126 Wash. 554 | Wash. | 1923
— The Eltopia State Bank is a banking corporation, organized under the laws of the state of Washington. On October 26, 1918, it had on its books some four excess loans, which it had been re
One of the debtors to the Eltopia bank was C. L. Colley, and as to his loan the agreement was carried out. One-half of Colley’s indebtedness amounted approximately to $2,226.35, and for this sum the national bank took his notes, payable to itself, and took a first mortgage upon all his personal property and a first mortgage on his growing crop of wheat as security. Colley gave new notes for the remaining part of the indebtedness to the Eltopia bank; and, as security therefor, gave a second mortgage on the property covered by the mortgage to the national bank. Colley required considerable sums to finance his farming operations, and these the Eltopia bank could not or would not make. The national bank thereupon made the advancements, and the sums so advanced were recognized by the Eltopia bank as constituting a prior lien to the mortgage lien it held upon the property, and were allowed by it as prior liens in the settlement made with Colley after the close of the harvest in 1919.
The mortgage of the national bank provided for future advances to Colley, and the bank did make to him large advances to enable him to perform his necessary farming operations in the year 1920. His crop, however, was again a partial failure, and enough was not realized thereupon to satisfy his obligations due the national bank. The Eltopia bank refused to enter into any arrangement for the year 1921, and the national bank financed Colley under an agreement made wholly with Colley. No release of record, however, was made of its mortgage executed in 1919.
In October, 1921, the Eltopia bank began the present ac.tion to foreclose its mortgage. It made the national bank a party defendant, and averred that the mortgage to the national bank had been paid, and that any claim that the bank had thereunder was subject and inferior to the lien of the plaintiff’s mortgage. The national bank answered, setting out its mortgage of 1919 as a first and superior lien on the property described therein, to the extent of the amount due there
The trial court refused to make findings of fact or conclusions of law. In its decree, however, it recited that there was due and owing from Colley to the First National Bank the sum of $3,307.65, and that there was due and owing from Colley to the substituted plaintiff the sum of $1,944.56. It further recited that the mortgage of the bank was a first and superior lien for the amount found due on the property described in the mortgage. It decreed a foreclosure of both mortgages, ordered the mortgaged property sold, and directed that the proceeds be applied on the mortgage debt in accordance with its conclusion as to the priority of the mortgages. From the decree, the Eltopia .Finance Company appeals.
Subsequent to the execution to it of the first of the mortgages mentioned, the First National Bank received the proceeds of all of Colley’s crops, and the appellant’s assignment of error raises the question whether it has properly accounted for such proceeds. The dealings extended over a period of time exceeding two years, the items are numerous, and the bank’s ledger account, a copy of which is in the record, is but a series of figures showing debits and credits. If these' are taken to be correct, the finding of the court as to the balance due it is also correct.
The appellant, however, challenges a number of these items on the debit side, particularly the items of
In the first of these cases, the authorities on the question are somewhat extensively reviewed, and the conclusion was reached that the great weight of authority was in accord with the view there taken. We are satisfied with the rule announced, and conclude that there was no error in the holding that the first mortgage, to the amount of the original sum secured plus the advances, was a superior lien to the lien of the second mortgage.
The case of Inland Trading Co. v. Edgecombe, 57 Wash. 257, 106 Pac. 768, cited by the appellant, is not contrary to the cases above cited. In that case, the mortgage contained no provision for future advances, and it was held that, as against a junior mortgage, it was a lien only for the amount of the notes enumerated therein. The case, however, does seemingly approve the principle that a mortgage for future advances which leaves it optional with the mortgagee whether or not he shall make them, will be postponed to the lien of a junior encumbrance if made after knowledge that the junior mortgage attached. But this principle is not applicable here. As we read the record, there was
The appellant, however, says that the rule we find controlling is without application to the first mortgage, since that mortgage did not contain a provision for future advances. But the answer to this is that the predecessor of the appellant, in the settlement with the respondent of their mutual accounts at the end of the crop season of that year, treated the mortgage as so providing. Manifestly, neither it nor its successor in interest, in view of the subsequent dealings, can now be heard to say, to the disadvantage of the respondent, that the mortgage did not so provide.
The gross returns for the quarter section of land on which the Eltopia bank held a first mortgage was $906.85. Of this sum, but $300 was paid to the Eltopia bank. The appellant claims that it was entitled to the remainder. But this remainder was expended in seeding, caring for, and harvesting the crop grown thereon. It was absolutely necessary for the production of' the crop, and without it the mortgagee would have received nothing. As these expenditures were advanced by the respondent bank, no principle of equity requires that it should be refused credit for them in its general account.
The objections to other items require no special notice. With reference to certain of them, owing to the fact that the original records had been misplaced or destroyed, the manager of the bank had to rely on his memory as to their purposes, and it may be that, with reference to some of them, he had no recollection. But this in no manner disproves the correctness of the items. The system of bookkeeping adopted seems to have been that commonly used by banks, and there is no presumption that it does not show the true state of the account.
Main, C. J., Parker, and Tolman, JJ., concur.
Pemberton, J., dissents.