46 P. 1020 | Idaho | 1896
This action is by the Commercial Bank against J. W. Lieuallen and C. C. Lieuallen, as makers of a promissory note for $1,683.75. The plaintiff prays for a decree foreclosing the real estate mortgage executed by J. W. Lieuallen and Ivanella Lieuallen, husband and wife, as security for the payment of said note. A. A. Lieuallen and A. J. Cable were made defendants, on the ground that they had a lien against the real estate, which lien plaintiff claims is subsequent to the lien of said mortgage. J. W. Lieuallen and his wife contested the right of the bank to foreclose said mortgage, on the ground that said promissory note had been paid in full. The suit was tried by the court, without a jury, and judgment and decree of foreclosure were entered against the defendants. This appeal is from the judgment and order overruling defendants’ motion for a new trial. Several errors are assigned.
The facts of this ease are substantially as follows: The plaintiff seeks to foreclose a mortgage on real estate given to secure a promissory note executed for $1,683.75, and dated January 27, 1892, due six months after date, claiming a balance due thereon of $894.20, with interest from November 21, 1892. The defendants admit the execution of the note and mortgage, but claim that said note has been paid in full, by the payment of a certain amount of cash, and the execution of a promissory note for the sum of $1,556.25, dated August 23, 1893; that the last-mentioned promissory note was paid, part in cash, and the balance by a promissory note for $763.60, dated November 23, 1893, which was secured by chattel mortgage, on which chattel mortgage foreclosure 'proceedings -were commenced December 4, 1894, during the pendency of this action. The plaintiff claims that said $1,556.25 note and the $763.60 note were “memorandum notes,” representing the balance due on the $1,683.75 sued on in this action, after certain payments were made, and gives as one reason for fairing said first-mentioned note that the matter would run for a long time, and would save the expense of executing a new mortgage, every
Appellant contends that the note of $1,683.25, on which this suit was brought, had been paid, and that the evidence clearly shows that fact. The evidence shows that the original note was superseded by the note for $1,556.25, and that note was paid in full, and stamped “Paid” by the respondent and delivered to appellants; that it was paid as follows: Cash, on October 16, 1893, $764; cash, on November 23, 1893, $56.25; and balance, $763.60, by promissory note, dated November 23, 1893, and secured by chattel mortgage. While it is true there is a conflict in the oral testimony given by J. W. Lieuallen, for defendants, and the oral testimony of the witness Funk, for the plaintiff, as to the place occupied by the note of $1,556.25 in this transaction, the testimony of Mr. Lieuallen is supported by the written evidence in the case made by the plaintiff, and is in direct conflict with the oral evidence produced by plaintiff. Mr. Lieuallen testified that the $1,556.25 note was given in part payment of the $1,683.25 note sued on in this case, and on the last-named note are written by Mr. Funk, cashier of the bank, the following words and figures: “R. E. Mtg. Collateral to $1,556.25, due Nov. 23d, 1893.” If that be true, then there was a change of some kind made. The $1,556.25 note took the place of the original, and the original became the collateral, if the testimony of Funk be true. But Mr. Funk also testified that the $1,556.25 was only a “memorandum note,” as he terms it, made for the purpose
The respondent contends that there is a conflict in the evidence, and, for that reason, this court will not disturb the findings of the court below where there is a scintilla of evidence to support them, and cites, among other cases, that of Sabin v. Burke, 4 Idaho, 28, 37 Pac. 352, 355, decided by this court, as sustaining that contention. That case does not sustain the position of respondent. In that case the court said: “In causes tried by the court below, without a jury, the decision of the court on questions of fact takes the place of the verdict of the jury in jury trials, and will not be disturbed when there is a substantial conflict in the testimony, unless the decision is clearly against the weight of the testimony.” That, we think, is the correct rule; and, as there is no substantial conflict in the evidence, the court will not hesitate to reverse the judgment in order that justice may be done.