145 Minn. 331 | Minn. | 1920
In November, 1917, Herman Jass owned a farm in Wilkin county subject to two mortgages. Jass borrowed $1,500 from defendant bank to take up the second mortgage, and it was used for that purpose. To evidence the loan, he gave the bank his note for the amount, and, to secure it, signed and acknowledged a mortgage upon the land. Jass was married, but his wife was ill in Iowa. It was agreed that she would later call at the bank and execute the mortgage. In the meantime the mortgage was not recorded. In this situation Jass conveyed the land to plaintiff by warranty deed subject only to the “recorded mortgage thereon.” This deed was recorded March 8. On March 14 plaintiff notified defendant Peterson, president of the bank, by telephone, of the conveyance to him. Peterson at once called on both Jass and plaintiff. Jass told him he had told plaintiff about the bank’s mortgage and that ■plaintiff was to take care of it. Plaintiff, on the other hand, insisted that he knew nothing of the mortgage until after he had paid the consideration for the land and recorded his deed. In this situation, Peterson sought the advice of a lawyer, and, on his advice, recorded the bank’s mortgage without the signature of Mrs. Jass.
Shortly thereafter plaintiff negotiated a sale of the land at a profit. The purchaser learned of this mortgage, not from the record, but from plaintiff himself, and refused to close the sale.
Thereupon plaintiff brought this action to recover damages for slander of title. The trial court directed a verdict'for defendants. Plaintiff appeals.
Defendant of course wanted the signature of Mm Jass in order that her interest might be bound, and was trustfully holding it for that purpose. While so doing, a palpable fraud was perpetrated upon defendant by some one. Its president knew that either plaintiff or Jass had-perpetrated the fraud. Each claimed the other to be guilty. It had a bona fide lien supported by a bona fide consideration, admittedly unpaid, and still of force, unless defeated by the prior record of plaintiff’s. deed. It stood in danger of losing its security, if it had not already done so. If defendant had lost the lien of its mortgage, then the question whether the recording of it was a wrong, depended on the question whether the act was done in good faith. Odgers, Libel and Slander, pp. 80, 84, 87; Harriss v. Sneeden, 101 N. C. 273, 7 S. E. 801. We find no evidence of bad faith. We think defendant was within its rights in acting on the assurance of Jass that plaintiff had notice of its mortgage. Good faith did not require that it determine the question of veracity between Jass and plaintiff or act at its peril. We think defendant’s president acted as the average man of sound business morals would or might have acted under the same circumstances and that his conduct did not render defendant liable.
Order affirmed.