Southern Commercial Savings Bank v. Slattery's Administrator

166 Mo. 620 | Mo. | 1902

PEE CUEIAM:

The salient facts and features of this litigation are sufficiently presented in the following statement in the chronological order of their occurrence. On July 12, 1892, the Lange Financial Company, a corporation of which one William B. Lange was at the time president, executed to Ernest Eenner eleven promissory notes, one for twenty thous- and dollars, due five years after date, and ten for the sum of six hundred dollars each, due one each six months during the five years, which latter obligations represented the interest to be earned upon the principal note. At the same time it executed a deed of trust to secure the payment of the notes, wherby it conveyed to Charles F. Vogel as trustee, certain of its property at the southeast corner of Third and Market streets in the city of St. Louis.- Eenner was an employee of William B. Lange, and at the request and direction of the latter, indorsed the notes without recourse, and thereupon Lange took possession of them.

At the time the notes and deed of trust above mentioned were executed,'the property was subject to two prior deeds of trust, one for six thousand dollars held by James M. Carpenter, and the other for ten thousand dollars which Lange had *628sometime previously pledged to tbe plaintiff as security for a cash advancement to him of ten thousand dollars. This latter deed of trust was then three days over due, and that held by Carpenter was to mature seven days .latter. In these circumstances Lange had, sometime prior to July 12, 1892, suggested to the cashier of the plaintiff bank that it increase his loan to sixteen thousand dollars by paying off the Carpenter .incumbrance, release the ten thousand dollar second deed of trust and accept as security the twenty thousand dollar deed of trust over which the controversy in this case arises. lie was informed that it wonld be necessary for him to meet the discount committee of the bank and discuss the proposal with them. And upon that meeting it was decided that “when his [Lange’s] paper matured, or when it became necessary that he pay off this first deed of trust,” the bank would advance the additional six thousand dollars in accordance with his proposal, if all was found to be correct.

On July 12, 1892, or the day previous, Lange requested that the discount committee be called together to meet him at nine o’clock the following morning, stating to the cashier of the plaintiff that he “had perfected his deed of trust and was prepared to close the loan that had been agreed upon.” This committee was composed of Fred Hofmeister, John Beckert, Jr., and one Meegan, who died prioi to the trial below, and in accordance with Lange’s request Hofmeister and Meegan met him in the bank at the hour named, Street, the cashier, also being present. Lange stated that he had asked the committee to meet him in order to close the loan previously agreed upon, produced the deed of trust and the twenty thous- and dollar note, together with the ten interest notes, and handed them to Meegan, who examined them and pronounced them regular and in proper form and then handed them to Street, the cashier, who in turn put them into the safe where they remained twenty days and until they were transferred to a safe-deposit box owned by plaintiff. They have ever since been *629in its possession. The deed of trust did not follow the notes into the safe, but was given to Lange upon his statement that as he was “going right up to the city, he would take it up and have it recorded.” On the day following he returned and informed the discount committee that he had recorded the deed of trust and. exhibited the receipt of the recorder of deeds upon a card such as is issued for instruments filed in his office, and stated that he would bring to the bank a certified copy of it, which he afterwards did. Eor some unexplained reason Lange was permitted to retain the card.

It was in evidence that the collateral note given by Lange to the plaintiff for the new loan of sixteen thousand dollars, to secure which the twenty thousand dollar deed of trust and notes wTere pledged, bore date of sixteenth day of July, 1892, and that its proceeds were formally credited to Lange’s account upon plaintiff’s books on July 19 following. It matured ninety days after date, and when due was cancelled and replaced by a new collateral note for seventeen thousand dollars to which amount the loan was then increased, and the latter •obligation was at its maturity replaced by another for eighteen thousand dollars representing an increase of an additional one thousand dollars. There were numerous other renewals until January 25, 1894, at which time the plaintiff’s claim had been reduced to the original amount, and under that date Lange executed the collateral note upon which plaintiff still holds the notes and deed of trust now in question.

