156 Minn. 193 | Minn. | 1923
Action to foreclose a mortgage. There were findings for the plaintiff. The defendants appeal from the order denying their motion for a new trial.
In 1916 the defendant Albert Woolery, a brother of the defendant Boy Woolery, was the owner of 240 acres of land in Faribault county. A quarter section of it was subject to an annuity of
The plaintiff claims that the deed to Roy 'was a mortgage. The court found that it was.
In- July, 1917, Roy received a letter, now lost, from Albert. Testifying for himself, Roy reproduces it as follows:
“This letter was written on a common piece of paper with a lead pencil and it had nothing but just the one particular thing in that Albert refers to and he says this way, he says, ‘Roy, I wish you would take that land down there and pay up what I owe. If there should be anything left, give it to my Mds.’ There was nothing else mentioned in the letter. It was addressed with a pencil, a lead pencil.”
In October, 1917, Roy went to North Dakota taking with him, prepared for execution, the deed here in controversy which Albert executed when he was there. He and Albert went over the situation thorougMy. As we get it from their talk, it looked gloomy. There were encumbrances, and Albert had a floating debt. He could not work the farm. It was anticipated that he might not live long. Roy says he told him “I thought the better way would be if he would deed the land to me; that on account of my mother I would be willing to shoulder this load or use the credit that I had built up from year to year.” This was after the brothers had considered together the situation of the Minnesota land. Continuing Roy testified:
Q. “What did he say about deeding it to you, and you carrying the loan?
A. “He says, ‘I told you when I wrote you I wanted to do that.’ And he says, ‘All winter I was unable to get out of my bed. They had to feed me.’ And he says, ‘If I have another bad spell this
Q. “Well, now state whether or not he told you he would deed it.
A. “He said that was what he wanted to do and that was what he would do.
Q. “Well, now, was the land ever to be deeded back to him?
A. “No, he never asked me to redeed it to him.
Q. “Was it ever to be redeeded back to anybody?
A. “ ‘At the death of my mother/ he says, ‘if there is anything left, give it to my children.’ He says, ‘I got a better thing right here in this butcher shop than on that farm.’ And he says, ‘I can handle this shop and I could not go out and work that farm if I had to.’ ”
There is evidence of admissions made by Roy from time to time that the land belonged to Albert, or that he was holding it for him. There is evidence that Roy said to one witness that “Albert really owned the land, that it stood in his [Roy’s] name, that he had made a will protecting Albert in case of his death;” and to another that while the land “was in his name, it really belonged to Albert. * * * and that he had protected Albert in his will.” Roy was successful in his farming operations and is apparently a man of force. It is an outstanding fact in the record that he had no thought of taking advantage of his brother, or making a profit from the transaction. He wanted to help, not hurt him, and was desirous that the land charged with an annuity in favor of his mother should not pass from the family. There was a substantial equity in the land, even before the advance in prices which soon followed. The deed recited a consideration of one dollar and other valid considerations. It was contemplated that Roy would take care of Albert’s debts. Among these was a judgment for $400 or $500, known as the Barnes judgment, upon which an execution had been issued and a sale made to Roy on June 2, 1917. Roy did not purchase at the execution sale in order to get title away from Albert; and under the arrangement with Albert, made before the time of redemption expired, it is to be considered as a debt secured by the
An attentive consideration of the evidence satisfies us that the trial court’s finding of a mortgage relationship between the brothers is satisfactorily sustained. In reaching this result we have in mind that the evidence should be clear, strong and convincing. Young v. Baker, 128 Minn. 898, 151 N. W. 132. Upon the evidence it is a necessary holding that the deed was not in fact absolute. Roy was not to make a profitable bargain. The transaction was well found to constitute a mortgage.
