Washington Supreme Court, 1905

Washington Loan & Trust Co. v. Ritz

Washington Loan & Trust Co. v. Ritz
Washington Supreme Court · Decided March 27, 1905
37 Wash. 642; 80 P. 174; 1905 Wash. LEXIS 785

Washington Loan & Trust Co. v. Ritz

Opinion of the Court

Per Curiam.

On the 1st day of October, 1888, Philip Ritz and Catherine J. Ritz, his wife, executed and delivered to Thomas S. Krutz their certain promissory note, for the sum of $1,400, due four years after date. On the same day, for the purpose of securing the payment of said promissory note, according to its terms, the makers thereof mortgaged to the said Krutz certain real property, in Adams county, in this state. At the time of negotiating said loan, the said Krutz was the general business manager of the plaintiff corporation, and the loan in question was negotiated by him in that capacity. Thereafter this note and mortgage were transferred, without recourse, to the Portsmouth Eire Association of New Hampshire. George A. Fernald & Co., bankers and brokers of Boston, negotiated the sale of the note and mortgage to the Ports-*646month Eire Association, and all interest on the loan was thereafter paid through said Eemald & Co., as agents of the assignee of the mortgage.

Prior to the maturity of the note, Philip Ritz, one of the makers, died testate, in said Adams county, and the note was not paid when due. On the 15th day of September, 1892, the assignor of the mortgage and Catherine J. Ritz, Hattie M. Ritz, and Ella Coss, the successors in interest of the original mortgagors in the mortgaged premises, entered into an agreement extending the time for the payment of this loan for a period of five years from the 1st day of October, 1892. This extension agreement was first executed between said second parties and the said Krutz, but thereafter the assignee of the mortgage approved such extension and the said Krutz on the 8th day of October, 1892, assigned the extension agreement to the assignee of the mortgage.

At the time of executing said extension agreement, the said Catherine J. Ritz, Hattie M. Ritz, and Ella Coss also executed and delivered to the said Krutz ten certain interest coupons, in the sum of $49 each, payable to the said Krutz or bearer, in payment of the semi-annual interest to accrue on said loan on the 1st day of April, and on the 1st day of October, of each year during such extension period. These interest coupons were delivered to the assignee of the mortgage at the time of the assignment of the extension agreement. The first six of these interest coupons to mature were taken up or paid in the following manner; six days prior to the maturity of each coupon, the plaintiff in this action would remit the full amount of the coupon to said Fernald & Co., agents of the assignee of the mortgage, and the said Fernald & Co. would return the coupon to the plaintiff with the following endorsement thereon: “Pay to the order of the Washington Loan & *647Trust Co. (Signed) Geo. A. Fernald & Co.” There seems to have been no agreement, between the assignee of the mortgage and coupons and the plaintiff, or between the plaintiff and the makers of the coupons, that the coupons should he taken up or paid in this manner.

The first two coupons to mature were paid to the plaintiff by the makers thereof, after they had been returned by Fernald & Co. in the manner above stated. The four coupons next to mature have never been paid, except that the money was advanced by the plaintiff and the coupons returned to it, endorsed as above set forth. On the 9th day of March, 1898, the defendant Hauschild purchased a portion of the mortgaged premises from the mortgagors or their successors in interest, and, as a part of the consideration, assumed and promised to pay this mortgage debt. On or prior to the 8th day of April, 1898, the defendant Hauschild paid to the Portsmouth Tire Association, assignee of the mortgage, the full amount of the mortgage debt, with all interest, exclusive of the two coupons paid by the mortgagors, and the four coupons taken up by the plaintiff in this action in the manner hereinbefore stated, and the said Portsmouth Tire Association, as assignee of the mortgage, executed and delivered to said Hauschild a full release and satisfaction of said mortgage. The assignment of the mortgage from Thomas S. Krutz to the Portsmouth Tire Association was dated March 28, 1898, and the assignment and release were recorded in said Adams county on the 18th day of April, 1898. This action was commenced on the 9th day of May, 1898, to recover the amount of the four coupons above mentioned,, and to foreclose the mortgage given to secure the same. The defendants had judgment below.

The court found, among other things, that the last of the four coupons in question to mature was paid to the *648Portsmouth Pire Association by the respondent Hauschild; that the appellant was estopped by its conduct to assert any right to recover on these coupons, as against the respondents Hauschild and wife, and

“That the plaintiff [appellant], about six days prior to the dates of maturity thereof, in each case, voluntarily, and without having previously purchased them, paid to the Portsmouth Fire Association,the following coupons,to wit: $49.00 due April 1, 1894; $49.00 due October 1, 1894; and $49.00 due April 1, 1895; to Portsmouth Fire Association, the legal owner and holder thereof and the said coupons, together with one due October 1, 1895, for $49.00, are the coupons sued on in this action.”

The finding that the coupon due October 1, 1895, was paid to the Portsmouth Fire Association by the respondent Hauschild, finds no support in the record.

In support of the plea of estoppel, it is claimed that the respondent Hauschild, on the 5th day of March, 1898, or four days before he bought the mortgaged property and assumed the mortgage debt, wrote the managing agent of appellant, at Seattle, that he was about to arrange for a release of the Ritz mortgage, and that, if he had any claim or interest in the matter, to kindly advise him at once, and that he received no reply. It is further claimed that the appellant had notice of the negotiations pending between the respondent Hauschild and the Portsmouth Fire Association with a view of obtaining a release of this mortgage, and remained silent, and, further, that the appellant was, for a long time, the agent of the Portsmouth Fire Association in the collection of interest on this loan and never made known to it the fact that it held these coupons, or that they had not been paid. These facts, if true, are wholly insufficient to support the plea of estoppel, and the judgment below must be sustained, if at all, upon the find*649ing or conclusion that the transaction hereinbefore mentioned constituted a voluntary payment of these coupons on the part of the appellant, and that the appellant is not an assignee or transferee thereof.

We do not think that the transaction in question can he construed as a voluntary payment of these coupons. To have that effect, it must appear that such was the intention of the parties at the time the money was advanced and accepted. Ketchum v. Duncan, 96 U. S. 659. The coupons in this case were not cancelled, but, on the contrary, were delivered to the party making the payment with the stamp of negotiability endorsed on the hack. It is clear, from the uncontradicted testimony, that the appellant did not intend that the transaction should operate as a payment or satisfaction of the coupons, and the only evidence before us as to the intent of the mortgagee or holder of the coupons is the endorsement on the hack thereof, directing payment to he made to the appellant in this case; We think, therefore, that the finding of the trial court that the appellant voluntarily paid these coupons, and is estopped to assert any rights under them, as against the respondent, is not warranted hy the evidence. There is no pretense that these four coupons were ever paid, either hy the makers or hy the respondent Hauschild, who assumed them.

The judgment is reversed, with directions to enter a decree cancelling the satisfaction of the mortgage in question, and foreclosing the same for the amount due on the four coupons in suit, together with an attorney fee of $100.

Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.