12 Colo. App. 351 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1898
This action was brought to restrain a sale of real estate under a deed of trust, and also for the cancellation of the trust deed, of the note to secure which it was given, and of an agreement extending the time of payment of the note, under a plea of payment. It appears that in July, 1887, one Charles T. Snyder applied to H. J. Aldrich, president and manager of the Colorado Securities Company, doing business at Denver, Colorado, to obtain for him a loan of $3,000 for the period of five years, to be secured by deed of trust upon his ranch of 320 acres in Park county, Colorado. Aldrich applied to the Wilson & Toms Investment Company, of St. Louis, Missouri, and this company found in Daniel Steele, one of their clients, a citizen of Massachusetts, and one of the defendants, a person who was willing to make the loan. Thereupon the note, the deed of trust, and coupon interest notes were prepared, the money transmitted by Mr. Steele to the investment company, and by it to Snyder through the Colorado Securities Company. The principal note and each of the coupon notes were dated at St. Louis and were expressed upon their face to be payable to defendant Steele, at the office of the investment company in St. Louis. By a separate agreement in writing, the Colorado Securities Company guaranteed the payment of the note and interest. Subsequently, and before the maturity of the note, the title to
“EXTENSION AGREEMENT AND COUPONS.
“ St. Louis, Mo., July 28, 1892.
“ Whereas, Daniel Steele has agreed to extend the time for the payment of a loan of $2,500, secured by a trust deed made and executed by Charles T. Snyder, dated July 15, 1887, and by the terms thereof due August 1, 1892, for the term of five years; now, in consideration of such extension I hereby agree to keep said loan for the term of five years from August 1, 1892, and- further agree to pay interest on the*354 principal of said debt according to the tenor and effect of certain extension coupon notes, signed by me, of even date herewith, and in case'of any default in payment of interest, or in case of non-payment of taxes assessed on the mortgaged premises, or of a breach of any of the covenants in said trust deed contained, it shall be optional with said mortgagee to declare the principal of said debt immediately due and payable, and the same may be collected according to the terms and conditions of the said trust deed and principal note, time being the essence of this contract for extension.
(Signed) “ S. Emma Snyder.”
By whom this agreement was drawn does not appear from the evidence, but it was presented to Mrs. Snyder by Aldrich, and upon being signed, was transmitted by him to the trust Company at St. Lo.uis, together with the $500 to be paid on the principal, and by this company both were transmitted to defendant Steele. At the same time, coupon interest notes for the extended time were signed by Mrs. Snyder, and transmitted with the agreement. All these were payable to Daniel Steele, and at the office of the Central Trust Company in St. Louis. For his services in securing this extension, Mrs. Snyder paid to Aldrich $250. About December 28, 1893, Mrs. Snyder through Aldrich negotiated the sale of 140 acres of the ranch property to Mrs. Lydia L.'Cowell. On the same date, the Colorado Securities Company executed to Mrs. Cowell its agreement in writing as follows:
“ (Letterhead of The Colorado Securities Co.)
“ Denver, Colo., December 28,1893.
“ In consideration of the payment of $500 to be applied on a loan of $2,500 given by Mrs. S. Emma Snyder and secured upon land in Park county, we hereby agree with Mrs. Lydia L. Cowell that upon the payment by her of $1,800 in addition to the above named $500 together with accrued interest, on the full amount to the date of payment, that we will release from our deed of trust the land purchased by her from Mrs. S. Emma Snyder as described in a deed held by us and executed*355 by Mrs. S. Emma Snyder conveying said land to said Lydia L. Cowell. Said above named payments to be made within ninety days from date of this agreement.
(Sgd.) ■ “ The Colorado Securities Co.,
“ By H. J. Aldrich, Pt.”