Sometime in July, 1892, but on what day it does not appear from the evidence, Lange met Dennis P. Slattery in the courthouse and solicited a loan from him, informing him that he “owed some money on a piece of property on which he had a deed of trust.” Slattery replied that he had no •money on hand, and Lange asked him to indorse for him for a few days, offering as security a set of notes of the same description as those mentioned in the deed of trust of July 12 on the property at Third and Market streets, together with the *630recorder’s receipt for that conveyance which he had taken from the bank to place on record, and certain insurance policies, and stating that Slattery might come into the recorder’s office and “see that the papers were all right, as he had just recorded them.” They went into the office of the recorder and Lange exhibited the card to a clerk who thereupon produced the deed of trust for their inspection. Slattery compared the notes with those described in the deed of trust and checked them off, and having thus convinced himself, indorsed Lange’s notes for four thousand dollars and took the notes, insurance policies and recorder’s receipt as security. About ten days later Lange returned with the notes bearing Slattery’s indorsements cancelled and received back the deed of trust, notes, policies and recorder’s receipt. In September of the same year Slattery again indorsed for Lange to the amount of three thousand dollars, and as security took the same recorder’s receipt, notes and policies of insurance, together with three additional policies and held them until the note he had thus indorsed was returned to him cancelled, when he gave the securities back to Lange.

In January, 1893, Lange applied to Slattery for further indorsements, but the latter declined to again accommodate him in that manner although he finally loaned him one hundred shares of Missouri Pacific stock, receiving as security for return of the stock the same notes, policies and recorder’s receipt. These he retained until the first day of February following, when Lange brought back the stock, and they seem to have done no further duty as collaterals until the first of September, 1893. About that day Lange again solicited Slattery for a loan, this time asking for fourteen thousand dollars, which was more than the latter had at hand. After some' negotiation, Lange agreed to take teii thousand dollars and some of the Missouri Pacific stock, but Slattery declined to take the recorder’s receipt for the deed of trust, or a certified copy of that instrument, demanding the original and a certifi*631cate of title. These were furnished him and he turned over to Lange fourteen thousand dollars in cash or its equivalent, for which he received a collateral note for that amount due one year after date, describing the securities pledged, among which were the original deed of trust to Yogel, trustee, and the same notes which Lange had given him before, although it was stated in the collateral note that the first two of the ten interest notes were paid. This collateral note and the securities so pledged with it remained in Slattery’s possession continuously from that time until the trial of the case.

The notes held by plaintiff are on white paper, the blank spaces being filled in with pen and ink in Lange’s writing, while the blanks in those held by Slattery are filled up in typewriting, the principal note being on tinted paper and the interest notes on white paper. On January 28, 1894, Lange died, and shortly afterwards plaintiff’s agents took possession of the property conveyed by the deed of trust of July 12, 1892, and began to collect the rents. Then the fraudulent actions of I-ange for the first time came to light, and it was discovered that although there was but one deed of trust, both Slattery and the respondent held a set of notes in every respect identical with those mentioned in the deed of trust. Neither had ever known of Lange’s dealings with the other, and each asserted that the notes held by the other were spurious and fraudulent. Slattery, having in his possession the original deed of trust through his loan to Lange of September 1, 1893, called upon Yogel, the trustee in that conveyance, to sell the property in execution of the trust, but he, having in the meantime become the administrator of Lange’s estate, declined, and thereupon Slattery called upon Patrick Staed, the then acting sheriff of the city of St. Louis, to act in Yogel’s place, the deed of trust providing that upon refusal of the original trustee tp act, that officer should succeed to the trust, and accordingly Staed advertised the property for sale under the deed of trust.

