Citizens' State Bank v. Christianson
Citizens' State Bank v. Christianson
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff seeks to establish title in defendant Christianson, and to foreclose a real estate mortgage given by Christianson and wife for $2,200 and interest. Defendants answered separately. Westby pleads title in himself and denies that C. ever had any interest in the quarter section attempted to be mortgaged by him, and asks that title be quieted against the mortgage sought to be foreclosed. To this plaintiff replies, alleging C. to be the equitable owner of said premises, and that Westby holds the legal title in trust for C. and procured the deed to himself to defraud and defeat the lien of plaintiff’s mortgage. Plaintiff recovered judgment, from which Hans Westby appeals, demanding a trial do novo.
Briefly stated the issues hang upon the following statement of facts: C. came to Pierce county in 1906, where W. was residing. He moved upon W.’s homestead and farmed it that year. W. was working on the railroad as a section hand. Christianson had previously married W.’s sister. W. was unmarried. C. farmed W.’s homestead that year on halves, W. furnishing 600 bushels of oats, giving the use of four horses and machinery, $10.60 in cash, and allowing C. to take all the crop that year, W;’s share amounting to $300, leaving O. indebted to him that fall in the sum of $490.60. Of the foregoing there is no dispute, nor anything upon which to question the good faith of the dealings between W. and C. In the early spring of 1901 a neighbor, defendant Ejeld, desired to sell an adjoining quarter section and the subject of this litigation. He talked with C. about his buying it, and got him interested to the extent that C. made a trip to Bugby and attempted to raise the money or credit sufficient to buy the land, but he failed and could get neither money nor credit for the purpose. During this time and throughout all times involved in this litigation, W. was working on the section in another county and away from his home, except as he would visit it over Sunday. After it became apparent that C. could not purchase this land, E., who was apparently anxious to sell, went to McCumber in Eolette county to interest W. in purchasing this land, and succeeded in negotiating a deal wherein W. agreed that E. should procure a loan of $1,200 on it and that W. then would purchase it,
To pursue the facts in the light of the foregoing contentions, C. farmed W.’s homestead and the Fjeld land for the next five years under an oral understanding whereby one half of the crop raised on W.’s homestead each year, less the thresh bill, should belong to W.; that O. should take all the balance of the crop raised on the homestead and on the Fjeld land, but should pay the taxes, and the interest due upon the Fjeld contract and upon the first mortgage. This left W.’s share of the crop from his homestead free to be applied in reduction of principal of the contract and to meet its payments, leaving the balance of the crop on both quarters with which to pay interest and taxes, with whatever that was left to go to O. as his property and to pay running expenses. W. sold C. his farm machinery and two teams for $600 on time. W. continued to work on the section at $55 per month. Under this arrangement W.’s one half of the grain raised on his homestead netted him the following amounts. For 1907, $502.40; for 1908, $398.90; for 1909, $804.19; for 1910, nothing, a crop failure; for 1911, $319.45. In December, 1911, F. and wife deed to W., which deed was placed of record January 25, 1912, F. having been fully paid off that fall through the mortgaging by W. of his homestead for $1,000, and with the balance from his crop of that year, making a payment by W. to F. for the deed of $1,122.45. The payments made and indorsed upon the contract of purchase were all sent by C. and were all made December 23d of the respective years; to wit, 1907, $400 and interest on $2,500 to that date, $100; 1908, payment on contract $600, with one year’s interest on $2,100 to date, $126; 1909, contract payment due of $500, with one year’s interest on $1,500, $90. Nothing was paid on the principal in 1910 on account of crop failure, W. paying the interest on the mortgage, $96, and on the $1,000 still due on the contract, $60, or total interest paid of $156 that year, and a like amount of interest was paid in 1911, when the deed was taken. Thus, in addition to the $2,500 paid from four crops raised in the five years, there had been paid in interest on the contract and $1,200 mortgage, at 6 per cent and 8 per cent respectively, $436 interest on the contract and five years’ interest at $96 per year, or $480, on the mortgage, or $916 aggregate interest, or a total of $3,416 up to the time title was vested
Throughout these years C. and family resided on the Fjeld tract, upon which he had made improvements in buildings, fencing, and planting of trees, and otherwise, all of which was an indirect advantage to W. The land was generally known in the üeighborhood as C.’s place,- — a-fact, however, of no special significance, as O. had at all times resided there. C. had evidently always desired the place as a home, and about the time of the crop arrangement in 1907 an indefinite sort of an understanding was had between the two, in which it was taken for granted that the farm should some day become C.’s and that W. would not sell it to any one else; that C. should have it for the amount
W. testifies:
I told C. I will be fair with him and will let him have this land for the same price as I paid for it, but I wanted to pay off Fjeld; I wasn’t going to do any dealings before Fjeld was paid off.