About this time, there is some evidence of an application by Aldrich to the trust company to secure a release from the deed of trust of 150 acres of land, presumably that sold to Mrs. Cowell, and the substitution of another and similar loan, to be secured upon the remainder of the land. The trust company wrote him in reply that if he would forward her new application, they would submit the entire matter to their client, Mr. Steele, who held the present loan, and would arrange with him, if possible, to do so. This seems to have gone no further, however, and it does not appear from the record that the proposition was ever submitted to Mr. Steele. Aldrich continued to collect from Mrs. Cowell the money due upon her purchase, and Mrs. Snyder says that it was her understanding that this money was to be applied upon the payment of the Steele note. No part of it, however, was ever so applied. In 1894, Charles M. Snyder, plaintiff in the case, became the owner of the ranch by deed from his mother, Mrs. S. Emma Snyder. In February, 1896, default having been made in the payment of the interest coupon notes, due on the first day of the month, and on the first day of August previous, Mr. Steele as was provided in the deed of trust declared the whole of the indebtedness due and payable, and directed the trustee, defendant Lester, to sell the property. Thereupon, this suit was instituted. There is no pretense or claim that any payment was ever made directly to Steele. All of the payments contended for by the plaintiff were the collections made by Aldrich, growing out of the sale of part of the land to Mrs. Cowell. The whole controversy, then, hinges upon the question as to whether or not Aldrich was the authorized agent to receive such payments so as to charge the principal, Steele. Upon the trial, the court called a jury
In the determination of the question as to whether or not an agency existed in the circumstances of this case, there are certain fundamental and well established principles bearing upon the doctrine of agency which must be borne in mind. They are thus tersely and aptly stated by Mr. Mechem: “ Among these are, as has been seen, that the law indulges in no bare presumptions that an agency exists, — it must be proved or presumed from facts ; that the agent cannot establish his own authority, either by his representations or by assuming to exercise it; that the authority cannot be established by mere rumor or general reputation; that even a general authority is not an unlimited one, and that every authority must find its ultimate source in some act of the principal. Persons dealing with an assumed agent, therefore, whether
Applying these principles, it is clear that in whatever light the acts of the parties may be viewed, there was an entire failure to establish any authority or agency, either express or implied, on the part of Aldrich or the securities company to receive payment of the principal or any part of it, of the Snyder loan. Mr. Steele was at all times in possession of all of the securities representing the loan, and at no time does it appear from the evidence that- he ever intrusted them or any of them, to Aldrich or the securities company, or even to the Central Trust Company. We may concede, although even that is not established by the evidence, that Aldrich was the agent of Steele to collect the interest, but that would not authorize him to collect the principal, and payment to him of such principal would not discharge the liability of the maker to the payee. Mechem on Agency, § 379; Smith v. Kidd, 68 N. Y. 130. We might even go further, and admit it to have been shown by the evidence, which it was not, that Aldrich was under the circumstances of the case the general agent of Steele, authorized to receive the payment of the principal when due, but even then he would have no authority to receive payment before maturity, so as to bind the payee. It will be remembered that the principal of this note under the extension agreement did not mature until August 1, 1897, and the pretended payments to Aldrich were received by him about the beginning of the year 1896, more than eighteen months prior to maturity, and whilst he was not in possession of a single security, either the deed of trust, the note, the extension agreement, or the interest coupon notes. The party who makes payment under such circumstances as these, must do so at his peril.
The views here expressed are not only in accordance with elementary principles, but are abundantly supported by authority. We deem it necessary to cite only a few cases, and
The evidence in this case, if it tends to show agency at all on the part of Aldrich, establishes the fact that he was an agent for the Snyders only. It is true that the Snyders paid 'to him the $500 which was to be credited on the original note before Steele would agree to the extension for five years, but in this he was professedly and actually acting as an agent for Mrs. Snyder, and received from her $250 as compensation for his services in this respect. This, too, was not a collection on the principal, because it was paid before maturity, and was paid in accordance with the terms of a new and an independent contract, and besides, there is no evidence that Steele ever knew that this payment was transmitted through Aldrich, or that he had anything to do with its receipt. Steele looked alone to the Central Trust Company. Even the demand by Aldrich for the payment of the interest coupon notes, and his transmittal of the money when received to the trust company for the holder of the note, did not constitute him Steele’s agent to receive this money. He was interested in the payment, because his company had expressly guaranteed the payment of the note and interest.
The question of ratification does not arise in this case, because ratification presupposes knowledge of the act claimed to be ratified, and there is not the slightest evidence that Steele had any knowledge during these transactions of Aldrich’s assuming to represent him, or of any payments to, or collections by Aldrich, on account of the Snyder loan, until the institution of tins suit.
The whole history of the case shows an unfortunate reliance by Mrs. Snyder upon Aldrich, regardless of all business precautions, and that she has thus become the victim of her misplaced confidence. It is hard, of course, that one of two parties, both equally innocent and honest, must suffer from the rascality of a third, but after a careful and thorough examination of the evidence, we can discover no act of the defendant Steele which should estop him from asserting his right
Plaintiff insists, however, that the evidence showed the Central Trust Company to be the general agent of the defendant Steele, and that the securities company was employed by it as a subagent, and was therefore invested with authority in the premises, and that Steele was bound thereby. It is not necessary to review the evidence in respect to this claim. It is sufficient to say that it does not support the contention. The evidence does not show that the Central Trust Company was the agent of Steele, authorized to receive and collect the principal of this note either before or at maturity, and certainly upon no principle could it be contended that it could invest a subagent with more authority than itself possessed.
Plaintiff also urges that these controverted questions were found in his favor by a jury, and that its verdict is final and should, not be disturbed by a court of review. There are several reasons why this rule does not apply to this case. First, as we have before stated, the facts which it is claimed created an agency were undisputed, and the question was therefore one of law for the court, and not of fact for the jury. Secondly, there was no conflict of evidence; there was none to support the verdict. Thirdly, this is a suit in equity, and appellate courts will exercise great latitude in considering evi
There are several other questions raised and presented for our consideration, but it is unnecessary to discuss theili, as the one which we have determined is decisive of the appeal. Upon the case presented, a decree should have been rendered in favor of the defendants. The judgment will therefore be reversed.
jReversed.