150 N.W. 928 | N.D. | 1915
The defendant Sandberg was the owner of a farm upon which there was a mortgage of $1,400, given by a prior owner of the
(1) It is physically impossible to set out all of the evidence in this case and we must content ourselves with merely a few quotations. The Investment Company was in the business of selling mortgages upon real estate. Their profit was usually evidenced by a second mortgage for a part of the interest. In the case at bar, the principal note bore interest at the rate of 6 per cent, and this mortgage was sold to Mrs. Trubel as an investment. She lived in Illinois in the same town where one Mr. Faber was cashier of a bank, and he received a cash commission from the Investment Company for negotiating the sale of such mortgage to her. When she had purchased such loan, she placed the note and mortgage in a tin box to which she retained the key,'and left the same in Faber’s bank. As the interest coupons became due she clipped the same, handed them to Faber, with the request that he collect the money for her. Faber, upon his part, forwarded the coupons to the Investment Company with a similar request. The Investment Company wrote to the defendant to come in and pay the same, which he did. There does not appear to have been any direct correspondence between
See also Stolzman v. Wyman, 8 N. D. 108, 77 N. W. 285; Corey v. Hunter, 10 N. D. 5, 84 N. W. 570. It follows that tbe plaintiff was well witbin ber rights, and that tbe loss was occasioned by tbe carelessness of tbe defendant in paying to an unauthorized person without a production of tbe note itself or evidence of agency from tbe owner thereof. Tbe order of tbe trial court is affirmed.