Thе receiver of the Pemiscot County Bank brought this suit in the circuit court of that county to enforce the payment of a promissory note for $6000 made by the defendant, Going, to said bank. The answer admits the execution of the note, but pleads in defense estoppel, settlement and payment. There was a verdict for the defendant, and from the judgment rendered thereon the plaintiff appealed to the Springfield Court of Appeals, which affirmed the judgment of the circuit court. One of the judges of the Court of Appeals dissented on the ground that the majority opinion conflicted with certain rulings of the Supreme Court and certified the case here for review.
The following facts are pleaded in the answer:
The making of the note is admitted; and that when it was executed and prior thereto, one A. C. Tindle was the cashier of the Pemiscot County Bank, and was also the president of the Pemiscot Lumber Company, an Arkansas corporation. Defendant was the attorney for the Lumber Company. At Tindle’s request defendant executed the note for six thousand dollars to the-bank, the proceeds of same to be used in the purchase of a tract of land in Arkansas, and in turn Tindle agreed to and did execute a note for a like amount by the Lumber Company to the defendant to secure him against loss on account of the note given by him to the bank. At Tindle’s request, the bank discounted defendant’s *509 note to provide funds to purchase for the Lumber Company a half section of land in Arkansas, which was the purpose for which the note had been given. The proceeds arising from this transaction were placed by the bank to the credit of the Lumber Company, and defendant received no part of same. With these proceeds the Lumber Company paid for the land, and defendant’s note was regarded by the bank as the note of the Lumber Company. Defendant was not notified by the bank that the note had not been paid and no demand was made upon him for its payment; that but for'the. conduct of the bank the defendant could and would have proceeded to enforce the payment of the note given to him by the Lumber Company which was then solvent, but which subsequently became bankrupt. That by reason of the foregoing facts, the bank as well as the plaintiff, its receiver, is estoppеd from prosecuting this cause. That in June, 1913, the Pemiscot County Bank was found to be insolvent and was taken in charge by the State Banking Department and later was placed in the hands of two of the bank’s directors as trustees; that it was then discovered that Tindle, its former cashier, owed the bank large amounts of money, and in an effort to pay the same he transferred to one of the said trustees much personal and real property, among which was the stock of the Pemiscot Lumber Company; that preparatory to the conveyance of this property to the trustees for the bank, the defendant was employed by said trustees to represent the bank in said conveyance; that it was discovered that about fifteen hundred acres of land in Arkansas had been purchased by the Lumber Company, but that the deeds thereto had been taken in the name of Tindle and one Elder, and that Tindle had conveyed all of said lands to Elder and that the title to same was in him; that these lands included the half section which had been paid for with the proceeds of the note given by the defendant to the bank; t-hat the trustees thereupon employed defendant to divest Elder of his title to said land and vest the same in trustees for *510 tlie bank, and that said service was successfully performed by the defendant. That before this was effected, defendant informed both of the trustees for the bank that the proceeds of his, defendant’s, note, which is now being sued on, had been used to pay for the half se'ction of the land for the Lumber Company,, and notified them of his intention to have an equitable lien declared against said land to protect him from the payment of said note; that said land was worth, at the time, more than the amount due on said note; that the said trustees, as agents for and representatives of the bank, then and there agreed with the defendant that in lieu of the satisfaction of his note they would take, accept and receive for the bank the title to said half section of land, and in pursuance of this agreement defendant abandoned his right to enforce his lien against said land and caused the title to same to be vested in the trustees for the bank, and abandoned his right to proceed against the Lumber Company on the nоte given by it to him to protect him against the payment of the note sued on; that the bank after securing the title to the half section of land aforesaid by silence and acquiesence, lulled the defendant into a sense of security until after the title, to the half section had been adjusted, the Lumber Company had gone into bankruptcy and the half section of land was listed as a part of the company’s assets, when the bank sought to hold said land as a preferred creditor for the satisfaction of the note it is now seeking to compel the defеndant to pay. That by reason of said facts plaintiff is barred and precluded in good conscience and in equity from maintaining this action.
The reply denies the new matter and asserts that the representatives of the bank did not make the agreement to release the defendant’s note and if such agreement was made it was void for lack of authority, because the bank had failed and its affairs were in the hands of the State Bank Commissioner.
*511 It was admitted that the plaintiff Trust Company was the receiver of the bank and that it sued as such.
