213 P. 354 | Idaho | 1923
This action was brought by plaintiffs to foreclose a mortgage which was given by Ensign and wife to the state of Idaho on certain lands in Blaine county to secure a loan of $4,500. Plaintiffs claim title to the note and mortgage in this case by reason of an assignment thereof to one W. H. Gibberd by the state of Idaho, an assignment by Gibberd to O. V. Allen, former state treasurer, and an assignment by Allen to plaintiffs. At the time of commencing the action plaintiffs had not obtained possession of the note and mortgage, but alleged the same to be in the possession of one B. F. Olden, who was made a defendant.
The owner of the land at the time the action was commenced was the Wyoming Holding Company, a corporation organized under the laws of Idaho, of which Dean Perkins, one of the defendants, was the receiver. Defendant M. F. Dean is a judgment creditor of said Wyoming Holding Company.
Dean Perkins, as receiver of the Wyoming Holding Company, answering plaintiffs’ complaint, admitted the execution and delivery of the note and mortgage, but denied that the same were due, or that they had ever been assigned to the said Gibberd, or that they were assigned to plaintiffs for valuable or any consideration, or that prior to the commencement of this suit the said Gibberd, for any consideration whatever, assigned said note and mortgage, or that the plaintiffs were the holders of said note and mortgage. Said answer further alleged that the note and mortgage sued on in this case were fraudulent and void by reason of certain false representations made at the time of obtaining said loan from the state of Idaho, and that prior to the time of filing this suit the plaintiffs had known of the invalidity of said note and mortgage and of the fraudulent manner in which the same were executed; that the said W. H. Gibberd, through whom plaintiffs claim title, was at the time plaintiffs claimed he executed his assignment of said note and mortgage restrained by injunction from executing and delivering the same and that therefore his attempted act of assignment was fraudulent and void.
The National Surety Company by leave of court filed its complaint in intervention alleging that during O. Y. Allen’s incumbency of the office of state treasurer it became a surety on his official bond in the sum of $200,000; that the said Allen defaulted in the sum of $145,264.34, for which sum judgment was obtained against said surety company and by it paid to the state; that the assignment of said note and' mortgage was obtained by the said Gibberd by payment to the state of Idaho of $4,975.15, which was part of a trust fund in the hands of the said Allen, which he had unlawfully taken from the state treasury and delivered to the said Gibberd; that the said trust fund of $4,975.15 was included in the sum of $145,264.34, which was paid by the intervenor to the state of Idaho because of the defalcation of said O. Y. Allen as treasurer of said state; that some time after September 19, 1914, the date on which the said Gibberd obtained the assignment of the said note and mortgage from the state of Idaho, the said “Gibberd assigned said promissory note and mortgage to the plaintiffs herein, but that said assignment was without consideration and that said promissory note and mortgage were not at the time of said assignment, nor have they been since, delivered to said plaintiffs, and that said promissory note and mortgage and said assignment thereof were taken by said plaintiffs with notice and knowledge of the facts herein stated. That by reason of said facts herein stated said plaintiffs hold any and all rights, titles, interests and estates which they may have or claim to have in and to said promissory note and mortgage as trustees for the use and benefit of said state of Idaho and for the use and benefit of this intervenor.”
Said complaint in intervention further alleges matters proper to be alleged in a complaint to foreclose said mort
The receiver of the Wyoming Holding Company answered the complaint in intervention and denied that the sum of $8,844.68, the sum which it is claimed Allen took from the state treasury and caused to be paid to the state of Idaho for the assignment of the notes and mortgages given by Ensign and one George B. Wood, was a part of the sum of $145,264.34 paid by the National Surety Company to make good the shortage of O. V. Allen as state treasurer, or that said sum was a trust fund, or that it was extracted by the said Allen from funds belonging to the state of Idaho and embezzled by him, or that the intervenor is the lawful owner of the promissory note and mortgage sued on in this action. Said answer further alleges false and fraudulent representations which the receiver claims to have been made by Ensign in the procuring of said loans and certain false and fraudulent representations made by Allen and his agents when the Wyoming Holding Company acquired said mortgaged lands, and reliance by the said company on said false and fraudulent representations, and that said note and mortgage were not tona fide instruments, and that the state of Idaho is estopped by the acts and conduct of its agents from claiming any right, title or interest in said premises, and that said intervenor is also estopped thereby.
