90 Ind. 332 | Ind. | 1883
— Action by John M. Boyd, cashier of the First National Bank of Thorntown, for the use and' benefit of that bank, against Ira N. Holmes and Amanda D. Holmes, his wife, Patrick H. Dutch and Mary A. Dutch, his wife, and Charles A. Dryer, assignee in .bankruptcy of the said Ira N. Holmes, and commenced on the 3d day of December, 1878. The complaint alleged that on the 1st day of January, 1869, the said Ira N. Holmes executed to one Armstrong Ross, his promissory note for $3,000, payable on or before the 1st day of January, 1870, without relief from valuation laws, and with ten per cent.-interest from date; that on the 5th day of January, 1869, the said Holmes and wife, to secure the payment of said note, executed a mortgage on certain described real estate in Boone county, which was duly recorded; that on the 12th day of December, 1877, the
“ Deceived on the within $300, being the interest to this date, January 1, 1878, (of) Mary A. Dutch.”
Holmes and wife and Patrick H. Dutch demurred separately to the complaint, but the complaint was held sufficient as to them. Mrs. Holmes and Patrick H. Dutch made no further defence, and Dryer made default. Holmes and Mrs. Dutch answered separately.
In her fifth paragraph • of answer Mrs. Dutch pleaded in abatement that prior to the 1st day of January, 1878, she became the owner of the mortgaged lands, and then continued to be such owner; that, on the 5th day of January, 1878, she and her husband Patrick H. Dutch entered into an agreement with Armstrong Eoss, who was then the owner of the note and mortgage sued on, that she should pay the interest due on the note on the first day of that month, and interest at the
“ Whereas, Mary A. Dutch has bought of Ira N. •Holmes a certain tract of land in Sugar Creek township, Boone county, Indiana, on which I hold a mortgage; and whereas, she has this day paid me $300 interest on said note secured by said mortgage, the same being the interest up to 1st day of January, 1878 : Now, then, if the said Mary A. Dutch shall pay me ten per cent, interest promptly, for this year, on said note and mortgage, on the 1st day of January, 1879, and 8 per cent, interest for the year 1879, payable on the 1st of January, 1880, I agree to extend the payment of said note and mortgage two years from this 1st of January, 1878, provided interest is paid as herein stated, January 5th, 1878.
“Armstrong Ross.”
That the note and mortgage referred to in the foregoing agreement were the same note and mortgage described in the-complaint; that the, plaintiff afterwards purchased the note and mortgage with full knowledge of the existence of the agreement above set out, and had commenced this action before any further interest was due under such agreement. Whérefore she demanded that this action should abate.
Issue; trial by a jury; verdict for the plaintiff, finding that the sum of $3,519.16 was due upon the note, and that the plaintiff was entitled to a foreclosure of the mortgage.
A motion for a new trial being first denied, the court adjudged that the amount found to be due by the jury was due upon the note, and decreed a foreclosure of the mortgage.
Questions are made here upon the sufficiency of the com
The first objection urged to the complaint is that the bank ought to have been the plaintiff instead of Boyd.
The bank, doubtless, might have treated the assignments-of the note and mortgage as having been made directly to it,, and have sued as the sole plaintiff, but these assignments made-Boyd a trustee of an express trust, and, hence, he was authorized to sue without joining the bank, for the benefit of which the assignments were evidently intended. E. S. 1881, section 252; Daniel Negotiable Inst., section 417; Baldwin v. Bank, 1 Wal. 234; Waddle v. Harbeck, 33 Ind. 231; Heavenridge v. Mondy, 34 Ind. 28; Wolcott v. Standley, 62 Ind. 198; Garton v. Union City Nat. Bank, 34 Mich. 279.
The next objection to the complaint is, that; upon the facts averred, Boyd was not permitted to purchase the mortgage from Eoss for the bank, and that for that reason the assignment of the mortgage to Boyd was void.
It is true, that national banking associations can not. purchase, hold, or convey real estate except in certain specified cases.
Some of these excepted cases are where real estate is mortgaged to such associations in good faith by way of security for debts previously contracted, where real estate is conveyed to them in satisfaction of debts previously contracted,, in due course of business, and where they buy real estate at sales under judgments, decrees, or mortgages, held by them, or purchase that kind of property to secure debts due to them. R. S. U. S., section 5137; Heath v. Second Nat’l Bank of Lafayette, 70 Ind. 106.
No objection is made to the validity of the junior mortgage taken by Boyd to secure a pre-existing debt due to the bank., The authority to take this junior mortgage being conceded, the right of acquiring such further interest in the mortgaged
No restriction is imposed upon a banking association in taking a mortgage to secure a debt previously contracted. When, therefore, a national bank takes a mortgage for such a purpose, it becomes invested with all the rights which usually belong to a mortgagee. Among these is the right to protect itself, by all the usual business methods, against the disastrous consequences likely to result from older liens upon the mortgaged property. First Nat’l Bank v. Nat’l Exchange Bank, 92 U. S. 122. We, consequently, know of no ground on which the authority of Boyd to purchase the note and mortgage in suit, for the use of the bank represented by him, can be seriously questioned. Upton v. Nat’l Bank, 120 Mass. 153; Ornn v. MerchantsNat’l Bank, 16 Kansas, 341; Spafford v. First Nat’l Bank, 37 Iowa, 181 (18 Am. R. 6).
Furthermore, as has been seen, national banking associations are expressly authorized to purchase real, estate, which may, of course, include any interest in such property, when necessary to secure debts already due them.
A contract for forbearance in suing upon a promissory note, or other similar instrument, in writing, after it has become a binding obligation upon the makers, must be upon some new consideration. This rule applies not only to cases in which the rights of sureties are affected, but extends to all contracts of that character. A distinct and adequate consideration is an essential requisite in all contracts of forbearance to sue. Chitty Con. 289; 1 Parsons Con. 440; 2 Parsons Con. 26; Abel v. Alexander, 45 Ind. 523 (15 Am. R. 270); Buck v. Smiley, 64 Ind. 431; Starret v. Burkhalter, 70 Ind. 285; Lemmon v. Whitman, 75 Ind. 318 (39 Am. R. 150).
As the note was overdue when Mrs. Dutch paid $300 upon it as in full of interest due upon it up to the 1st day of January, 1878, the appellants7 claim, upon the authority of Burns v. Anderson, 68 Ind. 202 (34 Am.R.250), that it was then draw
At the time their brief was filed this claim of the appellants raised a question of some interest with reference to some of our decided' cases, but since that time the case of Burns v. Anderson, swpra, relied upon, has been overruled by this court, and the doctrine of the case of Kilgore v. Powers, 5 Blackf. 22, re-asserted and re-established. The amount of interest which Mrs. Dutch paid, as well as agreed to pay, was not, for that reason, in excess of the lawful interest accruing, and to .accrue, upon the note. Shaw v. Rigby, 84 Ind. 375 (43 Am. R. 96).
Neither the payment of interest already accrued, nor- a promise to pay such interest as may thereafter lawfully accrue, upon a note, will afford a sufficient consideration for an agreement to extend the time of payment of the note. Sta/rret v. .Burhhalter, supra.
Mrs. Dutch neither paid, nor agreed to pay, a greater rate of interest than was specified in the note, and neither paid, nor promised to pay, any interest in advance. There was, therefore, no new consideration to support the agreement for the extension of time entered into with Eoss. The agreement was, in consequence, ineffectual as a contract for forbearance, and inoperative for any other practical purpose.
The circuit court did not err in refusing to permit the agreement to be read in evidence.
Other questions have been incidentally discussed by counsel, but they are not presented in such manner as to require any decision upon them.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.