Plaintiff introduced the nоte and rested. Defendant testified along the lines of and in support of his answer. In addition he introduced in evidence contracts, deeds, etc., from Tindle to one of the trustees of the bank to show that the note sued on had been paid by Tindle; Tindle’s deposition was read on behalf of the defendant and supported the latter’s testimony. Among’ other things Tindle stated that he explained the transaction in regard to the making of the two notes, to both of the trustees, as representatives of the bank, one of whom was then a director and the other the president of the bank, and told them the purpose for which the note sued on had been given by the defendant, the same being to enable him, Tindle,-to secure six thousand dollars in cash for the Pemiscot Lumber Company to apply on the payment of the half section of land. Tindle’s deposition corroborated the testimony of the defendant in other particulars, which if necessary to be stated in detail will be found in the opinion. The trustees denied that they had made any agreement with the defendant releasing the note sued on, but admitted that defendant assistеd them in removing the cloud from the title to the half section of land to which Elder held the deed. They also denied that defendant’s note was satisfied by the settlement made by them with Tindle for the bank.
*512 In the Lee-Conran case, the distinction between two classes of cases as regards the right of trial by jury is thus defined:
“If the issue joined entitle the parties to an ordinary judgment at law, then, under the Constitution and laws of the State, the parties are entitled to a trial by jury; but if the issues tendered are equitable in their nature and call for equitable relief, then the cause is triable before the chancellor.”
In that case, the action was one at law. The аnswer among other defenses, as at bar, pleaded estoppel. This was held, in the absence of a prayer for affirmative relief, not to convert the action into one in equity.
In the Toler-Edwards case, at page 158, we said further in this regard:
“It has long been settled in this State that a purely legal action, such as ejectment, is not converted into one in equity simply by the interposition of equitable defenses thereto, unless there is a prayer for affirmative relief based on those defenses. ’ ’
An epitome of the defenses pleaded in thе answer will demonstrate whether any equitable right was thereby sought to be established or if a demand was made for the application of an equitable remedy. The answer alleged that the proceeds of the note had been diverted from its purpose or transferred to another without authority and that the defendant had derived no benefit therefrom; that the note was given for a specific purpose with the knowledge and approval of the bank officials, and that the Pemiscot Lumber Company was, in fact, the maker and the real benеficiary; that the note had been paid by Tindle, and if not paid, that it had been settled in the surrender by defendant to the bank of the note for a like amount which had been given to him by the Lumber Company. These were questions of fact for the determination of .the jury in an action at law and we, therefore, overrule the plaintiff’s contention.
*513
*514
"If you find from a prepоnderance of the evidence in this case the note sued on was executed by defendant to procure money with which to purchase the north half of Section 8, Township 4, north, of Range 7 east, in Crittenden County, Arkansas, for the Pemiscot Lumber Company, and that thereafter defendant drew a draft on said bank in favor of the owner £or $4,901.67, the balance . of the purchase money due him, and that defendant honestly and in good faith believed that the proceeds of his note was used by said bank to pay said draft and reimburse A. C. Tindle for one thousand dollars prеviously sent by him to defendant to pay on said purchase price, and if you further find from the evidence that said bank failed and its property was turned over to the State Banking Commissioner, and by him to S. P. Reynolds, as State Special Agent, and that in assembling the assets of said bank, said J. A. Cunningham, the president secured all the capital stock of said Pemiscot Lumber Company, as trustee for said bank, and that said Cunningham, as trustee, and Reynolds, as State Agent, discovered that the title to a large body of land belonging to said Lumber *514 Company had been conveyed to W. E. Elder, the secretary of said company, and that said Reynolds, as special agent, and Cunningham, as president of said bank, sought the services of defendant to divest the title to said land out of said Elder and vest it in said Lumber Company, and that thereupon said defendant informed said Reynolds and Cunningham that if they, as the representatives of said bank, insisted that he was liable to said bank upon the notes sued on, he, the defendant, would undertake to subject said north half of Section 8, Township 4, north, Range 7 east, to the paymc-nt of same; and if you further find from the evidence that it was agreed between the parties that if defendant did release his claim to said land and recover said land for said Lumber Company, said bank would release defendant from liability on said note, or if you believe from the evidence that said Reynolds ao^d Cunningham as the agents of said banJc by their acts, words or conduct led defendant to believe that if he did release his claims to said land and recover the same for said Lumber Company, Pemiscot County Banlt would release defendant on said note, aaid said defendant relying thereon released his clаim against said las%d and Lumber Company and recovered said land for said Lumber Company, then your verdict should be for the defendant
It is to the italicized portion of this instruction to which particular objection is made.
An instruction was given at the request of the plaintiff submitting the issue of the agreement embodied in the foregoing instruction of defendant; plaintiff’s instruction, however, does not embrace the defense of estoppel, which is- submitted in the italicized portion of defendant’s instruction; there is no rule of law or equity which precludes the right of the defendant to thus intеrpose this defense in t]ie manner in which it is made under the facts at bar, and so far as this objection to the instruction goes, it must be held to be without merit.