These are the facts out of which the present case arises, *632as best we can gather them from a record of unnecessary length. The amended petition of plaintiff prayed an injunction restraining Slattery and Staed from making the sale advertised, and a decree declaring the notes held by Slattery to be spurious and counterfeit and not the notes secured by the deed of trust of July 12, 1892, and general relief. Slattery’s answer was in the nature of a cross-bill and set out the facts from his side of the case and prayed that he be adjudged the lawful owner of the notes secured by the deed of trust in question, that the bank be perpetually enjoined from making any claim that the notes held by it were the genuine ones, and that it be required to account for the rents collected from the property.

Staed’s answer was a general denial, and Mathildo Lange, the remaining defendant, who was alleged in the petition to have acquired the equity of redemption in the property involved, admitted, upon information and belief, the facts set up in the petition.

A temporary restraining order was granted and the case sent to a referee to try all the issues. In due time he filed his report finding for the plaintiff bank, to which Slattery filed forty-nine exceptions. These the trial court overruled and confirmed the report, entering a decree for the bank, making the temporary injunction perpetual. After the trial, but before the referee filed his report, Slattery died and the cause was revived in the name of his administrator, who, after unsuccessful motion for rehearing, prosecutes this appeal.

I. In the proceedings before the referee, the plaintiff called as witnesses to prove the transactions by which it acquired the notes and deed of trust from Lange, Street, its cashier, who was also a stockholder, and Hofmeister, a director and member of its' discount, committee. Counsel for Slattery objected on the ground that those witnesses were incompetent to testify in regard to any transactions with Lange who was then dead, but the referee overruled the objection. *633Before proceeding to discuss the real issue in the case, it is proper to dispose of this question, inasmuch as the plaintiff’s case rests largely upon the testimony of these witnesses, that a reversal must follow if both of them were incompetent. Their competency depends upon our statute, section 8918, Revised Statutes 1889, which is section 4652 in the Revision of 1899, and in considering our judgment upon this point we need look no further than to that section and the construction heretofore put upon it in our decisions. It has always been held to be an enabling and not a disabling statute (Bates v. Forcht, 89 Mo. 121; Fink v. Hey, 42 Mo. App. 295); and to supersede the common-law rule to the extent of its terms. So if Street was a competent witness at common law, or if he is not included in the proviso of our statute, the ruling of the referee was right. It can not be maintained that he was a party to the contract between Lange and the plaintiff by which the latter first acquired the deed of trust and notes, because he took no part in the transaction, the negotiations being carried on by the discount committee of which he was not a member. He was present in the capacity of a clerk, not as a contracting agent. The committee alone had power to make such a contract for the bank and the mere presence of Street when the contract was made does not alter the case.

But counsel for defendants urge that Street, being also a stockholder, was an interested party and so incompetent to testify. It is sufficient answer to this to say that under our statute the interest of a witness alone does not exclude him, where the other party is dead. That happens only because he and the deceased are both parties to the contract, or cause of action. In other words, the body of the statute removes the common-law disability arising out of interest, while the proviso confines the exclusion in case of the death of one party to a party to the contract or cause of action, so that a “party to the contract,” as the term is used in the statute, is considered to mean the person who negotiated the contract, rather than the *634one in whose name and interest it was made. [Banking House v. Rood, 132 Mo. 256.] As Street did not negotiate nor close the contract between Lange and the plaintiff, we hold that he was not'rendered incompetent by Lange’s death, and that the referee properly admitted his testimony. This conclusion renders it unnecessary to review the action of the referee in overruling the objection to the testimony of the witness Hofmeister. His testimony was merely corroborative of Street’s and that of the latter was not disputed, denied or impeached, so that, even if we disregard the evidence given by Hofmeister, the facts upon which plaintiff relies would still be established, and the final result would be the same had the referee excluded his testimony entirely. As this is a proceeding on the equity side of the court, the action of the referee in overruling the objection to the testimony of Hofmeister, even if erroneous, which' we do not decide, was not prejudicial to the defendants.

