American Freehold Land Mortgage Co. of London, Ltd. v. Wood

140 Ark. 452 | Ark. | 1919

SMITH, J.

In 1909 appellee, Fred A. Wood, became indebted to The American Freehold Land Mortgage Company of London, Limited, hereinafter referred to as the mortgage company, in the sum of $6,200, evidenced by ten principal notes and a like number of interest notes, one principal note and one interest note being payable on the first day of November from 1909 to 1918, and secured by a deed of trust on lands owned by appellee. Appellee paid the interest up to the first day of November, 1914, and paid $415.35 on the principal, and on May 5, 1915, owed a balance of $6,494.95. At that time Wood negotiated a loan from the Deming Investment Company of eight thousand dollars for the purpose of paying the debt due the mortgage company and two other debts which were secured by mortgage liens on his lands, and the investment company sent to J. D. Arnold, its local agent at Little Rock, a draft payable to J. M. Rose, the Arkansas representative of the mortgage company, for the amount due the mortgage company. Arnold’s instructions were to deliver the draft to Rose on the surrender of the canceled notes held by the mortgage company and the delivery of a duly executed release of the mortgage. Arnold delivered the draft to Rose without taking up the notes, but he did receive from Rose what purported to be a valid release of the mortgage. This release was properly executed by the duly authorized officers of the mortgage company, but it is said that, as originally executed, it related to another mortgage and that it had been changed after its transmission to Rose to describe appellee’s mortgage. Rose deposited the draft with a local bank to the credit of his individual account (all funds collected by him for the mortgage company were thus deposited) and thereafter made various remittances of this money and other collections for the benefit of the mortgage company to a bank in New York City as his contract with the mortgage company required him to do. The letters accompanying these remittances gave directions for the application of the payments so remitted, but in none of these letters was the mortgage company advised to give credit on appellee’s mortgage. Rose died, and a representative of the company took charge of his affairs and his papers, and upon an audit of his books he was found to be largely indebted to the mortgage company.

Suit was brought to foreclose appellee’s mortgage; and in the answer and cross-complaint which was filed payment was alleged and the cancellation of the mortgage was prayed.

Rose’s agency contract was offered in evidence, and the court below held that, by its terms, express authority was conferred on Rose to collect the sum due on appellee’s mortgage, and the court canceled the mortgage as having been paid, and the company has prosecuted this appeal.

Appellee insists, for the affirmance of the judgment, first, that the court properly construed the agency contract ; second, that appellee’s money actually reached the ‘ company and the debt was thereby paid; and, third, that, if Rose did not have actual authority to make the collection, that action was within the apparent scope of his authority.

Of the second ground it may be said that a very plausible argument is made to support it. But we think it sounder to say that in receiving appellee’s money Rose was acting within the apparent scope of his authority.

The agency contract is a lengthy one and covers many matters of detail, and we do not, therefore, set it ont, but the fourth paragraph — on which the decision of the court below was based — reads as follows:

‘ ‘ The agent hereby undertakes to carry on the business contemplated by this agreement, viz.: 'The making of mortgages for and on behalf of the company, collecting of principal, interest and charges, etc., and doing all the work incidental to the conduct of the mortgage business in an efficient and business-like manner, and also to do and perform all reasonable things and to render all reasonable things and to render all reasonable services conducive, incidental, or essential thereto, and. to the adequate protection of the company’s interest in all respects. ”

Another paragraph designates the agency as a special agency and recites that Rose is to have no other or different power or authority, either expressed or implied, than is defined and limited by the contract.

A study of these paragraphs in connection with the remainder of the contract leaves us in doubt whether the court below was correct in the construction given it; but, when it is read in the light of the testimony in the case, and the contract and that testimony are considered together, we think the receipt of appellee’s money by Rose was within the apparent scope of Rose’s authority, and the company was, therefore, as completely bound as if - express authority had been conferred.

