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Weaver, J. , „ loans: construction of ?nterest!°cnom-r: On or about January 23, 1902, Elizabeth Chambers and husband, Alexander Chambers, being the owners of a farm in Greene county, Iowa, executed ail(j delivered to Dillenbeck & Son an applix 1 cation for a loan thereon in the following-words :Exhibit A. Application for Loan.
I, the undersigned, do hereby appoint S. S. Dillenbeck & Son, of Citizens’ State Bank, Perry, Iowa, as my agents to procure for me a loan of $5,000.00 for the term of ten years, from February 1, 1902, at five and one per cent, per annum from 1-22-1902, to be paid semiannually, secured by first mortgage upon the following described real estate, situated in the county of Greene and State of Iowa, to-wit: The northwest quarter of section number thirty-five (35) and the north half of the southwest quarter of Sec. 35, Twp. 82, range 29, except eight acres off of side of said eighty-acre tract. For the purpose of procuring said loan, I declare the following statement to be true: Total No. of acres, two hundred and thirty-two. Acres cultivated, one hundred and thirty-two. The said property is not rented, but is occupied by myself. Are there any mortgages, judgments, taxes, or other liens against the property ? Yes. If so, describe them, giving amount, name of mortgagee, and when due. Loan of $1,600 at five per cent., two years’ interest due, to G. L. Peck, opt. 5-3 — 1902. $2,000.00 to C. W. Williams, opt. 2 — 1—1902, to Elisha Nichols. The money is borrowed for the purpose of paying above mortgages and purchase price. I own other property of the value of $4,000. My total liabilities at this time do not exceed the sum of $1,650. If this application is accepted, I will furnish, at my own expense, a complete abstract of title to the land proposed as security, ipd pay for stamping and recording the mortgage. I also agree to furnish the mortgagee each year, during the continuance of said loan, with evidence that all taxes against said property have been paid. T am a- married woman and am seventy-four years old. My husband’s name in full
*416 is Alexander Chambers. He is - years old. My post-office address is Angus, Iowa. I have appointed S. S. Dillenbeck & Son my agent to assist me in obtaining said loan, to whom the money and papers may be sent, at my risk. Options in even hundreds, at five per cent, interest period. And I further agree to pay ten dollars for examining the permises herein referred to and the title thereto if the security should not be as represented.Elizabeth (X) Chambers.
Mack Stevens.
The firm of Dillenbeck & Son is composed of S. S. Dillenbeck and B. C. Dillenbeck, who are, respectively, president and cashier of the plaintiff bank, and carry on their loan business in the bank. Thereafter Mrs. Chambers and her husband made and executed to Dillenbeck & Son the following written instruments:
(1) A promissory note of $5,000, payable to the order of S. S. Dillenbeck &,S<m, due 10 years after date, with interest at 5 per cent., payable semiannually. The note also contained a clause by which the makers had the privilege of making payments on the principal at any interest period.
(2) A mortgage to S. S'. Dillenbeck & Son to secure the payment of said promissory note of $15,000.
(3) A promissory note of $500, payable to S. S. Dillenbeck & Son in installments, and is in the following words:
$500.00 Perry, Iowa, January 23, 1902.
For value received, we, Elizabeth 'Chambers and Alexander Chambers, wife and husband, promise to pay to S. S. Dillenbeck & Son, or order, five hundred dollars, payable in twenty equal installments of twenty-five dollars each. The first installment of twenty-five ($25) will become due and payable on the first day of August, 1902, and the second installment of twenty-five ($25) will become clue and payable on the first day of February, 1903, and the balance to he paid in eighteen (18) equal installments of twenty-five ($25) each, on the first day of each succeeding month of August and February, thereafter, until the aforesaid sum of
*417 five hundred dollars is paid in full, with interest at the rate of eight per cent, per annum payable semiannually from maturity until paid. Unpaid interest shall bear interest at the rate of eight per cent, per annum from the time the same becomes due. And it is further agreed that if default is made in the payment of principal or interest, then the whole shall become due and payable at once. In case suit is commenced for the collection of this note, the makers hereof agree to pay all reasonable costs, including attorney’s fees.Elizabeth (X) Chambers.
Alexander (X) Chambers.
Witness to marks: Mack Stevens.
(4) A mortgage to S. S. Dillenbeck & Son to secure the payment of said note for $500; said security being made subject to the lien of the mortgage first-above mentioned.
