86 N.W. 714 | N.D. | 1901
The principal issue in this case is raised by the allegations of the complaint, stated substantially as follows: That the plaintiffs, husband and wife, made and delivered to LaMoure & Lee, defendants, on March 7, 1894, a warranty deed of two quarter sections of land -in Pembina county, one of such quarters owned by the wife, and the other the homestead of the plaintiffs. That such warranty deed was thus delivered to said defendants as security for certain debts due said defendants and as security for debts due to others, which debts were to be assumed and paid by defendants ; which was not intended or understood by the parties thereto to be given as an absolute deed. The complaint demands that such deed be declared a mortgage upon payment of all sums intended to be secured thereby. An accounting is demanded, and other relief, not necessary to mention here. The answer denies that such deed was intended to be given as security, and alleges that it was given, and understood to be given, as an absolute deed. The trial
The evidence given on the trial is quite voluminous, but the following summary of it will suffice to give a correct understanding of the facts out of which this litigation has grown: Henry McGuin, one of the plaintiffs, and Judson LaMoure had business dealings from about 1883 up to date of the giving of this deed, on March 7, 1894, and during all this time McGuin was LaMoure’s debtor. About this latter date Mr. McGuin was deeply involved in debt. On the lands in suit taxes were due and unpaid to the amount of $127.13. There were mortgage liens on the lands, amounting, with accrued interest, to $2,342.60. One of these mortgages, amounting, with interest, to $749.00, was being foreclosed. On these lands Mr. LaMoure held a second mortgage, originally given in 1890, amounting, with interest to March, 1894, to $1,151.60, which mortgage is. included in the total of mortgages given above. Mr. McGuin also owed Mr. LaMoure and LaMoure & Lee unsecured debts amounting, with interest, to $289.82. He also owed Randall & Norton between $700 and $800, secured by chattel mortgage. In the winter of 1894 the $660 mortgage, amounting to $749, was about to be foreclosed. McGuin was anxious, to avoid this foreclosure, and so was Mr. LaMoure, as such foreclosure would cut off his second mortgage, or make it necessary for him to redeem. He desired to avoid paying the costs of foreclosure of the $660 mortgage. So Mr. McGuin and Mr. LaMoure met, and talked over the situation. Mr. McGuin testifies as to this meeting as follows: “My first conversation was with Mr. LaMoure in the store at Neche, I think. I told him that Mr. Norton had made a proposition to me to pay my debts, and take a deed, and take half of the crop until it was paid,— until I paid off the debt, with 12 per cent interest. LaMoure said he would take it that way. I think that day and the day we made arrangements was the only time that I talked with Mr. LaMoure about the matter.” As to what was said in the store on the day the deed was agreed upon, he said: “Why, Mr. LaMoure was to pay off what was against the places, and taxes, and he was to have a deed of the places, and I was to give him half of the crops. He was to have 12 per cent interest on his money. There was no conversation or agreement between us by which I was absolutely to convey either of these two quarter sections of land to Mr. Lee, or to Mr. LaMoure, or to LaMoure & Lee. They was to pay the taxes and everything, and he would keep the places for security until it would be paid.” As to this meeting Mr. LaMoure testifies: “The result of the talk was that I agreed to take the places,- and pay the indebtedness against-the land; everything that was against the land I would pay, and did. The accounts of LaMoure & Co. against him were to be included in the whole business. Made a rough estimate of it here together, and I concluded it amounted to about $2,800; and I told him that was more than the land was worth; but I says, T can’t afford to lose the $1,000 or $1,200.’ After we got through talking, I went up with Mr. McGuin into the
The character of these two instruments, the deed and the lease, must be fixed by their own terms, considered in connection with the oral agreements, circumstances, and conduct of the parties at the time they were executed. What transpired prior to March 2d, or subsequent to the execution of these instruments, is to be weighed and considered for the purpose of aiding the court in ascertaining what the real intention of the parties was when these papers were executed. On March 2, 1894, we find Mr. McGuin in this condition : He was hopelessly in debt. His farms were heavily incumbered. One mortgage past due, on which foreclosure had been commenced. The other mortgages would be due in the coming fall. For two years his taxes had not been paid. Randall & Norton were pressing him. It does not appear, nor is it probable, that he could then procure a loan large enough to take up these pressing liens. From the outlook in March, 1894, it did not seem probable that he could secure the benefit of the crop of 1894, even if he could procure the seed in order to attempt to raise a crop. The defendants LaMoure & Lee offered him an opportunity by which he could receive the benefit of the crop of 1894 under a fair and reasonable arrangement' by which he realized about $500 for his work during that season. By this arrangement LaMoure & Lee did not secure anything much better or different than they could have secured by other means. They had a second mortgage, and could have redeemed from the foreclosure of the prior mortgages, or procured assignments of them. By paying $1,318.13, practically in cash, they probably saved the $289.82, the unsecured indebtedness. We-think the evidence of Henry McGuin is almost conclusively rebutted by that of LaMoure & Lee. The effort to weaken their testimony by showing that they have made statements inconsistent with the idea that there was a sale has failed. The defendants deny having made