Substantially the same matters are set up in the answer to the complaint and the complaint in intervention by M. F. Dean, judgment creditor of said Wyoming Holding Company, as are pleaded by the receiver in his answers to the plaintiffs’ complaint and the complaint in intervention.
In addition to such matters Deán -sets up a judgment obtained by him against the Wyoming Holding Company, that an abstract of said judgment was filed in the office of
For lack of information or belief plaintiffs deny all of the allegations of the intervenor with regard to the embezzling of the trust fund of $8,844.68 by O. V. Allen, or the payment of a part thereof to the state of Idaho for the assignment of said note and mortgage. They admit the assignment by Gibberd to Allen and by Allen to plaintiffs, but deny that there was no consideration, or that they had any knowledge or information “that the state of Idaho or the intervenor had any claims, rights or interest in the said note and mortgage whatsoever, and deny that they had any notice or knowledge of any facts similar to those set out in the complaint and intervention or facts that would in any way lead or tend to make them believe that the said note and mortgage were otherwise than genuine and in good faith and allege the fact to be that these plaintiffs purchased the said note prior to its maturity and for full value, without any notice of any defect in the title.”
Plaintiffs deny also that the intervenor is the owner of the note and mortgage in controversy.
Judgment was for plaintiffs, and defendants Dean and the receiver and the intervenor appeal.
The allegations of fraud made by Dean and the receiver, so far as they affect the rights of such parties, are wholly without proof. If a fraud was perpetrated on the state in procuring this loan, as seems probable, that is nothing to these parties, since they failed to show that their rights have in any manner been affected thereby. And if, as claimed by Dean, the Wyoming Holding Company relied upon representations made by Allen and his agents, or on representations as to the value of the land made by Ensign in procuring the loan, it did so at its peril, and the receiver cannot now avoid the responsibility that results from the purchase of this land by the Wyoming Holding Company subject to the mortgage given, by Ensign. The Wyoming Holding Company having bought subject to the mortgage and pre
Conceding for the moment, but not deciding, that Dean as judgment creditor of the 'Wyoming Holding Company might attack the mortgage, he has wholly failed to show that the mortgage given by Ensign was fraudulent.
The loan to Ensign was not, as claimed by Dean and the receiver, fictitious in any sense, except that probably in obtaining the loan a fictitious value was given to the property covered by the mortgage. It was very real in every other respect in that a real note was given by a real person and secured by a real mortgage on real land, and the state parted with $4,500 of real money therefor. Whether the state would ultimately have suffered loss if it had been required to foreclose we cannot know, but the fact remains that it did not lose by reason of this loan because the intervenor paid the loss caused by Allen’s defalcation.
The evidence is undisputed that the assignment of this note and mortgage to Gibberd was procured from the state by the payment therefor of $4,975.15 of the state’s money unlawfully taken from the state treasury by Allen and placed in the hands of one Olden. Gibberd paid nothing of his own for the note and mortgage and did not receive them. They were taken by Olden, and at the time of commencing this action plaintiffs had not received them.
Plaintiffs claim to have taken the assignment of the note and mortgage in this case from O. Y. Allen in good faith and for value and without notice of any defect in Allen’s title thereto. But it is urged by the intervenor that under the pleadings of plaintiffs they were not entitled to offer evidence to sustain their contention if they had attempted to do so. They did in fact offer no direct evidence to sustain their contention, the only evidence bearing thereon in plaintiffs’ behalf being such as was drawn from Mr. Guthrie on his cross-examination by the intervenor and his subsequent
Idaho Compiled Statutes contain the following provisions with regard to promissory notes:
“Sec. 5919. A holder in due course is a holder who has taken the instrument under the following conditions: . . . .
“3. That he took it in good faith and for value.
“4. That at the time it was negotiated to him he had no notice of any infirmity in the instrument or defect in the title of the person negotiating it. ’ ’
“Sec. 5922. The title of a person who negotiates an instrument is defective within the meaning of this chapter when he obtained the instrument, or any signature thereto, by fraud, duress, or force and fear, or other unlawful means, or for an illegal consideration, or when he negotiates-it in breach of faith, or under such circumstances as amount to a fraud.