These notes and mortgages immediately, or at least very soon after the application, were signed and the amount of the loan was at once fúrnished by Dillenbeck & Son on their own account and paid out for the benefit of the borrowers in satisfying and removing certain prior liens and charges upon the land. The Dillenbecks, according to their testimony, held the principal note and mortgage some three or four months, when they sold and assigned it to a party in Connecticut, retaining the note for $500 secured by second mortgage. The negotiations for the sale of said mortgage were not concluded until within about three weeks, of the first interest day, August 1, 1902, when the purchaser paid Dillenbeck & Son the amount of the principal note, with interest accrued to that date at 5 per cent. Within a month or two after obtaining the loan from the Dillenbecks the Chambers sold the land to the defendant James Wimmer, who assumed payment of the debt. On the arrival of the first interest day Wimmer claimed the right to exercise the option reserved in the principal note to pay the entire debt. lie paid, and the bank on part of the owner accepted, the full amount of $5,000, with five per cent, interest thereon, and the note and mortgage were surrendered and canceled.
*418 He also paid the first installment of $25 on the $500 note which had been retained by Dillenbeek & Son, but the holder refused to surrender or cancel the note, claiming that it represented merely the commission for making the loan and that the indebtedness thus evidenced was in no manner affected or avoided by the payment of. the principal before the expiration of the full loan period. • The note having been transferred by Dillenbeek & Son to the bank and default having been made in payment of the second installment, this suit is brought to recover thereon and for a foreclosure of the mortgage. This somewhat extended statement of conceded facts indicates the nature of the controversy before us without any formal statement of the pleadings filed. The question presented may be briefly stated as follows: Under the contract between the Chambers and the Dillenbecks, is the $500 note to be treated as representing a commission fully earned when the loan^was completed, or does its several semiannual installments represent interest accruing upon the principal note ? If commission, and the same has been earned according to the terms of the contract, then, of course, the plaintiff is entitled to recover and the conclusion of the trial court is right, but if interest, then there should bo no recovery, and the decree appealed from must be reversed.To ascertain the contract between the parties, we must look first to the writing. Recurring to its language it unquestionably appears that IVIrs. Chambers and her husband authorized Dillenbeek & Son to procure for them a loan upon certain specified terms, to wit, “ a loan of $5,000 for the term of ten years from February 1, 1902, at five and one per cent, per annum from 1 — 22—1902, to be paid semiannually secured by first mortgage upon [describing the land]. . . . Options in even hundreds at five per cent, interest period.”
If we look to the writing alone, and such is the elementary general rule in the absence of allegations or proof of fraud, we think it impossible to discover, in the language
*419 there employed, any agreement to pay a commission. It is possible that, if the borrowers were people of considerable business experience and observation, the expression “ five and one per cent.” would have justified the inference on their part that Dillenbeck & Son intended to dispose of the loan upon the market at 5 per cent, interest and retain 1 per cent, as their profit in the transaction, but the writing. certainly contains no agreement to that effect. Moreover, there is a very material distinction existing between “ profit ” and “ commission.” In the phrase “ a loan of $i5,000 for ten years at five and one per cent, per annum,” the words “ five ” and “ one ” stand grammatically and logically in precisely the same relation to the word “ loan,” which precedes them, and to the words “ per cent, per annum,” which follow them. If “ five ” refers to the rate of interest' to the lender, upon what authority or by what process of reasoning can we say that “ one,” standing in like relation to the antecedent and subsequent words of the sentence, refers to commission to the agents ? If “ one ” is to be construed as meaning “ one per cent, commission,” what license have we to say that “ five,” to which it is coupled in the same manner, means “five per cent, interest?” Stated in another form, if we assume to say that one numeral means interest and the other means commission, how are we able to say that “ one,” rather than “ five,” stands for commission ?2. Construction oi? writing: paroi evidence. In order to extract from the writing the meaning placed upon it by appellee, resort must be had to extrinsic evidence. It may be conceded that where the language of a contract is so ambiguous or incomplete as to convey no t • i * ♦. • • _? • i ,n clear idea o± its meaning, or is iairly susceptible ^ . f n ♦ t . . o± two or more constructions, parol evidence is admissible in explanation; but even in such cases the rule which excludes parol testimony of prior or contemporaneous oral agreements tending to vary or contradict the writing still prevails. The facts and circumstances existing at the time the writing was executed and the conduct of the parties*420 both before and after its execution may properly be scrutinized for the purpose of removing any ambiguity or uncertainty of expression, but the instrument is not to be changed or contradicted under the guise of explanation of construction. 