Gross Iron Ore Co. v. Paulle
Can I rely on this case?
Yes — no negative treatment found
- —
- —
Analysis generated from citing opinions in this archive. Not legal advice.
Gross Iron Ore Co. v. Paulle
Opinion of the Court
In March, 1909, Ludwig Gross secured from defendant a loan of
The only question on this appeal is whether there is evidence to sustain this finding. In our opinion there is. Gross gave this testimony as to the conversation at the time the loan was negotiated: "I told him that I needed money, that I was financially pressed and that I wanted this money, that I would secure him * * * that I had advanced money for the Gross Iron Ore Company, and that I would secure him with a mortgage on its property.” This, in connection with the fact that money was paid by cheek to Gross’ personal order, is sufficient to sustain the finding of the court that defendant had notice that the loan was being negotiated by Gross for his own personal use.
The court imposed as a condition to the annulment of mortgage the payment by plaintiff to defendant of $187.57, the amount which plaintiff owed Gross for the taxes paid by him on plaintiff’s land. Plaintiff does not complain of this. Defendant cannot. To this extent the decision favors defendant. This part of the decision was in no sense a partial
Order affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- GROSS IRON ORE COMPANY v. LEONARD PAULLE
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published