II. It is further contended that aside from the testimony of Street and Hofmeister, the decree should have been for the defendants, upon the evidence, and we must, therefore, review the whole case. [Lins v. Lenhardt, 127 Mo. 271.]

The referee found and held that the transaction of July 12 or 13, 1892, between Lange and plaintiff by which the notes were delivered into its custody upon its agreement to increase the loan to sixteen thousand dollars was a negotiation of the paper for value, even though he was permitted to carry away the deed of trust under the circumstances shown in evidence, and the formal credits were not passed to his account upon plaintiff’s books until some days later. The defendants challenge the correctness of that ruling, and insist that it is unwarranted both in law and in fact. Upon that question hangs the success of this appeal, for it can not be disputed that 'Slattery did not come into possession of the set of notes held by him until some time later 'in the same day, or on the day following. When Lange solicited him for a loan, the deed of *635trust bad been recorded. Tbe ticket receipt was produced and they went together to the office of the recorder and examined the same deed which Lange had brought from the bank to record, and Slattery checked the notes with those described in it. There is no dispute that the deed which they examined there, and which at the trial was in Slattery’s possession, is the same one which Lange carried away from the banking house of the plaintiff. When Lange met the discount committee and turned over to them the new deed of trust and notes for twenty thousand dollars, and they agreed to increase his loan six thousand dollars, and approved and accepted the notes and deed of trust, the obligation of the plaintiff became fixed and for a failure to perform, it might have been held liable in damages. Certainly it was so after they accepted the substituted securities, and it is equally certain that this obligation assumed was both a burden to the plaintiff and a benefit to Lange. The mere fact that Lange did not receive credit on plaintiff’s books for the new discount until some days later, does not militate against this view, for there is nothing to show that he might not have enjoyed it sooner had he so desired. The promise of plaintiff to increase the loan and its obligation to do so were a sufficient consideration. [Story, Contr. (5 Ed.), 548; Given v. Corse, 20 Mo. App. 132; Bank v. Rice, 107 Mass. 37.] And this is so notwithstanding the fact that the formal execution of the promise was deferred until a later day. The liability to perform sprang up when the promise was made. As between Slattery and the plaintiff, the question whether there was a sufficient delivery by the grantor in the. deed of trust to give it legal effect is wholly immaterial. Neither is in position to dispute it, and discussion of the question would not tend to shed any light on the issues in this case. Nor can it be said that Lange’s acts after leaving the bank to record the deed of trust show a lack of intent on his part to consider his agreement with the plaintiff uncompleted. The plain answer to that argument is that plaintiff can not be *636affected by any intent on his part of which it had no knowledge, and we find nothing in the evidénee concerning conversation or dealings with the discount committee which tends to disclose any purpose contrary to that stated by him, to record the deed. Lange’s official connection with the plaintiff as one of its directors is not of itself sufficient to charge the plaintiff with notice of his fraudulent purposes, if indeed he had at that time such a purpose. [Johnston v. Shortridge, 93 Mo. 227; Benton v. Bank, 122 Mo. 339.]

It is next objected that the plaintiff, by its negligence in permitting Lange to carry away the deed and in failing to get back the recorder’s receipt for it, put it in his power to defraud Slattery and so ought to bear the loss which must fall upon one of two innocent parties. We are cited to a number of cases in which that doctrine, about which there is no dispute, was announced and applied, but in none of them do we find facts entirely like those of the instant case. Thus in Guffey v. O’Reiley, 88 Mo. 418, it was held that one who has title to land and knowing it, stands by and allows and encourages another to contract for its purchase from a third party in possession under color of title, will be estopped to set up his title against the party so purchasing, but it is obvious that in that case the decision was based upon the knowledge, on the part of the owner, of the conduct of him who committed the. fraud, and in this case it is not even pretended that the plaintiff had any knowledge of the subsequent conduct of Lange.

