10 Wyo. 31 | Wyo. | 1901
W. P. Waters instituted this action in the District Court for the cancellation of a certain chattel mortgage executed by him to the defendant below, F. A. DeClark. The mortgage was given to secure the payment of nineteen promissory notes, each payable “on or before” a certain time therein designated; the first note maturing three months after its date and the last note falling due fifty-five months after date. They were dated August 12, 1897. The plaintiff alleged in his petition that he had paid all the notes in full, and had tendered to defendant an amount sufficient to pay the fees for releasing the mortgage on the records, and had requested its discharge.
The answer of defendant controverted the allegations of payment, and alleged that no part of three notes for one hundred dollars each, and but a portion of six other notes
The controversy arises over nine notes, each for one hundred dollars, and they may be placed in two series, one series consisting of three notes and the other of six.
It appears that the three notes had been endorsed to one J. B. Bell as collateral security for an indebtedness of the defendant below, the payee named in the notes, to Bell. A creditor of defendant having procured judgment against him in justice court, the plaintiff, Waters, and Bell were summoned as garnishees, and the proceedings resulted in an order that Bell deliver into court the principal note and the collateral notes held by him, and that Waters pay the amount of his notes (the same being the ones held by Bell as collateral) into court. That order was complied with by both Bell and Waters. The latter paid his notes December 8, 1898, and they were surrendered to him.
Plaintiff in error, defendant below, assailed in the trial court, and assails here, the jurisdiction of the justice in the garnishment proceedings, one ground of the. attack being that no execution was outstanding in the hands of the officer serving the garnishee notice; and it is contended that the defect is a jurisdictional one. Hence, it is urged that the payment by Waters was not lawfully required in the proceedings and not binding upon DeClarlc. The same question was presented in the case of DeClark v. Bell, this day decided, but we held it unnecessary to determine it, and the same condition exists in this case.
The facts as to the remaining six notes in controversy are as follows: DeClark, the defendant below, had assigned them to one Trumbower as collateral security for a note given to Trumbower by DeClark. With knowledge that they were held by Trumbower as collateral security, Waters obtained the notes by paying Trumbower, at the latter’s request, the sum of four hundred and fifty dollars. That payment, and the surrender of the notes thereon to him, Waters insists, amounted to a full and complete payment, and exonerated him from all further liability. He does not rely solely upon the fact of payment, but his contention is that the settlement of the notes at a discount was made with the consent of De-Clark. There seems to be no question upon this record but that the notes were amply secured and worth their face value. Waters is not shown to have been insolvent, and no reason appears for Trumbower’s surrender of the notes for less than their face value, unless it may have been that he desired the money, and possibly that the notes had not matured.
A compromise made with the consent of the pledgor is, of course, binding upon him. In this case it was attempted to show that the pledgor, DeClark, consented that Waters, the maker, might settle the notes with Trumbower, the pledgee, at a discount. Waters testified that in making .payment he relied upon a certain letter received by him from DeClark. That letter was introduced in evidence. It is as follows:
*38 “Big Horn, Wyo., Nov. 3, 1889.
“W. P. W.: — -Yours just received. I don’t know what the law is on notes as security. There is 2 sent over by Mckenzie of Shell, but he has to go to expense of foreclosure before he gets them, as he has notified me to hold. I have receipt that interest is all paid on my notes and only $1.50 or $1.25 is due. Wife is in la. and has perhaps sent Trumber the money, as she has arranged for $500.00 there, and she is turning over notes taken up as security. May take her few days, as has to do it all through the lawer (lawyer) there. We are having house plastered and man waiting on me, so will stop. Huff, the man in saloon, started off his cattle 3 days ago. Trumbower is good for any offer he makes, but of course he will have to account for interest acknowledged paid and only amount due. Later. Just had to stop and man in says it will take Huff and Spears 10 days to get back. (Signed) F. A. DeClark.”
