81 N.W. 33 | N.D. | 1899
This action was originally instituted in a Justice’s Court of Richland county, in which court the plaintiff secured a judgment. Defendant took an appeal to the District Court, where, upon a retrial upon the same issues and under the same pleadings, the plaintiff was again successful, and secured a verdict for the amount demanded in his complaint, and judgment was ordered and entered therein. A motion for a new trial was made and overruled. The motion was based upon a settled statement of the case, in which is embodied a specification of some thirty-six alleged errors of law occurring at the trial as the grounds of said motion. This appeal is from the order refusing to grant a new trial and from the judgment. In this court counsel for appellant urges but a portion of the alleged errors as grounds for asking that the judgment of the District Court be reversed. These only will be considered.
It is necessary, fibst, to • ascertain what the issues were which were submitted for the determination of the jury, in order to properly consider the errors which are urged as having occurred at the trial of the case. The complaint, in substance, alleges that in the year 1893 the plaintiff was the owner of a certain quarter section of land in Richland county; that he executed a mortgage thereon to one A. C. Waterman, to secure an indebtedness to the latter of $600; that thereafter, to further secure such indebtedness, he executed and delivered to the said Waterman a quitclaim deed to said premises, upon the agreement and understanding that, upon the payment of the debt secured, the land was" to be reconveyed to plaintiff; that the defendant had knowledge and notice of such agreement; that on May 14, 1898, thereafter, the said Waterman executed and delivered a quitclaim deed of said land to one Cox, the defendant’s cashier; that at the time of the conveyance from said Waterman to defendant there was an agreement entered into
Counsel’s first assignment is that the court erred in not sustaining an objection which was made at the opening of the trial, and after the first witness was worn. The objection was as follows: “The defendant objects to the introduction of any evidence in this case, for the reason that the complaint fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.” This objection to the evidence, which was about to be offered in support of the complaint, was wholly insufficient, in that it in no manner directed the attention of the trial court or opposing' counsel to the particular ground of the
At the close of plaintiff’s testimony, defendant asked for a directed verdict, on the ground that the evidence was insufficient to establish a cause of action, which motion pointed out the particulars wherein the evidence was claimed to be insufficient. This was overruled, and is assigned as error. The same motion was made at the close of all of the evidence, and the same ruling made. These rulings were not erroneous. There is substantial evidence upon every point necessary to a recovery by plaintiff.
Counsel for defendant requested the following instruction: “In any event, whether the deeds from Chilson to Waterman, and from Waterman to Cox, were mortgages or not, so long as they were of record as deeds, and not mortgages, and it would require an action in court to declare such deeds mortgages and to permit Chilson to redeem, the making of the deed by Cox to Houston, at Chilson’s request, was a sufficient consideration for the retention of the money involved in this action by the defendant bank.” The refusal to give this instruction was not error. Counsel for defendant correctly states in his brief that “the only question, under the pleadings and under the evidence, is whether the defendant had promised to repay to the plaintiff a certain sum of money.” It must be apparent that, if plaintiff performed the conditions entitling him to a repayment of the $105 and to a conveyance, namely, the payment of the mortgage debt, the execution and delivery of the deed by the bank was merely the performance of its obligation and legal duty to do so, and that the doing of that which it had legally bound itself to do could not furnish a consideration for the exaction of a greater sum of money than theretofore agreed upon. On this, Bishop, in his work on Contracts (section 48), says: “One, by undertaking to do or
Counsel also complains of a long examination of the cashier, Cox, conducted by the trial judge, which had for its purpose the elicitation of the fact that the defendant bank had knowledge and notice of the agreements which existed between Waterman and Chilson when it obtained the quitclaim deed. We find no error in the examination conducted by the court, requiring a review in detail. The evidence elicited was competent, and was relevant to the issues fiiade by the pleadings. A presiding judge may interrogate witnesses for the purpose of developing the true facts in a case, regardless of the effect it may have upon the interests of either party. The questions so propounded should, however, be such as are suggested by the evidence given on the trial. Thomp. Trials, § 355. The examination here in question was, we think, within the above rule.
The charge of the court embodied, at considerable length, an exposition of certain legal principles applicable to a determination of whether a deed in form is so in fact or is in effect a mortgage, with particular reference to the deed given by plaintiff to Waterman. The law relating to notice was also given at length. The giving of these instructions is assigned as error. Counsel does not challenge the correctness of the abstract legal principles announced in the instructions complained of, but urges that they were misleading and prejudicial, in diverting the attention of the jury to questions which were not in issue. This objection is not tenable upon the record, for it appears that a square issue existed, both in the pleadings and in the evidence, as to the nature of the transaction between the plaintiff and Waterman, and as to the extent of defendant’s knowledge thereof, and these precedent facts were material to aid the jury in determining whether the agreement to repay the $105 was or was not made. The remaining assignments are disposed of by those already considered. Finding no error in the record, the judgment of the District Court is affirmed.