*515
*516 While courts rеquire those who deal with their officers to take notice of the limitation which the law places upon their powers, this does not preclude such officers from pursuing such a course as should characterize every business transaction, whether performed individually or in a representative capacity. If the facts are, as the defendant declares them to be, judicial sanction should not be given to the course pursued by the representatives of the bank in this matter.
We do not desire to, nor will we draw any invidious distinctions between the testimоny of the respective parties hereto, further than our rules of procedure require, in that we will recognize the superior probative force of any substantial testimony, the verity of which has been approved by the jury. The jury, well within their province, have determined to give credence to the testimony of the defendant rather than that of the representatives of the bank. A summary of the defendant’s testimony, corroborated by that of the witness Tindle is, that by reason of the representations of the trustees, defendant was caused to lose his right to secure from the assets of the Lumber Company the amount it owed him equal to that of the face of his note given to the bank; that the course pursued by the trustees prevented defendant from enforcing an equitable lien upon the half section of land owned by the Lumber Company. While this course of conduct was, no doubt, pursued in an effort to enlarge the bank’s assets and with no desire to limit the rights of the defendant, it nevertheless had this effect and in the face of the record this course does not meet with our approval. .
*517
“The court instructs the jury that if you find and believe from the evidence in this case that the said A. C. Tindle and wife executed a deed of trust to and in favor of J. A. Cunningham as trustee for the Pemiscot County Bank upon all of the property which the said *517 A. C. Tindle owned, reserving tlie right to use said property and collect the rents and profits for a period of a year; ail<^ ^ 7011 ®11(^ ail<^ Relieve from the evidence in this case that subsequently said A. C. Tindle conveyed his entire interest, including the rent, in said land, for the consideration of the release, settlement and satisfaction of all indebtedness which the said A. C. Tindle owed .said bank, either directly or indirectly; and if you further find and believe from the evidence that the indebtedness sued on herein was included in said release, settlement and satisfaction and that said bank accepted and received said property and retained same, then you are instructed that said debt hasfbeen paid and that the plaintiff cannot recover in this case. ’ ’
This instruction is based on the testimony of Tindle who stated that the rents and profits of his mortgaged property was of the value of ten thousand dollars per year, and at the time of his release of the equity of redemption he was entitled to collect rents and profits for ten months, amounting to about eight thousand dollars, which he surrendered when he entered into the release, settlement and satisfaction of all of his indebtedness to the bank, directly or indirectly, as shown in a written instrument signed by Tindle and Cunningham, one of the trustees, on July 12th, 1913. The witnesses for the plaintiff denied the truth of this statement, but the jury gave credence to the testimony of Tindle. ' It was upon this testimony that thе above instruction was given. It simply told the jury that if Tindle released his. equity in consideration of the settlement and satisfaction of his indebtedness to the bank, directly or indirectly, and that the indebtedness sued on was included in that settlement and the bank accepted and received the property and retained it, then the debt sued on had been paid.
Ordinarily, a conveyance by a mortgagor to a mortgagee of the fee in mortgaged lands results in a merger of the legal and equitable titles, and in the resultant satisfaction of the entire debt secured by the *518 mortgаge. [27 Cyc. 1378-9 and cases cited.] This result, it may be conceded, is dependent in many cases upon the evidence as to intention of the parties at the time the equity is conveyed. The jury in believing Tindle evidently found that when he executed the deed to the representatives of the bank, he had an equity or interest in the property to the extent of eight thousand dollars; and that he surrendered this interest in consideration of a complete settlement and satisfaction of his direct and indirect indebtedness to the bank, including, as he stated, the note sued on. Thеre was, to say the least, substantial evidence upon which to base such a finding and hence the instruction, was not error. The defendant’s right to a verdict, however, in view of his other defenses, pleaded and proved, need not be made to depend on this instruction; and its discussion is pertinent if for nothing inore than to show that its giving did not constitute error authorizing a reversal.
Instructions numbered 8 and 9, refused, did not involve any issues presented by the testimony and hence need not be considered. •
*521 In view of all of which we are of the opinion that the plaintiff has suffered no substantial injury in the refusal of the instructions above referred to.
A careful review of the entire record discloses no ruling’s in regard to the admission or exclusion of testimony which materially affected the rights of the plaintiff.
. While it is true, as a general rule, that in an ordinary money demand, the fact of payment is in the nature of new matter and by our code inadmissible under a simple denial (Wilkerson v. Farnham,
A careful review of all the facts demonstrates to our satisfaction-that the judgment was for the right party.” Finding no error authorizing a reversal it is, therefore, affirmed.