“Sec. 5923. To constitute notice of an infirmity in the instrument or defect in the title of the person negotiating the same, the person to whom it is negotiated must have had actual knowledge of the infirmity or defect, or knowledge of such facts that his action in taking the instrument amounted to bad faith.”
“Sec. 5926. Every holder is deemed prima facie to be a holder in due course; but when it is shown that the title of any person who has negotiated the instrument was defective the burden is on the holder to prove that he or some person under whom he claims acquired the title as a holder in due course. But the last mentioned rule does not apply in favor of a party who became bound on the instrument prior to the acquisition of such defective title.”
It was shown beyond question that the instruments in controversy in this case were obtained from the state- of Idaho by O. V. Allen by fraud. When this was shown the burden
The facts known to the plaintiffs at the time they received this assignment were these: They knew that their client, O. Y. Allen, from whom they received the assignment, was at that time serving in the Idaho state penitentiary for the felony committed by him in the embezzlement of $145,000 of state money while he was state treasurer. The assignments received by Allen from Gibberd and by plaintiffs from Allen showed on their face that the note and mortgage assigned to plaintiffs were securities that had been given to the state of Idaho. These assignments from Gibberd to Allen and from Allen to plaintiffs were made by separate written instruments and not by indorsement on the note and mortgage and the note and mortgage were not at that time delivered to plaintiffs, and up to this time have not been indorsed to plaintiffs. Notwithstanding this information, plaintiffs made no effort whatever to learn the facts with regard to Allen’s title, but about three weeks after the date of Allen’s assignment brought this foreclosure action. From the record before us it is not to be doubted that reasonable inquiry on the part of the plaintiffs would have disclosed to them the gross fraud by which Allen obtained the assignment from the state. Is it possible that a reasonably prudent man would have taken such assignment and have given value therefor under such circumstances as we have
The fraud of Allen in obtaining the assignment of this, note and mortgage in the manner in which he did impressed them with a constructive trust in favor of the state, and the state was entitled to a return of said instruments and to have them enforced in its behalf as fully as if said fraudulent assignment had never been procured from the state. (Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, 4th ed., vol. 1, sec. 155; vol. 3, secs. 1044, 1049, 1051, 1058; Davenport v. Burke, 30 Ida. 599, 167 Pac. 481; Martin v. Smith, 33 Ida. 692, 197 Pac. 823; Pioneer Min. Co. v. Tyberg, 215 Fed. 501, 131 C. C. A. 549, L. R. A. 1915B, 442, and note.)
_ The intervenor, National Surety Company, having complied with its contract of indemnity by the payment of Allen’s indebtedness to the state, including the sum involved in this case, which was fraudulently taken by Allen from the state treasury and used in purchasing the assignment of the note and mortgage in controversy, is entitled to be subrogated to all the rights of the state arising out of said trust and to' enforce the payment of said note by the foreclosure of said mortgage in its behalf as fully as the state of Idaho might have done, and said plaintiffs hold the legal title to said note and mortgage in trust for said intervenor, National Surety Company. (Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, 4th ed., vol. 5, see. 2343 et seq., sec. 3245, pp. 5206, 5207; In re Bank of Nampa, 29 Ida. 166, 157 Pac. 1117; Wilson v. Wilson, 6 Ida. 597, 57 Pac. 708; National Surety Co. v. State Savings Bank, 156 Fed. 21, 13 Ann. Cas. 421, 84 C. C. A. 187, 14 L. R. A., N. S., 155, and note.)
Complaint is made by Dean and the receiver and the intervenor that the trial court did not make findings on all material issues and that its findings and conclusions are not
Just complaint is also made that the court followed the very bad practice of reserving its rulings on many important questions during the trial, particularly as to the admission of evidence, and finally disposed of the case without indicating what its rulings were.
The judgment is reversed and the trial court is directed to enter judgment that said intervenor is the owner of said note and mortgage and entitled to the possession thereof, and that said intervenor have and recover the amount of said note, and further that the usual decree of foreclosure be entered in behalf of said intervenor. Costs awarded to intervenor.