principal or interest that after such first mortgage was obtained the plaintiff should give the defendants a second mortgage over the land and a first mortgage over the stock and plant to secure the balance of the £180,000, also without personal liability that the first and second mortgages on the land should be for concurrent terms of five years; and that upon completion of these arrangements the defendants should release the testator's estate from all claims. It was further stipulated that during the term of the mortgages the plaintiff should only draw from the income of the station by way of salary £600 a year, and that, after payment of that sum and the working expenses and interest, the surplus profits should be accumulated and placed to a suspense account with the defen- dants, and at the end of the five years should be paid to them in reduction of the mortgage debt. In pursuance of this agreement the defendants obtained for the plaintiff a first mortgage of £100,000 at 5 per cent., but without the plain- tiff's knowledge entered into an agreement with the mortgagee by which, in consideration of a commission of 1/2 per cent. per annum to be paid to them by the mortgagee out of the interest payable by the plaintiff, they agreed to guarantee the payment of principal and interest, and under that agreement the defendants were paid by the mortgagee £2,500, being £250 each half-year during the term of the mortgage. In an action by the plaintiff against the defendants to recover the £2,500 as being a secret profit made by them while acting as his agent in connection with the loan of £100,000,
Held, by Isaacs, Gavan Duffy and Rich JJ. (Griffith C.J. and Barton J. dissenting), that the defendants were agents in the ordinary sense for the plaintiff to obtain the loan of £100,000 for him and owed to him the ordinary duty of agents, and that, therefore, the plaintiff was entitled to payment to him of £2,500 and not merely to have that sum brought into the accounts between him and the defendants.
Held, by Griffith C.J. and Barton J., that there was no such fiduciary obligation on the part of the defendants as to preclude them from entering into an independent agreement with the new mortgagees to induce them to lend the money at the nominal rate of 5 per cent., and that if there was the amount recoverable would not exceed the profit, if any, which the defendants derived from that agreement.
Decision of the Supreme Court of Victoria (Cussen J.) Keogh v. Dalgely &Co. Ltd., (1917) V.L.R., 11; 38 A.L.T., 87, varied.
APPEAL from the Supreme Court of Victoria.
An action was brought in the Supreme Court by William Monahan Keogh against Dalgety &Co. Ltd. in which the plaintiff by his statement of claim alleged that in or about 1909 he employed the defendants as his agents to procure a loan for him on the security of Warrana Station; that the defendants as such agents procured a loan of £100,000 with interest thereon at 5 per cent. per annum and that the defendants while acting as agents for the plaintiff made