110 N.W. 770 | N.D. | 1906
This is a suit in equity whereby the plaintiff seeks to have the defendant declared to be a trustee ex maleficio of the title of a quarter section of land in Nelson county, and to compel the defendant to convey the legal or record title to plaintiff, who claims to be equitably entitled thereto. The answer is a general denial. The issues were tried without a jury and resulted in a judgment for defendant, from which judgment the plaintiff appeals, demanding a retrial of all the issues.
On July 5, 1884, Chester Cranmer was the owner in fee of the southwest quarter of section 15, township 153, range 59, in Nelson county. On that day he borrowed from Anna Hoagland $450, secured by a first mortgage on said land. The debt was evidenced by a promissory note due November 1, 1889, with coupons attached representing the interest to be paid for the loan. By a mistake of the scrivener the mortgage described the land as being in range 58. This loan was procured through the plaintiff, E. P. Gates, who was then a banker and real estate loan broker in Grand Forks. A second mortgage was at the same time given by Cranmer to Mr. Gates to secure the latter’s conimissions on the loan. The commissions aggregated $96, payable in annual installments, being the equivalent of 4 per cent annual interest. The loan was evidently made at the rate of 12 per cent per annum; the broker reserving one-third of the annual interest as his commission. This second mortgage described the land correctly, and it is expressly stipulated therein that it is subject to the mortgage to Anna Hoagland. Both mortgages contained the usual power of sale in case of default. Cranmer abandoned the land in 1885, and has never since paid any taxes thereon or any of the interest or principal
On January 14, 1902, plaintiff wrote to defendant, inclosing his second mortgage against Cranmer, and also another mortgage upon another tract of land. Pie íequested Mr. Kelley to proceed to foreclose both mortgages at once on the terms proposed in the letter, if they were acceptable. A check for $50 was inclosed to apply on the fees. He also requested Mr. Kelley to notify him by telegraph if he would do the work, as.’he (Gates) intended to start on a journey to' California on the morning of January 16th, This letter in the usual course of mail reached Lakota on Wednesday, January 15th, the day after it was mailed, but the defendant asserts that, owing to his absence from Lakota, he did not actually receive it until the afternoon of Thursday, the 16th, too late to comply with Mr. Gates’ request for a telegraphic reply. In answer to Mr. Gates’ letter the defendant wrote the following letter:
Lakota, Jany. 17th, 1902.
“E. P. Gates, Esq., Los Angeles, Cal. — Dear Sir: Your favor of recent date, enclosing mortgages. Cranmer to Gates and Flatin to*642 Gates, at hand, together with draft for $50.00 arrived during niv absence, and was therefore unable to wire you as requested. I am sorry to say that I cannot represent you in the Cranmer case, as I am interested adversely, and I return herewith the papers in that case, together with chk for $25.00. I am willing to foreclose the other one, however, upon the terms named. If, however, you do not wish to separate the foreclosure, wire me upon receipt of this letter at my expenses, and I will return the papers in that case, together with the balance of the money. I regret that my absence has delayed this matter.
Very truly yours, Fred A. Kelly.
“Under a recent statute in tins state no mortgages over ten years past due can be foreclosed by advertisement so that the Cranmer mortgage will have to be foreclosed by action and may be subject to the defense of the statute of limitations.”
It is admited that this letter, although dated Jauary 17, 1902, was not mailed until January 18th. We shall have occasion to refer to this circumstance later. Immediately after the receipt of the Gates letter, and before the answer thereto was mailed, the defendant went by train to Willow City, in this state, near which place the mortgagor, Cranmer, lived, and obtained from him a quitclaim deed of the land in question, naming said defendant as grantee and reciting a consideration of $500. It is admitted that the actual sum paid by defendant for this deed was $75. The deed is dated and acknowledged January 18, 1902. Defendant returned to Lakota imediately after obtaining the deed and mailed the above letter to Gates, and on January 20, 1902, recorded the deed from Cranmer to himself. The following spring he took possession of the farm and has held possession since, claiming title under said deed. We will add that Gates, after receiving the answer to his letter transmitting the Cranmer papers, declined Mr. Kelley’s services in the foreclosure of the other mortgage, and the papers relating thereto and the remaining $25 were returned to him by defendant. Such, in brief, are the undisputed facts out of which this controversy arises. u
Plaintiff alleges and claims that the evidence proves (1) that the relation of attorney and client existed between defendant and plaintiff when the deed was obtained by Kelley, and' that the transaction was a betrayal by the latter of his trust; (2) that Kelley secured the deed to himself by inducing Cranmer to believe that
There were no witnesses present at the interview between Cranmer and Kelly at Willow City, which resulted in the execution of the deed. The decision of the case hinges altogether upon what was really said and done at this interview, and upon the circumstances which brought it about. Cranmer and Kelly, who alone know the facts, give wholly different versions of the transaction, and their testimony cannot be reconciled or the variance accounted for on the theory that one of them was mistaken. It is a question of veracity between these two men. At the time Cranmer occupied the premises in dispute Kelly was occupying a nearby farm, which he still owns, and they were then well acquainted and on friendly terms. Cranmer is single, and since leaving said farm has lived in McHenr}' and Bottineau counties, except about two years that he was in Montana. At one time he owned a quarter section of land in McHenry county which he sold and deeded in 1886 to one Crane, but the deed contained a defective description. In August, 1900, Kelly met Cranmer by appointment at Rugby and procured from him a quitclaim deed to Crane to correct the defect in the old deed, paying him therefor $25. We mention these facts because they play an important part in the consideration of what actually transpired at the subsequent transaction now in question.
