81 N.W. 77 | N.D. | 1899
This is an action on the equity side of the court, in which plaintiff asks that the defendant be required to execute and deliver to her a deed of conveyance of certain lands situated in Traill county. She also asks a money judgment for the value of their use for the year 1898. A trial was had in the District Court, under section 5630 of the Revised Codes as amended by chapter 5 of the Laws of 1897, in which the plaintiff was successful. Defendant brings the case here for a trial anew.
It will be necessary, to an intelligent understanding, to- state a few facts, some, of which are prior and others subsequent to the date of the particular transaction which furnishes the basis of the present action. On April 13, 1891, one A. L. Plummer was the owner of the tract of land here involved. On that day he made a written contract for the sale of the same to Mrs. A. E. Kellv, the defendant. LTnder its terms, she was to pay the purchase price by applying one-half of the crops grown thereon each year. It appears that she had complied with the -conditions of the contract, and was not in default in the spring of 1895, when the transaction with Mrs. Erickson too place. Plummer, however, had assumed that the contract was forfeited, and. during a portion of the year 1894, and in the spring of 1895, was attempting to get and keep possession of the land. Mrs. Kelly was at this time living in Minneapolis. Her husband, Thomas Kelly, was in Traill county, looking after her interests, and it appears that at all times prior thereto he had acted for her in a general way, either in farming the land or in procuring a tenant to work it. When Plummer attempted to retake the land,
In this there is an evident error as to the nature of the instrument upon which they rely; for a reference to the contract will show that it is not an agreement to sell, and contains no executory obligations resting' upon either party, but, on the contrary, purports to represent an absolute transfer of the Plummer contract immediately and without conditions. It is patent, if this assignment was executed and delivered by the defendant to the plaintiff as alleged, that subsequent to April 11, 1895, the date of the alleged delivery, the defendant was devested of all interest in the sale contract, and that the plaintiff on that date became the owner of, and succeeded to all of, the interests and rights which the defendant had therein on that date. While it is true this written assignment contains no promise which will furnish a basis for a decree for its specific performance, yet it is manifest that a court of equity, having assumed jurisdiction, may lay hold of the title in Mrs. Kelly’s hands, and delclare its nature, and at the same time adjust the rights of the litigants, and also direct a conveyance to the plaintiff, if that were necessary, if it satisfactorily appeared that the defendant had in fact acquired the title in violation of an assignment of her interest and right to acquire the same. Defendant’s answer admits that the assignment was signed by her, but places its delivery in issue. Plaintiff’s right to any relief depends upon whether or not the Plummer contract was assigned to her, and the answer to that question is dependent upon another, namely, was the written assignment delivered so as to become operative? for it is elementary that a written contract does not become binding until it is delivered.
At the close of respondent’s brief it is urged that this court is without jurisdiction to try the case anew, for the reason that the certificate of the trial judge attached to the statement of the case does not state that it “contains all of the evidence offered at the trial in the District Court.” The objection is not well taken; neither is counsel’s position sustained by the decisions of this court cited in its support. In First Nat. Bank v. Merchants’ Nat. Bank, 5 N. D. 161, 64 N. W. Rep. 941, the certificate' did not show that the statement contained all of the evidence offered, but merely that it contained all of the testimony “taken” at the trial. In Bank v. Davis, 8 N. D. 83, 76 N. W. Rep. 998, the certificate of the trial judge contained no' reference whatever to ,the evidence, and the stipulation of counsel upon which it was based made it appearent that all of the evidence offered was not in fact in the record. In Edmonson v. White, 8 N. D. 72, 76 N. W. Rep. 986, the certificate was that the statement contained all the evidence “considered” by the trial court, and it also appeared affirmatively in the record that it did not contain all of the evidence offered. The language used in the certificates in the cases cited was insufficient, because it showed affirmatively that the evidence embodied in the record was only such as the trial court had considered and acted upon, and was not all the 'evidence offered.. In the case at bar the certificate attached to the statement of the case states that it “contains all of the evidence introduced.” In the absence of anything in the record to