence that the appellant insurance company, at the time it recorded the deed and satisfactions of mortgages, had no actual notice or reason to believe that Dunn had sold or assigned the mortgage which plaintiff asserts. Neither did the appellant have constructive notice of any assignment of the mortgage or of any interest plaintiff had in the land. No record notice of bankruptcy proceedings was filed in Lane county where the land was situated. Appellant undoubtedly relied upon the record owner as having authority to satisfy the mortgage.

The vital questions are: Did appellant, acting in good faith and without notice of any assignment of the mortgage, have the right to rely upon what the record disclosed? Or was it, in securing a release of the mortgage by the record owner, obliged to assume the risk of a previous unrecorded assignment of the *82 mortgage? Was the assignee of the Dunn mortgage required to take a written assignment and record it to preserve its lien as against an innocent purchaser or encumbrancer who deals with the property in reliance upon the public record ? It is important to bear in mind that this is not a case between the plaintiff and its assignor of the note and mortgage. Nor is it one between two assignees, one of which is prior in time. It is a contest between an assignee, claiming under an unrecorded assignment, and an innocent purchaser. We might well agree with respondent that, as between it and its assignor, the title to the note and mortgage passed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 P.2d 39, 157 Or. 77, 1937 Ore. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willamette-collection-credit-service-v-gray-or-1937.