Cranmer’s testimony was taken by deposition. He testified that Kelley came to Willow City in January, 1902, where the witness met him at the depot as he was getting off the train; that he had no recollection of any previous appointment to meet Kelley, but was hauling wood to town at that time, and happened to be in town with a load when Kelley arrived. What then transpired is narrated by the witness as follows: “He [Kelley] said that, when he came to me, he was like a little fairy — he always brought good tidings —that there was an error in my name, and the man that owned the land had employed him to straighten it up, and he would give me $50 to sign a quitclaim deed. It would cost that to put it through the courts. He didn’t need none of my help; that he [his
Mr. Kelley testified at the trial, and his version of the transaction is as follows: At the time of the Crane transaction at Rugby in August, 1900, Cranmer inquired of Kelley what had become of the Nelson county land and requested Kelley to look it up, suggesting that there might be some chance of getting something out of it. Kelley agreed to do so, but neglected it for some time. He finally examined the records and discovered that by reason of the misdescription in the mortgage Cranmer’s title had not been divested by the foreclosure. There was also a tax deed to plaintiff which witness says he found to be wholly void. Just when this examination of the record was made does not appear. He says he did not at once communicate the results of his examination to Cranmer, because Cranmer was of a roving disposition, and it was uncertain where he could be found; that Cranmer was an ignorant
But to return to defendant’s testimony. On his arrival at Willow City he was informed that Cranmer lived a few miles from town, and he hired a team and driver from a livery barn and directed the driver to find Mr. Cranmer and bring him to town. Next morning, January 18th, Kelley found Cranmer at the hotel and obtained the deed under the following circumstances: He explained fully and in detail the condition in which he found the title; that the foreclosure was void; that the tax deed was not “worth the paper it was written on;” that the mortgages were outlawed, and the land worth from $2,500 to $3,000. He urged Cranmer to institute proceedings to recover the land; and, when the latter said he had no money to litigate with, Kelley stated that it would not require 'much money, and offered “to take it up with him and speculate,” as the land was valuable and he thought the title was good. Cran
For the purpose of corroborating Kelley and discrediting Cranmer, one Lee Keller was produced as a witness. He was working in the livery stable at Willow City in January, 1902, and swears that he was the driver of. the team which Kelley says he dispatched in search of Cranmer. He testifies that Kelley handed him a letter to Cranmer, and told him to drive until he found him and to bring him to Willow City. Keller swears that he did not find Cranmer at home, but finally found him after midnight some distance away; that he gave Cranmer Kelley’s message and induced him to dress and accompany the witness to town, where they arrived about 3 o’clock in the morning of January 18th; that Cranmer went to bed in the hotel. In corroboration of this story, the book kept at the livery stable was produced, and he identified a certain entry therein, which he asserts refers to the trip made -for Kelley. The book was one ruled and spaced especially for the
We shall not further prolong this analysis of the evidence. Suffice it to say that Cranmer has apparently no motive to falsify, and his testimony is probable and consisitent and bears the impress of truth. We regret to say that the contrary is true of the defendant’s evidence. We find that Kelley induced Cranmer to execute the deed by representing himself to be acting in behalf of the claimant under the mortgage, and that Cranmer made the conveyance with the intent that it should operate to remedy a defect in the title claimed under the foreclosure. The grantee of a title so acquired will not be permitted to reap the fruits of his wrongdoing; but will be deemed in equity a trustee of the legal title for the benefit of the person in whose favor it was intended by the grantor that the deed should operate. It is not essential to the application of 'this rule that the grantee should have violated any trust or confidence reposed in him by the person for whom the deed was in
The plaintiff has tendered and still offers to pay the money expended by defendant in obtaining the deed and also compensation for his services in doing so. The defendant has not chosen to show what his expenses were or the value of his services, and it may be questionable if he is entitled to such compensation under the circumstances of this case.
The judgment is reversed, and a judgment will be entered to the effect that the legal title acquired through the deed in question is held in trust by defendant for the use of plaintiff, and that the latter is, and since the delivery of said deed has been, the owner of the land in fee simple, and entitled to the possession, rents and profits thereof, and entitled to a conveyance of the legal title from the defendant, the judgment to have the effect of such conveyance. As the costs taxable in plaintiff’s favor will necessarily exceed the sum of $75, the amount paid by Kelley for the deed, that sum may be deducted from plaintiff’s costs and disbursements to be included in the judgment.