The defendants invoke the rule that in a foreclosure of a mortgage the mortgagee cannot litigate an adverse title 'paramount to the title of the mortgagor. This is the well understood general rule. Dickerman Inv. Co. v. Oliver Iron Min. Co. 135 Minn. 254, 160 N. W. 776, and cases cited. The rule was early announced in Banning v. Bradford, 21 Minn. 308, 18 Am. Rep. 398. In Churchill v. Proctor, 31 Minn. 129, 16 N. W. 694, the court, referring to the Banning case, said the rule was not offended by joining in the foreclosure of a leasehold the owners of the fee who fraudulently conspired with the mortgagor and forfeited the leasehold for the nonpayment of rent; and that in such action relief might be had against the fraudulent forfeiture. And in Foster v. Johnson, 44 Minn. 290, 292, 46 N. W. 350, the court commenting on the rule said:
“Strictly, a prior mortgagee is not a proper party to an action by a junior mortgagee to foreclose his mortgage, because the proper object of the action is to bar the equities of the mortgagor and rights accruing subsequent to the mortgage. * * * But prior lienors may consent to become parties to such an action, or may be made such, where the object is to ascertain the extent of their claims, and to have the premises sold subject thereto, or absolutely to create a fund out of which the several encumbrances shall be paid in their order; but such purpose or object should clearly appear from the complaint.”
In the complaint the theory of fraud was advanced. It was alleged that the conveyance from Albert to Roy was under a secret trust of which Albert was the beneficiary, and that Albert was the actual and true owner. The trial court, upon consideration of the evidence, was of the view that the conveyance was not fraudulent, but that the relationship between Albert and Roy was that of mortgagor and mortgagee. Thereafter the plaintiff was permitted to amend its complaint by alleging that the conveyance from Albert to Roy was not absolute but “was for the purpose of securing Roy for any money he might invest in paying Albert’s debts.” Findings were afterwards made. The difference between proof showing a conveyance on a secret trust for the benefit of Albert, with an attendant agreement to satisfy his debts and hold the property for him, and proof showing a conveyance to be a mortgage, is not great. In no event were the parties misled,- and, conceding the necessity of an amendment, there was no error in permitting one. Anderson v. Minneapolis, St. P. & S. S. M. Ry. Co. 146 Minn. 430, 179 N. W. 45; Radke v. Radke, 155 Minn. 333, 193 N. W. 461.
The court found that Roy refunded some of his brother’s debts by making new mortgages, that he paid some, that he received the proceeds of the farm, that all the advances which he made were repaid, and that he held the naked legal title. The evidence sustains the findings. This does not mean that the proceeds of the farm have paid the mortgages and Albert’s floating debts, though some of the years when Roy operated it were prosperous ones and yielded profits. When Albert went to North Dakota there were mortgages aggregating $9,500 on the farm. Roy gave a mortgage for $6,500, taking up two of the mortgages. He gave another mortgage for $2,600. A mortgage of $8,000 existing at the time Albert went to North Dakota still remains. Roy gave his brother a mortgage for $2,628.37. It is not clear just what amount this mortgage secures. Altogether there appear of record between $14,-
Counsel for the defendants urge that there is now no equitable mortgage in Minnesota under a deed absolute in form because the statute provides that no instrument relating to real estate shall be valid as security “unless the fact that it is so intended and the amount of such debt are expressed therein.” G-. S. 1913, § 2301. The statute of which the quotation is a part is a revenue measure. It was not intended to have the far reaching effect claimed. In Engenmoen v. Lutroe, 153 Minn. 409, 190 N. W. 894, the point here made was substantially decided adversely to the contention of the defendants, or at least such a holding was forecast. We hold, in view of that case, and the general object of the revenue statute, that the omission to state that the instrument was intended as security and the amount of the debt secured does not prevent an absolute deed from being a mortgage in equity.
Upon the going down of the remittitur the defendants may apply within 20 days for an opportunity to present additional evidence as to the status of the account between Roy and Albert and whether Roy has now any lien by way of mortgage under the deed. If this request is made, with an assurance that such evidence is at hand, the court will doubtless be as free in granting the opportunity as it was in offering it before. It seems that the parties, if not satisfied with the finding, should be able to get together upon the condition of the account without much trouble. We gather that all the evidence procurable as to the nature of the deed from Albert to Roy was produced. It was exhaustive. If the defendants think otherwise, and make a substantial showing to the trial court, it still will be within its discretion to hear it.
Order affirmed.