114 Neb. 636 | Neb. | 1926
Mrs. Annie W. Magill, plaintiff, is the mother of Alva B. Magill, defendant. Lavia B. Magill, is Alva’s wife. Alva and Lavia Magill are the sole defendants. This is a foreclosure suit commenced in the district court for Buffalo county by Mrs Annie W. Magill to recover on a certain 6 per cent, interest bearing promissory note, executed by Alva and Lavia Magill in the principal sum of $4,630, dated March 1, 1921, payable March 1, 1924, to plaintiff’s order, and secured by a mortgage on a quarter section of land in Buffalo county, which is dated and acknowledged April 28, 1921, being about two months after the date of the note. The above mortgage is subject to a prior first mortgage on the same land in the principal sum of $9,000. The owners of the $9,000 mortgage, however, are not parties to this suit. The following instrument, dated April 28, 1921,
“Kearney, Nebraska, April 28, 1921.
“Received of A. B. Magill, a note made in his favor for fifty-eight hundred dollars ($5,800), secured by a mortgage on one-hundred sixty acres of land in Lincoln county, Nebraska, which I am holding as collateral to a note of A. B. Magill and wife for four-thousand six-hundred thirty dollars ($4,630), secured by a second mortgage on the northwest quarter (N. W. *4) of section thirty-two (32) township nine (9) north, range fourteen (14) west, in Buffalo county, Nebraska, which is to be returned to A. B. Magill when his note is paid in full.
“Anna W. Magill.”
In respect of the $5,800 note and mortgage, referred to by some of the witnesses as “the western mortgage,” and also referred to in the last above-described instrument, the court held:
“That the instrument set forth in paragraph 5 of defendants’ second amended answer, dated April 28, 1921, and purporting to have been signed by Anna W. Magill, and purporting to state that a certain note made in favor of the defendant Alva B. Magill, for $5,800, secured by a mortgage on 160 acres of land in Lincoln county, Nebraska, was held by plaintiff as collateral security to the note and mortgage set forth in plaintiff’s petition, was not signed by the plaintiff with the knowledge and understanding that said instrument was a statement that said $5,800 note and mortgage was held by her as collateral security for the note and mortgage set forth in plaintiff’s petition, and the court finds that said $5,800 note and mortgage on the land in Lincoln county, Nebraska, is the absolute property of the plaintiff and is not held by the plaintiff as collateral security to the note and mortgage set forth in plaintiff’s petition.”
When the evidence was finally submitted, the court rendered a judgment of foreclosure and found and decreed that $5,301.50 was due plaintiff on the $4,630 rote and mort
The main dispute in the present case is in respect of the $5,800 note and mortgage and certain interest which -had accrued thereon. • Alva. Magill denied that he ever, at any time, delivered the $5,800 note- and mortgage to his mother other than as security for the $4,630 loan which she made to him. Defendants alleged that the “note of $4,630 represented all of the indebtedness which was owing to the plaintiff,” and that plaintiff agreed to return the $5,800 note to defendant as soon as .his note for $4,630 was paid; that plaintiff represented to her son, Alva, that she was being taxed on the $4,630 note, and that in order to avoid such payment of taxes defendant complied with her request to execute the mortgage sued on, upon her agreement that the $5,800 note and mortgage should be returned when he paid the $4,630 note.
Mrs. Beulah Ross is a daughter of plaintiff. She was eleven.-in 1901 and lived at home from thence until 1910 when Alva married. It was during the period between 1901 and 1910 that Beulah’s brother, Alva, claimed that he sent large sums of money to his parents which aggregated $5,000 or $6,000. She testified that Alva worked in a brickyard two years before he was married and paid $2 a week for his board and room; that her father never borrowed any money from him, but that at one time Alva sent $90 home for her father at a time when he could do no work on account of a broken arm after they moved to town in 1902. . Oh the cross-examination the witness testified: “Q. Now, so you think Alva didn’t contribute anything to your father.and mother at all during those years? A.. I do not. • Q. And you- are just telling from what you saw yours,elf; you don’t know anything aside, from any evidence of any
. A Kearney banker testified that plaintiff and defendant came to the bank and there made a settlement of the accounts between them; that from their talk he understood that Alva Magill was indebted to his mother in a sum approximating $10,000, and that she wanted him, the witness, to deduct the value of the $5,800 note and mortgage from the $10,000 which Alva owed her, and make out a note for the remainder of his indebtedness to her, includ ing accrued interest; that this brought the amount up to $4,630 which is the face of the note sued on. When asked if there was anything said by Alva or his mother to indicate that the $5,800 note was collateral to the $4,630 note, he answered: “I didn’t understand it that way;” that Alva did not at that time or at any other time claim that his mother owed him anything. On the cross-examination this banker testified: “I couldn’t say that Alva mentioned definitely about the $5,800 any more than he consented that the $4,630 was the difference -between the value of the $5,800 and the $10,000;” that Mrs. Annie Magill complained about having to pay taxes on the $4,630 note, and that he, the witness, suggested “that the real estate mortgage with the proper clause in it” would obviate the objectionable taxation feature of which Alva’s mother complained, and that this “led up to the making of the mortgage.” He further testified that Alva, in speaking of the
The following stipulation appears in the record:
“It is stipulated by and between the plaintiff and the defendants that the Central National Bank has collected for Anna W. Magill interest on the $5,800 note and mortgage referred to in the evidence for three successive years, 1921, 1922, and 1923, on or about March 1st each' year, in the sum of $348 each time, and that said bank has credited the account of Anna W. Magill with these amounts in said bank and that she has received the benefit of the credit.”
The record shows that Alva’s mother is 65 years of age. That she was unacquainted with business usage and business custom is apparent from all of her evidence. But 'in the main her evidence was corroborated by that of her daughter, Beulah Ross, and of the Kearney banker, both of whom were called in her behalf, and by at least one other witness. Plaintiff testified that she never borrowed any money from her son, but she added that he sent $90 home when his father broke his arm, and that this sum was all paid back to him. From her evidence it appears that Alva borrowed $10,000 from her while the parents lived on a farm and that with this he did “some building and he got a threshing machine,” an irrigating pump and some live stock. She produced a check for $4,000 and one for $6,000 payable to Alva, and his indorsement appears thereon. Defendant claimed, however, that the $4,000 check was not a loan from his mother, but was in payment of money he loaned her from time to time and for which he said she gave him three’promissory notes in the aggregate sum of $6,000 or about that sum. He claimed to have made a final settlement with his mother in 1920, about a year before he executed the $4,630 note in her favor. The evidence conflicts on this as on every material point at issue. True, the case was tried as one in equity, and under the law it is our duty to try the issues here de novo. Comp. St. 1922, sec. 9150. The rule to which we are committed follows
We conclude that the weight of the evidence is on the side of plaintiff. IH follows that the judgment of the district court must be and it hereby is in all things
Affirmed.