17 Cyc. 666, 66Y, note 34. Neither is evidence admissible of the unexpressed intention which one or both of the parties may have entertained, but failed to have embodied in the writing. King v. Merriman, 38 Minn. 47 (35 N. W. 570); Bank v. Brigham, 61 Kan. 727 (60 Pac. 754).a. trade usage: notice: evidence. On the trial in the court below the Dillenbecks were permitted to testify that the application in question was drawn according to their usual method of business. One Whinery. a banker in Des Moines, testifying for , . 7 . 7 J ° plaintiff, said: “ There is a custom between the borrower and the lender of expressing interest aild commission. We generally state the rate, then the commission, also, in the same application.” And on the strength of this showing he was allowed to say he would understand the language in the contract in suit to mean “ five per cent, interest and one per. cent, commission.” Another witness, a banker in Adel, was also permitted to testify in substantially the same terms. It would hardly seem necessary to enter into any argument to demonstrate the insufficiency of this very vague showing to establish a custom which shall control the construction of a written contract. In the first place, no custom is pleaded except the customary method of the Dillenbocks in making loans, Eller v. Loomis, 106 Iowa, 276, and of any private custom by which the words “ five ■ and one per cent.” were used in any particular or restricted sense there is no showing that the Chambers had knowledge or notice. They had negotiated another loan through the same agency, but in that transaction the agents had taken a written agreement in which it was expressly stated that they were to receive a specified sum as commission for their services. The term “ custom ” is perhaps not quite accurate as used in the record, and the claim of plaintiff in this*421 respect may possibly be better referred to the law governing “ trade usages.” But a trade usage by which words are given an unusual or arbitrary significance in a particular line of business generally or in the locality where the parties reside must be shown to be of such definite character and such general acceptance that knowledge thereof by both parties may be reasonably inferred. Underwood v. Iowa L. H., 66 Iowa, 134; Bradford v. Ins. Co., 54 Iowa, 598; Murray v. Brooks, 41 Iowa 45; Rindskoff v. Barrett, 14 Iowa, 101; Van Hoesen v. Cameron, 54 Mich. 609 (20 N. W. 609); Irwin v. Williar, 110 U. S. 499 (4 Sup. Ct. 160, 28 L. Ed. 225); Beatty v. Gregory, 17 Iowa, 109; Johnson v. DePeyster, 50 N. Y. 666; Brunnell v. Hudson Saw Mill Co., 86 Wis. 587 (57 N. W. 364).But we think there is no occasion in this case to resort to proof of custom or usage to determine with certainty the real nature and effect of the transaction between the appellants and Billenbeck & Son. Conceding, for the purposes of the case, that the testimony was all properly admitted and giving it its utmost probative effect, we are still of the opinion that in view of the undisputed facts the appellee is not entitled to recover.
Looking at the practical construction placed by the parties upon the contract, we find that, instead of negotiating a loan from some third party for the borrowers, the Billenbecks themselves made the loan from their own funds at “ five and one per cent.,” taking their chances of marketing the< paper on a basis which would leave them a margin of profit. This fact shows quite conclusively that the “ five and one per cent.” was understood by the parties as only another way of saying “ six per cent, interest,” (the division into “ five and one ” being made to facilitate the marketing of the security by the lenders), for there could be no such thing as commission to the lenders for making a loan of their own money. This feature of the case will be emphasized by considering what would have been the rights of the
*422 parties bad tbe Dillenbecks never sold tbe principal note and mortgage, and when tbe first interest day arrived Chambers or bis grantee Wimmer bad appeared and exercised bis option to pay off tbe debt. Under snéli circumstances could Dillenbeck & Son liave' rightfully demanded not only tbe “ five and one per cent.” accrued to that date, but, in addition thereto, tbe equivalent of 1 per cent, per annum on tbe entire debt for nine and one half years in the future after tbe debt itself bad been fully discharged? There is absolutely nothing in tbe contract on which to base such an extraordinary ruling, yet we must so bold in order to sustain the conclusion of tbe trial court.It follows from what we have said tbe decree appealed from must be, and is, reversed.
Document Info
Judges: Weaver
Filed Date: 1/17/1906
Precedential Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/9/2024