It must be conceded, we think, that the letter not only contains no explicit consent that Waters may settle his notes for less than their face value, but that the language used is far from clear. The expression, “Trumbower is good for any offer he makes,” is perhaps clear enough standing alone, and capable of easy comprehension when applied to certain transactions. But we think it falls short of amounting to a consent that Trumbower, the pledgee, and Waters, the maker, might settle the collateral notes at a sum less than their face value. But in view of the entire contents of the letter it is all the more difficult to construe that language, or any other emplo)''ed in the letter into such a consent. In the first place the writer commences by saying that he is ignorant of the law regarding notes held as collateral security; rather indicating by that statement an intention to retain all rights that the law gave him; and that intention seems to be indicated also by the observations as to the amount for which Trumbower would be obliged to account. What was intended to be expressed by the words “and only amount due,” it is quite impossible to determine by reference alone to the letter. It
The letter might be better understood, possibly, did we know the contents of the letter to which it was an answer. Unfortunately, however, the record leaves us entirely in .the dark as to that. DeClark testified that the letter written him by Waters had been destroyed. Waters was asked by his counsel to state what he wrote, and his answer to the question was as follows: “I wrote him that Mr. Trum-bower had written me, and that I didn’t know that he held any notes against me. He wrote and told me that DeClark owed him $550.00, and that he held these notes as collateral security and that he wanted his money. He says I will make you a proposition, if you want to take these notes up. I accepted the proposition and paid the notes; the notes were payable on or before, at any time.” It is obvious that, so far as the letter of Waters to DeClark is concerned, all that Waters testified about its contents was that he informed DeClark that Trumbower had written him, and he did not know that he held any notes against him. The rest of the answer relates to the" communication of Trumbower to Waters, and that the latter accepted the former’s proposition. If DeClark was informed as to the nature of that proposition, the answer does not disclose it, nor does the testimony elsewhere disclose it. DeClark testified that he did not consent to any settlement of the notes by Waters at less than their face value, and he is positive in that assertion, except, in answer to one of the questions as to whether he had consented to such a settlement, he replied: “Not if I should lose anything, no, sir.” He admitted that Waters had
It may be that the letter of Waters did not mention the fact of a proposed discount. Waters does not testify that it was mentioned, while DeClark’s testimony is to the effect that it was not.
The testimony of Waters is peculiarly cloudy whenever he refers to this matter of consent. For example, on cross-examination, after stating that the letter from DeClark introduced in evidence was the only communication the witness had received upon the subject, he was asked :■ “That is the only direction he has given you with reference to these notes ?” and his reply was : “No, sir; he told me that whatever contract Trumbower made with me he would account for personally. He said that to me on the street and in my store.” Now, whether it is intended to be asserted by that answer that Trumbower would account for any contract he made, or that DeClark would do so, we are quite at a loss to determine. The matter was not followed up by further questioning by either counsel; nor does it appear whether the remark attributed by the witness to DeClark was made before or after the settlement. But on direct examination Waters testified that he relied upon the representations of the letter in accepting the proposition of Trum-bower.
In our opinion, the expressions of the letter are altogether too vague and uncertain to authorize a finding that DeClark consented to the transaction between Waters and Trum-bower. Upon the record before us that letter stands totally unexplained, while the writer of it testifying as a witness
Our conclusion is that upon the three notes held by Bell, and paid by Waters to the justice of the peace, there is no further liability on the part of Waters, and, in respect to those notes, there is no error in the judgment. As to the six notes held by Trumbower, the plaintiff in error, defendant below, is entitled to recover thereon, less the amount paid by Waters to Trumbower. That is to say, Waters is liable for the residue of the face of those notes, after deducting the actual amount he paid on them to the pledgee, Trum-bower. Hence, in our judgment, the court erred in. finding said six notes paid in full, and in adjuding a cancellation of the mortgage. For that error the judgment must be reversed and the case remanded for a new trial.
Whether the plaintiff in error is entitled to a foreclosure of the mortgage in advance of the maturity of the notes, upon the facts, or the allegations contained in his answer, is a matter not decided, as it is not involved in the case now here. Reversed.