155 P. 683 | Okla. | 1916
From an examination of the record in this case, it appears that one L.F. Fue, who was the husband of the plaintiff in error, Ida Fue, in 1908 conveyed certain real estate to plaintiff bank and in December, 1909, by an agreement made between the bank and the said L.F. Fue, said real estate was reconveyed to him by the bank for the consideration of $1,500 evidenced *739 by the joint note of the plaintiff in error and two others. This note was renewed several times, and the bank instituted a suit upon the note to collect against Ida Fue and two others, but the action was dismissed as to the others on account of their age.
At the conclusion of the evidence the trial court instructed a verdict in favor of the bank and against Ida Fue for the full amount of the note. The plaintiff in error did not deny, nor is it denied anywhere in the record, that the bank conveyed this real estate to L.F. Fue for the consideration of said note, but the sole defense of the plaintiff in error is that L.F. Fue told her when the note was executed that the same was being done for the purpose of securing a deficiency in the bank in order that the bank might stand an examination by the examiner, and that as soon as the examination was made the notes would be returned to her, and it is claimed that no consideration passed to her or the other signers for said note. This evidence does not sustain her defense, as it is perfectly clear that her husband, at the time he made said representations to her, was not acting for the bank, but for himself, and the rule is that where an officer of a bank is individually interested and adversely to the bank, knowledge of those things which he thereby acquires is not to be imputed to the bank, since his interest is best served by concealing the same from the bank.
See First National Bank v. Foote, 12 Utah, 157, 42 P. 205, wherein that court held:
"No person can act as an agent in regard to a contract in which he has any interest, or in which he is a party on the opposite side to his principal. * * * In the case at bar, Hague, although cashier of the bank, and empowered to represent it, and speak for it, generally in *740 such transactions, was himself a party to the note on the side opposite to respondent. If it should be held that he represented and spoke for the bank in that transaction, as its agent, he would be permitted to occupy exactly that adverse and inconsistent relation which the law forbids. He had no power or authority to act or speak for the respondent in that matter. He stood upon one side, with his comakers, the appellants, and the bank stood upon the other side."
Also in the State Bank of Moore v. Forsyth,
"Where a benefit is conferred by [upon] a third party or a detriment suffered by the payee of a note at the instance *741 of the maker thereof, it will be sufficient consideration to support the note, even though the maker thereof received no personal benefit by reason of the execution and delivery thereof."
That rule is also announced in Willoughby v. Ball,
L.F. Fue procured this note to be executed; he made certain representations to the plaintiff in error, which were untrue in order to induce her to sign the note. The notes were made payable to the bank, and the bank conveyed to L.F. Fue certain real estate as a consideration for the note. The evidence constitutes no defense by Ida Fue to said note.
The judgment is affirmed.
By the Court: It is so ordered.