First Nat. Bank of Clayton v. Harlan

Decision Date23 December 1924
Docket Number2858.
Citation234 P. 305,30 N.M. 356,1924 -NMSC- 085
PartiesFIRST NAT. BANK OF CLAYTON v. HARLAN et al.
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court

Rehearing Denied March 18, 1925.

Syllabus by the Court..

A finding by the trial court, unsupported by any evidence, will not be sustained.

There can be no estoppel where the party relying upon the same has not been induced to take a position to his detriment by the act of the other party.

On Motion to Modify Judgment.

Where a case is submitted to the court, sitting without a jury, upon the evidence then before it, and the court erroneously finds for the plaintiff, without any substantial evidence to support the finding, and erroneously refuses to find for defendant as requested, there is no right to a new trial, but this court may reverse and remand the cause, with directions to enter the proper judgment.

Appeal from District Court, Union County; Leib, Judge.

Action by the First National Bank of Clayton against J. A. Harlan and others. Judgment for plaintiff, and defendants appeal. Reversed and remanded, with directions.

Joseph Gill, of Albuquerque, for appellants.

O. P Easterwood, of Clayton, for appellee.

PARKER C.J.

This is an action for the foreclosure of a chattel mortgage resulting in a decree in favor of appellee (plaintiff) against appellant (defendant), from which appeal has been taken. The plaintiff introduced the note and chattel mortgage, showing that the same were unpaid and that the note was a renewal note, and rested its case. The defendant alleged and proved, without contradiction, that the original note of one Harlan, signed by him, a renewal whereof was the note sued on, was signed by him upon the express consideration and contract of plaintiff that it would turn over to him the cattle, upon which the chattel mortgage of said Harlan was executed, which cattle he should sell at private sale and apply the proceeds to the payment of the note, and the overplus, estimated at $1,000 by plaintiff, was to be divided equally between plaintiff and defendant; that the plaintiff failed to turn over the cattle, and defendant notified plaintiff of election to rescind the contract; that no consideration of any kind moved between the parties other than the promise of plaintiff as above set out; that no consideration moved between the parties for the signing of the renewal note, and that defendant was induced to renew the note by threats of plaintiff to sue him on his certain other indebtedness to plaintiff, but no contract for forbearance was made. At the close of the evidence, plaintiff moved for judgment, which motion was granted and the decree entered.

Proper exceptions to the findings were made, and proper requests for findings were presented to save all the questions raised. The court found:

"That the defendant, C. E. Anderson, for a valuable consideration, executed the notes and chattel mortgages sued on, and renewed such indebtedness from time to time by the execution of the various instruments described in the complaint, and that he likewise paid a pasture bill upon said live stock, and paid other expenses in connection with the same, and in connection with the recording of the chattel mortgage sued on; and that the defendant is barred and estopped on account of his acts and conduct, as appears from the evidence, from recovering in this suit."

1. Just how the court found that defendant received a valuable consideration for the execution of the note is hard to understand. There is no evidence to support such a finding, and, on the other hand, the evidence is all the other way. The court was in error.

2. The finding of estoppel is erroneous. In the first place it was not pleaded;...

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