77 Iowa 235 | Iowa | 1889
The question to be determined is, should the plaintiff suffer the loss occasioned by Creighton’s defalcation, or should the loss fall upon Jones, and the other defendants who are subsequent mortgagees and purchasers of the land ? If, when the note and mortgage became due, Jones had, instead of asking for an extension, paid the money to Creighton, and Creighton had failed to pay it to Abbe, the agent of the mortgagee, the loss would have fallen upon Jones. Artley v. Morrison, 73 Iowa, 132. Did the facts, in connection with the payment of the mortgage by Creighton, the subsequent sale and assignment to the plaintiff, change the rights of Jones as to whom he was authorized to make payments ? It is contended by counsel for appellant that, as the plaintiff held the note and mortgage by a regular assignment, he has the same rights which the mortgagee had. On the other hand, it is claimed by counsel for appellees that
The transaction, so far as Creighton’s connection with it was involved,-amounted toa mere transfer of the note and mortgage from Mrs. Hillhouse to the plaintiff, and his rights as against the maker of the mortgage and subsequent grantees of the land were precisely the same as the rights of Mrs. Hillhouse, unless there were some facts in connection with the assignment to the plaintiff which changed the relations of the partiés. An examination of the evidence satisfies us that in making the transfer and assignment the plaintiff acted in good faith, and in the belief that Creighton was the agent of the mortgagors. The plaintiff testified as a witness that Creighton represented himself to be their agent, and there is no evidence in the record contradictory to this. It is true that Creighton solicited the plaintiff to make the purchase and take the assignment, and promised that he would find another purchaser for the nota
Reversed.