14 S.D. 62 | S.D. | 1900
This action was commenced by the plaintiff in May, X894, and findings and judgment were rendered in favor of the plaintiff. The defendants, Hole, Miller, the Valley Land and Irrigation company, and the North American Loan and Trust Company have appealed to this court from the judgment, and the plaintiff has also appealed from the same. The case was before this court on a former appeal, on demurrer to the complaint, and is reported in 8 S. D. 353, 66 N. W. 939. The findings of the court are voluminous, and we shall only attempt to give a brief summary of them. The court finds that In 1886 there was a partnership doing business and negotiating loans under the name of the Dakota Farm Mortgage Company, which was afterwards succeeded by a corporation of the same name, and this, subsequently by the North American Loan &
It will be observed from the conclusions of law that the court refused to allow the defendants any amount paid by them, or either of them, as interest upon the note or taxes upon the property prior to the foreclosure of the mortgage, as against the plaintiff’s prior lien. Appellants, as we understand their brief, do not insist that they are entitled to the repayment of any of the interest paid by them, or that it is a lien upon the mortgaged premises superior to the lien of the plaintiff, but they do claim that the taxes paid -by them should be repaid, and held to be a lien superior to the lien of the plaintiff, and they base this claim upon the fact that it is provided in the trust deed that said Hole was to hold the land as trustee for said Miller and for any other person who might become the owner of said note, and that, in case there should be at any time during the continuance of
Assuming that the property at the commencement of this action was not of a value sufficient to pay the total amount for which the same was bid in by the Valley Land & Irrigation Company, but was of sufficient value at the time default was made in the payment of interest*and taxes by the debtor to have satisfied plaintiff’s claims, the failure of the defendants to notify the plaintiff of such default, and the payment of such interest and taxes by the defendants, was calculated to prejudice the rights of the plaintiff. The position of Hole
Sections 3915, 3921, Comp. Eaws, provide as follows: “ Everyone who voluntarily assumes a relation of personal confidence with another, is deemed a trustee within the meaning of this chapter, not only as to the person who reposes such confidence, but also as to all persons of whose affairs he thus acquires information which was given to such person in the like confidence, or over whose affairs he, by such confidence, obtains any control.” “In all matters connected with his trust a trustee is bound to act in the highest good faith towards his beneficiary, and may not obtain any advantage therein over the latter, by the slightest misrepresentation, concealment, threat or adverse pressure of any kind.” It is claimed on the part of the defendants that they paid said taxes and the interest in good faith, believing at the time that the property was amply sufficient to repay the same and the amount of said loan; but this cannot be held as an excuse for a period of nearly seven years in neglecting to inform the plaintiff that her debtor was in default, and that they were paying the taxes and interest which he had obligated himself to pay. It was the duty of the trustee and of the loan company to have notified the plaintiff, as soon as they were aware of the failure of Eroelich to pa}’- either interest or taxes when the same became due, and if, by reason of this failure to so notify the plaintiff, she refrained from directing the foreclosure of her mortgage, and loss is to result to any party from the failure to so foreclose, the defendants should sustain the loss, and not the plaintiff, to the extent, at least, of the interest and taxes so paid.
It is contended on the part of the defendants that, not having guarantied the notes and mortgage assigned to the plaintiff, they owed her no duty and that they had a right to purchase the land
The appeal of the plaintiff may properly be disposed of in connection with the appeal of the defendants. The plaintiff at the proper time requested the court to change and modify its conclusions of law as follows: (i) By omitting therefrom that part allowing the defendants to deduct the taxes paid subsequent to the commencement
As we have already stated, we are of the opinion that the conclusions of law of the court are correct and, after a careful examination of the requested modifications of these conclusions, we are of the opinion that they were properly denied. The amount paid by the defendants to protect the property from tax sale after this action was commenced, and the plaintiff had full opportunity to ascertain the