Court Opinion

ID: 4893988
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-02 23:54:25.96548+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:11:51.703503
License: Public Domain

Station, Associate Justice.
This action was brought by the defendant in error against the plaintiff in error to recover a balance alleged to be due on two loans, after deducting therefrom the proceeds of certain bonds of the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Eailroad Company, which had been deposited by plaintiff in error as a pledge to secure the loan. The petition contained no averment of any express agreement that the pledgee might sell the bonds in the event of failure of the pledgor to pay the debt upon demand, but alleged that after demand for payment, notice thereof having been given to the pledgor, the bonds were sold in the city of New York at public auction, and the proceeds of sales applied to the payment of loan, interest, etc., which left due on Hovember 3, 1881, a balance of $2,695.25.
The petition also alleged that interest was to be paid on the loans *671at the rate of six per cent, per annum to date of demand, and that on the 1st day of September, 1881, the first loan, amounting to $56,000, was demanded, and that on the sixth day of the same month the demand was made for the second loan, which amounted to $30,000. Interest upon the loans from the time of demand, was claimed at the rate of eight per cent, per annum.
The account as stated in the petition, rates of interest at different times, and manner of appropriating money received from the sale of bonds, is set out in an exhibit, which is made a part of the petition, as follows:
Exhibit A.
W. B. King & Co. in account with Texas Banking & Insurance Co., Galveston, Texas. 1881.
July 1. To loan on forty-seven G., C. & S. F. R. R. bonds of §1,000 each.................................. $56,000 00
Sept. 1. To interest to date at six per cent............... 560 00
Oct. 1. To interest to date at eight per cent.............. 473 18
To charges paid by Bank of New Ycrk on sale of above bonds:
Auctioneer’s fees........................... $127 10
Notary’s fee............................... 15 00
Total................ ............... $57,175 28
Opt. 8. By proceeds of above forty-seven bonds sold in New York by Bank of New York................... 51,935 00
Leaving balance due this bank in the matter of the forty-seven bonds........................... $5,240 28
To interest on $5,240.28 at eignt per cent, from October 8 to November 3........................ 80 28
$5,270 56
1881.
Aug. 1. To loan on thirty bonds, same as above........... $30,000 00
Sept. 6. To interest from August 5th to date on above loan at six per cent............................... 125 00
Nov. 3. To interest to date at eight per cent.............. 415 40
To charge paid by Bank of New York on sale of above thirty bonds — auctioneer’s iees........... 84 32
Total........ .......................$30,624 72
Nov. 3. By proceeds of above thirty bonds sold in New York at auction.............................. 83,200 00
«Leaving balance due W. B. King & Co. in this sale, of...................................... 2,57-5 28
Leaving balance due this bank November 3, 1881, of........................................... §2,695 28
*672The answer alleged the loans as charged, and that the same “ was upon the following express terms and conditions: that this defendant should have the use of said money at the rate of six per cent, per annum until the 1st day of October, 1881, and thereafter at the rate of eight per cent, per annum, there being no time stipulated specifically when said money so advanced, and no authority delegated to said plaintiff to sell said bonds to repay said money by it advanced thereon, should be repaid to said bank.”
After admitting the demand and notice, the answer alleged that the defendant “ importuned said plaintiff not to sacrifice said securities ; at the same time offered to pay the interest on said loan to date, and protesting against a sacrifice of his securities at a time when it was next to impossible to borrow money on any terms; at the same time reminding said plaintiff that it held no instrument of hypothecation or other authority to sell said bonds held by it, and that said money advanced by it was not due.”
The answer further averred that the sale of the bonds by plaintiff destroyed the confidence which had theretofore existed in that class of bonds, as good securities for the investment of capital, by reason of which, other parties, to whom the defendant had pledged other like bonds, seeing that the bonds were depreciating in value, advertised for sale the bonds of defendant which they held, and that to prevent their sale he had to pay a higher rate of interest, and ultimately had to sell the bonds which the parties held at a depreciated price, to settle the debts for which the bonds were hypothecated; for which he sought to recover damages as well as for loss which he claimed to have sustained by reason of the bonds which were sold not bringing as much as he claimed to be their market value.
To the answer, demurrers general and special were filed and sustained by the court. There was a judgment for the plaintiff.
The assignments of error are as follows:
“ First. The court erred in sustaining the plaintiff’s demurrer to the amended original answer of the plaintiff in error filed in the honorable district of Galveston county, when said cause was called for trial, and in holding, in sustaining said demurrer, that the amended answer of plaintiff in error, defendant in the court below, showed that the money loaned on bonds deposited with it as collateral security was payable in cash, and that after demand for said money so loaned, that the defendant in error was authorized, without judicial or other proceedings, with plaintiff in error’s consent, to place said bonds so hypothecated on the market of New York, and force *673a sale thereof for whatever sum was obtainable therefor. Because said answer and plea in reconvention negatives any such authority on the part of the defendant in error in express terms, and shows that it was not in contemplation of either party that said loan should be called in the time that said money so loaned was demanded by the Texas Banking and Insurance Company of William B. King,, and because said petitioners’ amended answer negatives the existence of authority in the defendant in error to make the sale of his bonds at public outcry in the market of New York.
