144 Iowa 220 | Iowa | 1909
On December 21, 1881, plaintiff conveyed the premises in controversy, consisting of eighty acres
In the first place, it is said that plaintiff’s claim amounts to a trust which cannot be established by parol, and that, if there ever -was a written agreement, which is denied, it was not binding upon the deceased grantee, Nancy Faris. Other points made for defendants are: (a) That they held title by adverse possession; (b) that plaintiff’s action is barred by the statute of limitations; and (c) that plaintiff is estopped, by his laches and by his conduct, from asserting any title to the land. Plaintiff does not bring this action on the theory that he had a contract for the repurchase of the land from Joshua and his wife, and that he has paid or offered to pay the purchase price. His claim is that the deed to Nancy Faris was, in fact, a mortgage, that she paid nothing for the property, and that the deed was made as security for obligations entered into by her and her husband in order to obtain the money wherewith they should secure title to the land which was then owned by plaintiff— although title stood in the name of another and the land was so heavily incumbered that plaintiff could not redeem it.
We are satisfied, from a perusal of the record, that the land was conveyed to Mrs. Faris without any consideration passing from her to plaintiff; that whatever she or her husband advanced to clear the title was secured by a mortgage upon the land, and that, aside from what they expended in
"Whilst we are satisfied that there was a written contract made, as claimed by plaintiff, there is nothing to show when, by the terms of that contract, plaintiff was to redeem the land. Surely this right would not exist forever. As no time was fixed, the law says it should be a reasonable time, and this reasonable time is ordinarily a question of fact to be determined from all the circumstances. In no event should it, in our opinion, run beyond the period of the statute of limitations; that is to say, in the absence of a provision in the contract fixing the time, the action to redeem should be commenced within ten years from the date of the making of the contract. Nash v. Land Co., 15 N. D. 566 (108 N. W. 792); Thomas v. Brewer, supra; Smith v. Foster, 44 Iowa, 442; Albee v. Curtis, 77 Iowa, 644; Crawford v. Taylor, 42 Iowa, 260. The right to foreclose and the right to redeem must of necessity be reciprocal, and, where the one is barred, the other must also be. There may, of course, be exceptions to this rule, but they are not present in the instant case; Plaintiff’s action here is to redeem, and nothing else. If this be not the situation, he is out of court, for he has not shown himself entitled to the specific 'performance of a contract to reconvey. The receipt of the rents
Following these rules, it is quite clear to our minds that plaintiff’s action is barred, and for this reason the decree must be, and it is, affirmed.