Wyoming Inv. Co. v. Wax Et Ux.

18 P.2d 919, 45 Wyo. 321, 1933 Wyo. LEXIS 12
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 1933
Docket1770
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 18 P.2d 919 (Wyoming Inv. Co. v. Wax Et Ux.) 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
Wyoming Inv. Co. v. Wax Et Ux., 18 P.2d 919, 45 Wyo. 321, 1933 Wyo. LEXIS 12 (Wyo. 1933).

Opinion

*324 Blume, Justice.

This is an action brought by tbe plaintiffs, respondents herein, against tbe defendants, appellants herein, on a promissory note purporting to have been executed by tbe defendants on April 22, 1929, made to John W. Hartney for tbe principal sum of $1776.00, due on or before five years after date with interest at tbe rate of 1% per annum payable semi-annually, and providing that in case of suit upon tbe note tbe makers thereof should pay 10% additional as attorney fees. Tbe note was secured by a mortgage also sought to be foreclosed herein, made to John W. Hartney, which also is dated on April 22, 1929, duly acknowledged before R. N. LaFontaine, Notary Public, and duly filed for record on May 9, 1929, conveying as security tbe west sixteen feet of tbe north forty-four feet of Lot 3 in Block 175 in tbe City of Cheyenne, Wyoming. Tbe mortgage states that it is a second mortgage and that a first mortgage for the sum of $4000 is held by tbe Investors Snydicate of Minneapolis, Minnesota. It further provides that:

“In ease default shall be made in the payment of the above sum hereby secured, or in the payment of the interest thereon, or any part of such principal or interest, when the same shall become due, or in case default shall be made in any of the covenants and agreements hereof, then the whole indebtedness hereby secured, with the interest thereon shall *325 become due and payable, and the mortgagee may proceed, pursuant to law, to foreclose on and sell said property, and out of the proceeds of such sale they shall pay all sums due hereunder, together with all costs of sale and foreclosure, including One Hundred Dollars as attorney’s fee.”

On May 14, 1929, the plaintiff and respondent herein, the Wyoming Investment Company, made a loan to John W. Hartney. The note of $1776 made by the defendants was pledged as collateral thereto, and endorsed to the plaintiff on the back thereof. At the same time John W. Hartney made and executed to the plaintiff an assignment of the Wax mortgage, duly acknowledged and filed of record on the 14th day of May, 1929, and on the same day John W. Hartney also executed to plaintiff an agreement showing that the note and mortgage heretofore mentioned had been duly assigned as collateral security, and that it should be security for the payment of all and any liabilities due or to become due to plaintiff or that might thereafter be contracted, and that the collateral, in ease of default, might be sold at public or private sale without notice, with the right of the plaintiff to become purchaser at such sale. The officers of the plaintiff corporation testified that on May 15, 1929, the following letter was sent, duly stamped and addressed and deposited in the postoffice, as follows:

‘ ‘ Louis Wax & Anna Wax,
321 West 16th Street,
Cheyenne, Wyoming.
Dear Sir & Madam:
This will notify you that we have your note for $1776.00 dated April 22, 1929, payable to the order of John W. Hart-ney and secured by a certain real estate mortgage; this note has been pledged with us as security for a loan made to Mr. Hartney. This is to inform you that any payments made to apply on principal or interest on this loan must be made at our office.”

The note heretofore mentioned, made by Hartney to plaintiff, dated May 14, 1929, is for the principal sum of *326 $1573.00, payable $50 on the third day of each succeeding month. Twenty payments were made, the last on January 3, 1931, making the total of payments on the note the sum of $1000, and showing the principal amount due thereon as of that date the sum of $573.00, but an additional loan seems to have been made to Hartney, the facts of which do not clearly appear in the record, evidenced by a note of October 7, 1930, for $352.50, payable at the rate of $27 on the third day of each month thereafter. On this last note no payments were ever made, and the note of $1573 was in default after February 3, 1931. In accordance with the power of sale conferred upon the plaintiff it advertised the Wax note and mortgage for sale, and a sale of the collateral pledged by Hartney to the plaintiff was accordingly made on March 12, 1931, to the plaintiff herein. It is alleged by the defendants that the sale was illegal, but no evidence to that effect was introduced. Prior to that time, and on February 14, 1931, plaintiff also advised the defendants, by letter, as well as orally, that in view of the fact that no payments had ever been made on their note of $1776, the entire amount had become due, and requesting a settlement. Nothing being done by the defendants, this action was instituted on March 12, 1931.

The defendants pleaded that the note and mortgage in suit were never executed, or if executed were obtained from the defendants, who are illiterates, by fraud perpetrated by one R. L. LaFontaine, and that whatever paper was executed by them as requested by LaFontaine was represented by the latter to be a contract for the purchase of property. The origin of the indebtedness by the defendants herein appears to be as follows: On November 22, 1927, the Barks-dale Realty Company, or John W. Hartney and R. L. La-Fontaine, were the owners of the property mentioned in the mortgage in suit in this case. They had theretofore made a contract of sale for such property to F. M. Burrill. The latter desired to dispose of his interest, and Morris Wax, son of the defendants herein, desired to acquire a *327 home and to purchase that property. On November 22, accordingly, Burrill and his wife assigned the contract, which he held, in blank, in the presence of Morris Wax, of Max Wax, also a son of the defendants, and of Annie Wax, one of the defendants herein, paying Burrill the sum of $500 for his interest in the property, which sum was paid by Max Wax. The contract was payable at the rate of $50 each month and payments of that sum were continued to be made each month up to April 22, 1929. At that time, according to the plaintiff’s theory, the Burrill contract was taken up by a note and mortgage of $4000 to the Investors Syndicate of Minneapolis, Minnesota, and by a note and a second mortgage against the property for $1776, the latter being the note and the mortgage in suit in this case. The defendants, however, deny that the Burrill contract was taken up by the notes and the mortgages just stated, but claim that it was intended at that time that a new contract of purchase should be made, and claim that if any new papers were executed, it was a new contract of purchase executed to them instead of to F. M. Burrill. No new contract of purchase was, however, actually executed, but payments made by the defendants or their sons each month thereafter were made to the Barksdale Realty Company, and consisted of the sum of $50.00. $40 of this was credited to the first mortgage in a loan book of the Investors Syndicate. All of these payments were also endorsed, at least up to March, 1930, on the Burrill contract. The amounts of $10 each month, that is to say, the amount over and above the $40 credited on the first mortgage, were never paid to the plaintiffs on the second mortgage, but were retained by the Barksdale Realty Company or by the stockholders thereof. It appears that R. L.

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Bluebook (online)
18 P.2d 919, 45 Wyo. 321, 1933 Wyo. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wyoming-inv-co-v-wax-et-ux-wyo-1933.