Upon the whole evidence in the case, and after having carefully considered the able and exhaustive arguments submitted on the part of the learned counsel for the appellant, we are of the opinion that the evidence totally fails to make out a case for any relief on the part of the plaintiff; and while we would have been better satisfied with the findings and judgment of the learned circuit judge had he placed his judgment on the ground that there was not sufficient evidence in the case to authorize the court in finding that the deed was given as security for the loan of money by the defendant to the plaintiff, or that it was an absolute sale upon condition that the defendant would reconvey to the plaintiff on the payment of $1,200 and interest thereon at five per cent, a month, still -such latter finding is not inconsistent with the judgment rendered by such court, and is thereforc no ground for reversal of such judgment.
There are some facts established in the case which are not controverted by the appellant, and which, in our opinion, ought to be conclusive upon him that the warranty deed made in this case in 1858 was neither intended as a mortgage security for the loan of $1,200, nor as a conditional sale giving him the right to repurchase the property upon the payment of $1,200 and interest at five per cent, per month, or at any other rate of interest. The undisputed facts referred to are that after such deed was recorded, on the 9th of November, 1858, and down to 1887, the plaintiff has never made any claim to any of said lands, has never paid any taxes thereon, or in any way exercised any ownership thereof, or claimed any interest therein; that during all that time the plaintiff has never claimed to the defendant that he had any interest in said land, or any part thereof; that during that time, and about ten years after such deed was executed and recorded, the plaintiff made a settlement of other loans of money made by the
Under these undisputed facts, it is evident that in order to entitle the plaintiff to have this warranty deed declared a mortgage and security for a loan of money, and to compel the defendant to account for the land unsold and for the value of that sold, he must make out a very clear case. All reasonable inferences are against his claim. To establish his claim, he has introduced no evidence, except such as rests in parol and is dependent for its conclusiveness upon the vague and uncertain recollection of the parties to a transaction which took place thirty years before the date of the trial. There is this in the undisputed evidence which
As was to be expected, the parol evidence as to the nature of the transaction in 1858, as attempted to be detailed by the parties on the trial, is contradictory and unsatisfactory, and there is certainly no evidence, even on the part of the plaintiff, which establishes the fact that the transaction was a mortgage, or that it was intended as such by the parties. Even the testimony of the plaintiff himself, if there were nothing in the case which conflicted with his statements, does not show with any clearness that the transaction was understood by the parties to be a loan of money by the defendant to the plaintiff, and security given for such loan by making the deed instead of a mortgage. The plaintiff admits that the defendant refused to take any mortgage security from him for his monejq and insisted upon an absolute deed of the lands for the money paid; and he says “ he [the plaintiff] was to give him a deed for the lands and the Thompson note, with the understanding
The strength of the plaintiff’s argument to establish, the fact that this transaction was a loan, and not a sale, is, first, that the price paid by the defendant for the lands was inadequate. Upon this point we agree with the learned circuit judge that there was not at that time, and for many years thereafter, any certain cash value for the lands in controversy; and the evidence shows that, for over twenty-five years after the transaction, the lands were not and could not have been sold for enough to pay the taxes and interest thereon at seven per cent., and the $1,200, with like interest thereon. This argument cannot have great weight in the determination of the controversy.
The evidence on the part of the defendant, explanatory of the claim that the note was given to him as security for the $1,200, was, we think, clearly admissible under the pleadings. The plaintiff in his complaint alleges that the note was given with the deed to the defendant as security for the loan of $1,200, and the defendant denies this allegation in his answer, and denies that the plaintiff ever assigned said note to him at any time, or that he ever received the note from the plaintiff. The evidence offered by the defendant, and objected to by the plaintiff, clearly tended to prove the issue made by the pleadings upon this question.
The first, second, sixth, and tenth findings of fact by the circuit court are sufficient to sustain the conclusions of law and the judgment of the circuit court thereon, and, as we think these findings are sustained by the weight -of evidence, the other findings in the case become immaterial, and, whether sustained by the evidence or not, the judgment must be affirmed. It is unnecessary to discuss the question in regard to the statute of limitations applicable to the case, which was discussed by the learned counsel for the respective parties upon the hearing in this court.
This case is pre-eminently one to which the rule laid down by this court in Kent v. Lasley, 24 Wis. 654; Newton v. Holley, 6 Wis. 592; Lake v. Meacham, 13 Wis. 355; Fowler v. Adams, 13 Wis. 458; Harrison v. Juneau Bank, 17 Wis. 340; McClellan v. Sanford, 26 Wis. 595, 607; Sable v. Maloney, 48 Wis. 331, 333; Schriber v. Le Glair, 66 Wis.
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.