Appellants claim that, as to Mrs. McGuin, the deed must be held to be a mortgage, because the land in section 1 was her individual property, and that she never assented to- the deed or lease. She did hold the title to this land in her name. It was given to her by her husband in 1884, “so that, if anything happened to him, she could have a place of her own.” She never paid anything for it. Since that time the proceeds of this land have been used, just the same as the proceeds of the homestead have been used, for their mutual interests as husband and wife. But under the evidence we do not think it makes any difference in this case whether she knew of the lease, or authorized it, or assented to it or not. Nothing was ever said between Mrs. McGuin and these defendants as to either of these instruments, or any business relations between them and her husband leading up to the deed. She testifies that she signed this deed “to secure Mr. LaMoure.” She doe's not state that she so stated to any one at the time of signing. That she signed to secure Mr. LaMoure is her present statement, that such was her intention then. She was asked what her husband told her when he talked with her about these matters? She says, “He told me he was going to have Jud fix it up,” and she says he explained that “we will be so paying the debt by one-half crop payment.” This was all that her husband said to her as to signing this deed. There is no evidence in the record tending to show that the defendants were ever informed, or had notice of any' sort, that any such conversation had ever passed between her and her husband. It does not appear when her husband told her this, — whether before the conversation with Mr. LaMLoure, or whether after such conversation, and before she signed the deed. She delivered the deed to the notary, who'delivered it to Mr. Lee. She delivered it unconditionally after acknowledging it and informing the notary that she understood the nature of it. It is too late for her now to say thaf she signed the deed as security after delivering it under circumstances that led the defendants, LaMoure & Co. and others, to rely upon it as an absolute deed. She has failed to show by satisfactory and convincing evidence that she signed the deed as security. In view of all the evidence in the case, we think the contrary is shown. Having reached the conclusion that she signed and delivered the deed unconditionally, it is unnecessary for us to consider or discuss the question raised by counsel that her husband was not her authorized agent to execute the 1894 lease. We observe, in passing that the evidence strongly tends to negative the claim of counsel that she never knew of the leases or assented to them. In the first place, she does not testify that she did not know of them. For nearly five years the leases were in force. There
It is claimed by plaintiff’s counsel that the burden is on the defendants to show that these two instruments together constituted a sale of the land; in other words, that an agreement to reconvey on conditions, contemporaneously entered into with the deed, makes the transaction presumptively a mortgage. If such be the case, the effect is. that parties competent to contract cannot make their own contracts. We think the following lays down the most approved principle as to this question: “There can be.no question that a party may make a purchase of lands, either in satisfaction of a precedent debt or for a consideration then paid, and may at the same time contract to recover the lands upon the payment of a c.ertain sum, without any intention on the part of either party that the transaction should be, in effect, a mortgage. There is no absolute rule that the covenant to reconvey shall be regarded either in law or in equity as a defeasance. The covenant to reconvey, it is true, may be one fact, taken in connection with other facts, going to show that the parties really intended the deed to operate as a mortgage, but, standing alone, it is not sufficient to work that result. The owner of the land may be willing to sell at a price agreed upon, and the purchaser may also be willing to give his vendor the right to repurchase upon specified terms; and, if such appears to be the intention of the parties, it is not the duty of the court to attribute to them a different intention. Such a'contract is not opposed to public policy, nor is it in any sense illegal, and courts will depart from the line of their duties should they, in disregard of the real intention of the parties, declare it to be a mortgage.” Henley v. Hotaling, 41 Cal. 22. See, also, Conway’s Ex’rs v. Alexander, 7 Cranch. 218, 3 L. Ed. 321; McNamara v. Culver, 22 Kan. 460. This court has clearly laid down the rule that governs in this class of cases as to the burden of proof. The rule thus laid down is: “Hence courts have, with great uniformity, in this class of cases, required the proof that should destroy the recitals in a solemn instrument to be clear, satisfactory, and specific, and of such a character as to leave in the mind of the chancellor no hesitation or substantial doubt.” Jasper v. Hazen, 4 N. D. 1, 58. N. W. 454, 23 L. R. A. 58. See, also, Larson v. Dutiel, (S. D.) 85 N. W. 1008, and cases there cited,
It is claimed that the consideration for the deed was inadequate, and should be considered as a circumstance tending to prove that the deed and lease constituted together a mortgage. Were it proven that the consideration was grossly inadequate to the value of the land, it would not be sufficient alone to constitute it a security transaction. That would be considered as one fact to be weighed in connection with all the others in the case, from which to gather what the real intention of the parties was at the time of the execution of these papers. On the question of value the evidence is conflicting. Disinterested witnesses give widely divergent opinions as to such value in March, 1894. Such opinions range from $3,400 to $5,000. The defendant LaMoure estimates its value then at $2,500, and the defendant Lee offered to sell it to Norton in April, 1895, for what he had put into it'. It is quite conclusively shown that the place in section 13 was of somewhat inferior character. After considering all the evidence on this question of value, we are far from convinced that the price paid was grossly or manifestly inadequate. Our conclusion is that the plaintiffs have failed to substantiate their claim by that clear, specific, satisfactory, and convincing proof required in this class of cases. It follows that the judgment of the District Court must be affirmed.