This testimony may be summarized as follows: Rose became the company’s agent in 1898 for the State of Arkansas, and thereafter made a great many loans and acted for the company in an infinite number of transactions between the company and the borrowers growing out of these loans. The applications for the loans were made to Rose, and these applications with the abstracts of the title to the lands offered as security for the loans were delivered to Rose and forwarded by him to the company, and when the loans had been approved the deeds of trust were written Tby Rose on-blank forms bearing Ms name as agent and thereafter the borrower dealt with no one but-Rose upon all questions of extension of time, of payment of either principal or interest, or of cancellation of the deeds of trust after payment had been made. It was the custom of the company to send releases to Rose, who delivered them to the borrowers upon the payment of their loans. The release which Rose was said to have altered was sent to him in this manner by the company, according to the testimony in its behalf, for the purpose of releasing a different loan. ,

The agency contract does not recite that Rose had authority to collect notes which had not been sent him for collection, but it contained no denial of that authority, and it is undisputed that he collected a great many notes, both for principal and interest, for the company. It is said, however, that in each case where that authority existed the notes had been sent to Rose for collection.

It was shown, however, that Rose had in his possession at all times a large number of the company’s notes, each of which contained the following endorsement:

“To John M. Rose for collection and cancellation on our account. ¡
(Signed) “The American Land & Mortgage Company of London,-Limited,
“By W. B. Smith, Secretary.”

Notes were sent to Rose for collection from sixty to ninety days before their maturity, and he had in his possession at all times for collection a large number of the company’s loan notes. Indeed, at the time Arnold delivered the draft for the amount of appellee’s mortgage Rose had in his possession appellee’s notes due in the years 1909, 1910, 1911, 1912, 1913 and 1914, and the authority to collect those notes is conceded, but Rose did not then have in his possession the notes which had not matured. It thus appears that appellee had obtained much indulgence in the matter of extension of time and these extensions were granted to appellee, as were similar extensions to other borrowers, by Rose.

The mortgage company invokes the doctrine of the case of Taylor v. Oliver, 137 Ark. 515, and of other cases there cited, to the effect that authority to negotiate loans raises no presumption of authority to collect such loans ■without possession of the securities, and counsel quotes from that case the following statement of the law:

“The doctrine of those cases is conclusive of this. Bose did not have the notes for collection at the time the payments were made; and we think the testimony does not show that Mrs. Taylor was guilty of any conduct which warranted Oliver in assuming that Bose had the authority to make these collections. The testimony is conflicting as to whether Bose was the agent of Mrs. Taylor, or of Oliver, in negotiating the loan; but, if it be assumed that Bose was the agent of Mrs. Taylor in this respect, it does not follow that he was also her agent for the purpose of receiving money in payment of this loan. Upon the contrary, the law is that authority to negotiate loans raises no presumption of authority to collect such loans without possession of the securities. The note to Campbell v. Gowans, 23 L. R. A. (N. S.), 414, cites many cases to that effect.”

It will be observed, however, that we there said that “we think the testimony does not show that Mrs. Taylor (the mortgagee) was guilty of any conduct which warranted Oliver (the mortgagor) in assuming that Bose had the authority to make these collections.”

And just here the instant case is distinguishable from that case. We think the testimony set out above would have warranted a person of ordinary prudence and acquaintance with business usages — such as the testimony shows Arnold to have been — to believe, as Arnold did believe, that Bose had full authority in all matters relating to the extension and-collection of these notes and the satisfaction of the deeds of trust securing them; and, that being true, payment to such an agent must be deemed payment to the principal. Bigelow on Estoppel (6 Ed.), 612, 613; Martin v. Webb, 110 U. S. 7; Travelers’ Ins. Co. v. Edwards, 122 U. S. 457; Johnson v. Milwaukee & Wyo. Inv. Co., 46 Neb. 480, 64 N. W. 1100; Dispatch Ptg. Co. v. Nat. Bank of Commerce, 109 Minn. 440, 124 N. W. 236, 50 L. R. A. (N. S.), 663; Quinn v. Dresbach, 75 Cal. 159, 16 Pac. 762; Harrison Nat. Bank v. Austin, 65 Neb. 632, 91 N. W. 540; Fitzgerald v. Beckwith, 182 Mass. 177, 65 N. E. 36; Thompson v. Shelton, 49 Neb. 644, 68 N. W. 1055; Hare v. Bailey, 73 Minn. 409, 76 N. W. 213.

Tbe decree of tbe court below adjudging that appellee’s deed of trust bad been paid and canceling it on that account is therefore affirmed.

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