O. testifies:
Q. You were to pay the interest and taxes on the Fjeld contract for the use of the land?
A. Yes.
Q. Now, when you made those payments of the notes on the Fjeld contract, where did you get the money ?
A. I took Hans’ crops; he told me to haul it out and pay the notes.
Q. Hans’ share of the crops on the homestead ?
A. Yes.
Q. How did you pay the interest and taxes ?
A. Hauled out some other crop and paid it.
Q. Did Hans tell you he would sell you this land after he got it paid for from Fjeld ?
A. He told me I was going to have it when the land was paid for, for the same price he bought it for.
Q. What do you mean by that, that you were to pay him $3,700 ?
A. Well, I do not know.
Q. The same price ?
A. As he bought it for.
Q. You never paid him any money?
A. Not yet.
Nor was a more definite understanding agreed upon between these two brothers-in-law, one of whom, W., was the property owner and benefactor, and the other without means and obliged to rely wholly upon the former. A charge is made in plaintiff’s brief on this appeal, based on the harmony in the testimony of the two, that they have at all times been acting in collusion. But it would seem that C.’s attitude in desiring W. to succeed in this litigation would be but the natural
In 1909 one Simon Westby (of no relation to Hans Westby) owned 120 acres, known as the Frohold land, near by the Fjeld farm upon which C. was residing. Simon induced O. to purchase the Frohold 120 acre tract for $3,600, under the terms of which purchase O. was to assume a $1,400 mortgage thereon. In addition he executed notes for $2,200 bearing 8 per cent, secured by a purchase price second mortgage for $2,200 given by C. and wife on the Frohold 120 acres and on the Fjeld place, running to Nellie Westby, wife of Simon Westby. This mortgage was dated October 5, 1909, and due in instalment notes of $500 each year, the first due February 1, 1912. These notes were indorsed to plaintiff bank; none of them have been paid. C. defaulted in interest with this foreclosure following in November, 1911. Before O. purchased he consulted Hans Westby, who advised against his buying this land. In the course of the deal Simon Westby and O. went together to Hans Westby, who still advised C. not to buy it, and that he had enough to work without it, and who told Simon not to sell it to C, and “told them both that I didn’t want anything to do with it.” In this Hans is fully corroborated by C. and in part by Simon Westby as well. Simon testifies that “Hans said that he was against the purchasing of the Fjeld land, and Christianson wanted it, and he was against the proposition; then he said Chris had made good and he would leave it to him.” Later the sale was made and the mortgage taken when Hans was not present, and Hans was never asked to sign it. Hans testified as follows: “The first I heard of it was when Simon and Christianson came to Bolette together, as it appeared to me on a visit, and Simon told me first that he was going to sell Chris the three forties, the Frohold land as he called it. I said, ‘Is that so ?’ And he says, ‘Yes;’ and I asked him what he wanted to sell that land for to Christianson and at what price, and he said $30 an acre. I told him it seemed a pretty stiff price, and he said it was, but that it was the least he would sell it for. So he didn’t say much more, and after a. while he commenced talking about security; whether or not I asked him or he mentioned it first I cannot say, but anyway they was talking about security, and he said, ‘I will take security on those three forties and the land that Christianson lives on.’ I told him, ‘You know that
The plaintiff makes much of the admitted fact of an oral agreement at the time of the purchase of the Fjeld land, to the effect that when $1,500 of the contract price had been paid by W. to F., the latter would discharge the $2,500 mortgage taken as security on W.’s homestead. Plaintiff strenuously contends that this is strong evidence that Hans had an understanding with C. that the latter should be the real owner, and that the mortgaging of the homestead was but the giving of friendly financial assistance. But this discards the testimony of Plans, in which he says that at the time of the purchase he told F.: “I have a $700 note that will come due in about three years from now; if I haven’t got the money I won’t be in shape to renew that loan when you hold the second mortgage on my homestead; I want you to release that land so that it will put me in shape if I have to, so I can renew my loan on my homestead. He said: ‘By that time you will have about $1,500 paid on it, and there will only be about $1,000 left, and it ought to be all right surely,’ and I said he would. That was about all.” An understanding that a discharge of this mortgage on the homestead could be exacted was but good business, and rather tends to strengthen than discredit Hans, and there is nothing