“ Second. The court erred in holding that the sale made by defendant in error of the bonds belonging to the plaintiff in error and deposited by him, with it as collateral security for the money loaned, was a legal sale, the manner and place of said sale being fully stated and charged in said amended answer to have been made in New York as against the earnest protest of the plaintiff in error.”
That parties by contract may regulate in advance the remedy which the creditor must pursue in subjecting property pledged to the payment of the debt which it is hypothecated to secure, cannot be questioned.
The time, mode and place of sale may be so fixed; and it lias been held that the parties may agree that the property may be sold without notice and at private sale upon default of pledgor to pay., the debt.
In the absence, however, of a contract regulating the mattei’, the person holding the pledge, in default of payment, may, upon giving reasonable notice, sell the pledged property at public auction and appropriate the proceeds to the payment of the debt, unless the character of the thing pledged be such that the law will presume • that it was the intention of the parties that money should in some other way be raised from the pledge; as in the case of a bill of exchange or promissory note which matures in a short time. Schouler’s Bailments, 206-217.
The rule is thus expressed by Wheeler, Justice, in Luckett v. Townsend, 3 Tex., 131: “ But English law now is, that when the debt is due, the pawnee has the election of two remedies: he may have a judicial sale under a decree of foreclosure,.or he may sell without judicial process, upon giving reasonable- notice to the debtor. For the pawnee is not bound to wait for a sale under a decree of foreclosure, as he is in the case of a mortgage - of land.. 2 Kent’s Com., 581. But without any bill to redeem, the creditor on a pledge or mortgage of chattels may sell at auction, on giving, reasonable opportunity to the debtor to redeem, and. apprising him *674of the time and place of sale.” 2 Kent’s Com., 582; 2 Story’s Equity, 1031-1034, and citations.
We are of the opinion that the answer does not set dp an agreement by which the plaintiff waived his right to sell the bonds upon default; but that the legal effect of the answer is only to deny that the law conferred upon the plaintiff the power to sell, in the absence of any contract upon that subject. Such is the fair import of the language of the answer; and-under the well known rule that the pleading is to be construed most strongly against the pleader, such we hold is the effect of the answer. If there ivas a contract between the parties which varied the general rule, it was incumbent upon the defendant to set it up.
It is claimed that the money was not due at the time of the sale, and that therefore the sale was unauthorized, and that this Avas shoAvn by the answer. Such is not the legal effect of the answer.
The answer alleges that the defendant was to pay six per cent, per annum interest on the money until the 1st of October, 1881, and after that he Avas to pay eight per cent., and that there Avas no time fixed for the payment of the debt. This is a sufficient averment, perhaps, that the money Avas not to be paid before the 1st of October; but Avhen there is no stipulated time for payment, the law, in the absence of something from which a contrary presumption would arise, would presume that the payment Avas to be made upon demand.
The answer does not allege that New York Avas not a proper place to sell the bonds, nor that they ivould have brought more in some other place; but upon the contrary, does allege that New York “ was the center of capital of the United States.” Such a place would seem to be the proper one to sell such securities as are sought by investors of capital. The bonds were sold at a rate above par, and the very best place to sell them would seem to be that place Avhere there Avas money seeking investment.
The answer does not allege that the notice given of the sale Avas too short, but. only complains that the sale Avas made at a time Avhen there was a stringency in the money market.
As the plaintiff had the legal right to sell, it was not required to. wait until the money market Avas better. The. risks of fluctuations in the market the parties must be held to have contemplated Avhen the pledge and debt were made, and if a sale became necessary, the defendant was only entitled to have it made.at public auction at a proper place and after reasonable notice.
The court, under the view Ave have of the case, did not err in *675sustaining the demurrers in reference to any of the matters we have considered.
[Opinion delivered February 10, 1883.]
[Note.—The defendant in error filed the remittitur on the day when the opinion was delivered.— Reporter.]
We are of opinion, however, that the court did err in sustaining the demurrer to so much of the answer as denied that the defendant had agreed to pay eight per cent, interest upon the loans after demand for payment was made, and alleged that such rate of interest was to be paid only after the 1st of October, 1881. Upon a part of the loan interest was computed from September 1st, and upon the residue from September 6, 1881, at the rate of eight per cent, per annum, and for this error of the court the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded, unless the defendant in error files in this court, within five days, a remittitur of all interest at a higher rate than six per cent, per annum for the period prior to October 1, 1881.
If this is done, the judgment will be affirmed at the cost of the defendant in error.
Affirmed.
Chief Justice Willie did not sit in this case.