And in Simpson v. Bank, 43 Hun 158, the deed intrusted to Bliss was a deed in fee conveying the property to him, in other words, the case was one in which a grantor intrusted a deed to the grantee before the consideration was paid and thus clothed him with the indicia of ownership.

In Preston v. Witherspoon, 109 Ind. 457, one party deposited wheat for storage with another and allowed him to mingle it with his own, knowing that he was publicly selling and shipping from the mass, and it was properly held that the *637true owner, having conferred apparent ownership and authority to sell, was estopped as against an innocent purchaser,' but here again, the decision turned upon element of knowledge, which is wholly lacking in the case at bar; and so it is with the other authorities cited on this point by defendants. None of them are in point.

A much different case would be presented had the plaintiff intrusted the notes to Lange instead of the deed of trust, but the deed did not of itself clothe him with the indicia of ownership of the debt it secured. It was the mere incident to the debt evidenced by the notes (Hagerman v. Sutton, 91 Mo. 531; Carpenter v. Longan, 83 U. S. 275), and when' once recorded, its manual possession was not sufficient to raise the presumption of ownership, and the plaintiff was not within the rule of the cases cited, unless it might ordinarily have anticipated what in fact occurred. The recorder’s receipt had no different effect, and although it may be true, as stated by some of the defendant’s witnesses, that it is the custom among those engaged in the real estate loan business to use the receipt card in place of the deed of trust while the latter instrument is being recorded, the plaintiff, being in the banking business, is not chargeable with knowledge of that custom (Lawson, Usages and Customs, 45; Brown v. Strimple, 21 Mo. App. 338), and actual knowledge of it was not brought home to it or its officers who were acting for it. Without notes corresponding to those described in the deed of trust, Lange could not have secured the loan from Slattery; indeed it would be idle to pretend the contrary, but it was not due to any fault or neglect of the bank or its officers, that Lange was able to produce such notes, nor do we observe anything in the record indicating that they might have prevented it. The vice of defendant’s argument, lies in the fact that it assumes that the loan was made by Slattery on Lange’s possession of the recorder’s receipt, while in truth the notes were the real inducement and security. We agree with the referee that the plaintiff was not *638guilty of any such neglect as would deprive it of- its right to the security of the deed of trust as against Slattery.

The next contention of defendants is that where there are two sets of notes conforming to those described in the deed of trust, the possession of one set together with the deed by a purchaser for value is conclusive against the validity of the other, but we are not cited to any authority so holding. Counsel support their position on this point by the argument that a ruling to the contrary would be detrimental to the business interests of the State and would open the way to the perpetration of similar frauds. The argument, however, could more properly be considered by the Legislature than by the courts. A very much similar state of facts appeared in Kernohan v. Manss, 53 Ohio St. 118, where one Gill, the custodian of a mortgage securing a note in his own favor and others in favor of other persons, counterfeited the note owned by himself and sold the counterfeit and the mortgage to Kernohan. Afterwards he sold the genuine note without the mortgage to Manss. Upon the issue between the two purchasers, it was held that the latter was entitled to the security of the mortgage, a result quite opposite to that which defendants contend must follow the possession of one set of duplicate notes together with the mortgage.

So, too, in Morris v. Bacon, 123 Mass. 58, cited by the referee, it was held the possession of the mortgage and a note similar to that described in the mortgage, did not entitle the holder to the benefit of the security as against the pledgee of an identical note previously negotiated for value under the representation that it was secured by the mortgage. At best, the rule urged by the defendants’ counsel could only be one of evidence, and could amount only to a presumption in the absence of positive evidence.

A full consideration of the case leads us to the conclusion that the plaintiff is entitled to the security of the deed of trust of July 12, 1892, and the decree below being for the right *639party, we affirm it.

Burgess, O. J., Brace, Marshall, Yalliant and Gantt, JJ., concurring; Sherwood, J., dissenting. Robinson, J., agrees tbe judgment should be affirmed, but not for the reasons stated in the opinion.
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