worthy of consideration in the testimony to impeach his motives or his statements, or otherwise discredit his explanation. Simon testifies to having had a conversation in 1908 at Polette, in the course of which he said that Hans had told him that he (Plans) had taken the contract to himself because he had had to give a mortgage on his land, his homestead, to secure it up, otherwise he said Chris could not have bought the land. “I told him that you were going to get married now, and while it has been all right while you were single it might not be if you were married at the time of the transfer of this land, and P think you ought to transfer the contract to Chris now before you get married. Pie said, ‘I will not turn over that contract until my land is out of soak, until it is released, whether I get married or not, but when my land is clear and out of it I will turn it over to Christianson whether my wife wants to or not.’ He asked me if I didn’t think Chris had bought a nice farm. I told him I thought he had. Pie said, ‘Chris is a good worker and will get along all right; he will pay for the farm if anybody can.’ ”
■ It is admitted that O. during the five years in question always marketed all of the crop, including the share of Hans, but both agree that it was always done under the instructions of Hans to haul in the wheat and pay the notes as they fell due each year; also that the contract was left in the possession of C., who sent the money each year to F., and who in 1910 procured from F. a year’s extension of the $500 payment due that year on Hans paying the contract and mortgage interest and taxes; and Hans admits that he did not know F.’s address, but left the matter to C., he, Hans, working on the section. Simon’s brother Ole testifies to a conversation in 1908 in which Hans told him that C. would come out all right and he had a good crop on his quarter; and on witness asking Hans whether he intended to farm himself he was told,
In case that Chris will be able next fall to take up the contract without borrowing any money at a higher rate of interest, I think that would be advisable, and I for my part will not crowd him for any part of the amount due me until he is in shape to pay it. Just tell Chris to get the amount he pays the bank indorsed on the contract, and leave it go the way it is until I can spare time to go up with him and have the thing fixed up. There also should be a settlement between you and dims, that is, he ought to have something to show that this land is going to be his after he had paid for it, but I think that will be time enough to fix this up when he pays it, the amount due, in March. You tell him not to worry about it, and that I will look after it, and that it is simply because I cannot possibly spare the time that I cannot at this time be there. . . .
In conclusion, I wish you all a Merry Christmas and a Happy and Prosperous New Year.
Most sincerely yours,
Simon Westby.
I would have ivritten to Chris but I did not know whether he would get it or not.
S. W.
It is noticeable that this letter is a purely self-serving declaration, written for the future use to which it was applied in this lawsuit. The parts italicized in this opinion plainly disclose the reason why this' letter was written to Hans, instead of to Chris. Hans testifies: “I
This is a fair and substantially complete résumé of the testimony, upon which this farm was held to belong to C. as the equitable owner thereof, and subjected to the rights of this third party mortgagee, and in doing of which $2,025.34 in cash payments coming from the share of the crop belonging to Hans Westby and raised upon his homestead, and inclusive of $450.40 of his wages paid on the contract by him, were utterly cast out and disregarded, while the final payment made by him of $1,122.45 was allowed as a prior lien to that of the mortgagee plaintiff. Certainly Hans Westby was entitled to a prior lien for all that he had paid if he was entitled to one for the last payment made. If it be contended by respondent that Hans is unworthy of belief, the unanswerable fact remains that the money was procured from these two places with which to meet $3,600 in five years paid from four crops, and the testimony is wholly uncontradicted that Hans has gotten none of it, even the crop from his own homestead, except the benefits he may have derived by turning in his half of the crop on his homestead in payment of this contract. It is undisputed that he made the contract. Concede that he knew that C. had attempted to buy the land before he dealt with F. and knew at the time that O. wanted it, nevertheless he,
Much is made of the fact that October 27, 1911, found C. in debt to Hans Westby in the sum of $1,478, for which amount a chattel mortgage was that day taken on O.’s personal property, including horses and machinery. When questioned as to what the items were composed of, Hans itemized the amount as follows: “In 1906 he.got 600 bushel of oats, 30 cents a bushel amounting to $180; my share of the crop in 1906, $300; cash $10.60; 5 per cent interest and interest on this at 8 per cent, $196, four horses and machinery (sold in 1907 to C.) $600 and four years’ interest on that $192-$1,478.” This is attempted to be discredited by a showing that in 1908 C. had advanced $22.70 to.make up the payment for that year, and in 1909, $156.40, or a total of $179.-10; and it is admitted that these items, and the improvements made on the i1 jeld farm were not taken into consideration in computing the $1,478 indebtedness. That it was not casts no doubt upon the testimony, as the proof is ample that these two men have never dealt closely with each other. And probably foreseeing that, through the intermeddling of others in their affairs, an attempt might soon be made to collect of C. on the Trohold mortgage indebtedness, these two parties adjusted the indebtedness of six years of dealings at the above figure and secured its payment by chattel mortgage. It was not to their discredit that they did so. It was not in fraud of creditors, but merely the giving of a preference of one creditor over another. Some comment is made on the fact that Hans did not bring with him his book of original entry, but instead a note book upon which he had noted many of the transactions, and also that he did not produce some checks to substantiate his testimony. This is trivial. There is nothing to show that the book of original entry could not have been produced had it really been desired, and as to the checks the burden was not upon Hans to corroborate his assertions, apparently frank and straightforward, but instead
Respondent has 'attempted to invoke an estoppel against W. and in favor of the mortgagee and this assignee thereof, and has quoted law to the effect that “the owner of land who stands by and sees another sell it without making known his claim is forever estopped from setting up his title against an innocent purchaser.” There are no facts upon which to base any such estoppel. The testimony is all to the effect that the mortgagee had full knowledge of Iians "Westby’s interests; that she, through her husband, dealt with knowledge of every fact, and knew that Hans was in position to consistently claim to be the purchaser and the only real party .in interest. All the testimony to the contrary comes from alleged conversations had with C. in the absence of Hans, or from at the most ambiguous statements in casual conversation of Hans to interested parties; while plaintiff’s testimony from its own witnesses establishes that Simon was told by Hans that C. had no interest in the land, but that on the contrary it belonged to Hans. Not only that, but C. produced to Simon the contract running to Hans as purchaser before the deal, and hesitated to deal until it became necessary that a lawyer be employed to put this transaction through, and in the course of which, in the presence of Simon, his attorney explained to O. that the mortgage would merely cover any interest in the land that O. might have. The mortgagee parted with nothing in reliance upon any act or word of Hans or C., but instead dealt at her peril. If the testimony be taken at face, and the same deductions drawn in weighing the testimony as would be indulged in under ordinary circumstances, it would not be unfair to say that the presumptions are strong that Simon was fully aware of the exact situation for at least a year- before the sale of the Erohold place and the taking of the C. mortgage, and regarded the same as what has been characterized as a “preliminary mortgage” which might be good should Hans at some future time sell the place to C. that the term “preliminary mortgage” was used is a circumstance against plaintiff, as it has a certain significance all its own to anyone who has lived in frontier settlements. He therefore knew he was taking a chance, and took it with knowledge that it might or might not in the future avail as security. As heretofore remarked, any rights of plaintiff Would necessarily not only be subject
It is directed that judgment be entered quieting title to the land in suit in Hans Westby, and canceling as a cloud upon his title the mortgage in question, executed by O. and wife to Nellie Westby and assigned to plaintiff bank; that plaintiff’s complaint be dismissed as without merit; and that appellant Hans Westby recover of plaintiff and respondent judgment for his costs and disbursements both on the trial of this case and on his appeal, as provided by law. The District Court will vacate the judgment entered, including the findings, conclusions, and order upon which the same is based, and enter judgment in conformity with this opinion.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- CITIZENS' STATE BANK, a Corporation v. CHRIST CHRISTIANSON (and Hans Westby, Sole Appellant)
- Status
- Published