112 N.W. 677 | N.D. | 1907
The complaint in this action alleges that prior to December 5, 1885, one Thomas O’Toole, since deceased, was the owner of the N. J4 of the N. E. 34 of section 21 and the WJ4 of the N. W. 34 °f section 22, in township 159 N., of range 55 W., in Pembina county, N. D., and that on that day he and Ann O’Toole, one of the defendants -herein, his wife, conveyed the same to plaintiff by warranty deed, which deed was recorded in the office of the register of deeds in Pembina county on the 8th day of February, 1886, but that said -deed was given only for security; that on the 13th day of January, 1887, O’Toole and his. wife executed and' delivered to plaintiff another deed of the same premises, which deed was duly recorded on the 4th day of February, 1887; that at the time of the execution and delivery of the said deeds said O’Tooles were living upon and occupying said described premises, and continued to’ do so until the death of Thomas O.’Toole; that Thomas'O’Toole was indebted to the plaintiff in a large amount, and on or about the 20th day of November, 1894, he had a settlement with plaintiff of all matters relating to said indebtedness, and entered into a -contract in writing, whereby the plaintiff agreed to reconvey said land to said O’Toole upon payment by O’Toole to plaintiff of $2,800, the amount
Judgment is asked that the amount due from said O’Toole to plaintiff is $2,800 with taxes and interest paid, with interest thereon, less the payment made of $162, and that the amount found to be due is a lien upon the real property described or any such part thereof as may be sufficient to pay the amount so adjudged to be due and the costs of sale and action, and that there be paid out of the proceeds thereof the costs of sale and action and the amount of such judgment, or any such part thereof as the proceeds of such sale will pa3r, and for execution for the balance, and the usual other relief asked in foreclosure proceedings. To this complaint defendants answered, denying each and every part thereof, except as specially admitted and alleged that Thomas O’Toole, deceased, and the defendant, Ann O’Toole, were husband and wife for more than 20 years before the death of Thomas O’Toole, and during all such time lived together as such; that in 1882 Thomas O’Toole filed on the land described in the complaint under the homestead laws of the United 'States, and that they established their residence thereon and have resided thereon with their family ever since, and that it is their homestead; that on or about the 5th day of December, 1885, the defendant Ann O’Toole executed and delivered to plaintiff an instrument, in form a warranty deed, but in fact a mortgage of said described premises, to secure the balance of an indebtedness remaining unpaid, created -by Thomas O’Toole to plaintiff, on no part of which indebtedness Ann O’Toole was liable;-that about the 1st day of February, 1887, she and Thomas O’Toole executed and de
On the trial in the district court, defendants objected to the introduction of any evidence under the complaint for the reasons claimed: First. That it fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, in this: that, if an action to recover a money judgment upon a claim or contract, it is fatally defective, in that it shows that the only one of the defendants personally liable is dead, with no one surviving him against whom a personal judgment can be rendered. Second. That it appears from the pleadings that the court is without jurisdiction, power or authority to declare a lien for the amount prayed for in the complaint against the land described. Third. Because the complaint fails to set forth any facts which entitle the plaintiff to equitable relief. The court overruled this objection, and this ruling is assigned among the errors committed •by the trial court. We think the complaint, taken as a whole, does not disclose an attempt to procure a personal judgment. The action was begun before the death of Thomas O’Toole, and a personal judgment was prayed for against him. After his death the complaint was amended to recite the fact of his death, and other parties were made defendants — his -heirs at law, etc., — and some portions of the complaint, which might properly have been changed to make it technically perfect, were left unchanged, but, as a whole, we construe it as asking the court to find the amount due from the late Thomas O’Toole to plaintiff. If .it can be construed as asking a personal judgment, this does not invalidate the claim for other relief well pleaded. The reasons for the second ground of demurrer are not entirely clear, but we assume them to be based upon the theory that the complaint shows an agreement to mortgage the homestead for the debt of the husband, or to extend the time of payment of the debt secured by such mortgage without the consent of the wife to such an extension. This will be treated later in this opinion, ■but it is sufficient to say at .present that this point assumes as facts things which were sought to be established on the trial, viz., whether the plaintiff was seeking to hold his lien for a different debt from the one secured by the mortgage, and whether-the wife had given her consent to an extension, and, if not, whether it was necessary, and was her signature to the defeasance necessary, or was a verbal defeasance adequate. As to the third ground of objection, the com
After the close of the evidence, plaintiff asked and was permitted leave to amend his complaint to conform to the proof, which proof tended to supply the omissions complained of by defendant in the complaint and conformed to statements of the answer. This ruling is assigned as error. The amendment added a few items of taxes paid and interest paid on the $1,000 mortgage hereinbefore referred to, and more fully described the debt secured by the deeds to the plaintiff and set out the giving of the mortgage for $1,000. After a careful inspection of all the pleadings, we see no material change in the claim. Both the original and amended complaints state facts showing a lien on the premises, and ask to have the amount determined and the property sold by the usual method of foreclosure. We think the action of the court comes within the rule permitting the exercise of the discretion of the trial court in allowing amendments, and see no abuse of such discretion, and particularly as no claim was then made that defendants were taken by surprise, or that they were unable to meet the new allegations. It is well settled that, unless the trial court abuses its discretion in allowing an amendment to make the complaint conform to the proof, where there is no substantial change in the claim, such action will not be deemed reversible error.
We deem it advisable, before taking up the contentions of the appellants in detail, to consider certain legal questions involved, relating to the case in general, as this will furnish a starting point from which the effect of the evidence and all other questions'can more readily be determined. (1) An instrument, in form a deed, may be proved by oral testimony to be a mortgage as' between' the parties and all others with knowledge of its purpose. Rev. Codes 1905, section 6153; Patnode v. Deschenes (N. D.), 106 N. W. 513; O’Toole v. Omlie et al., 8 N. D. 444, 19 N. W. 849. (2) The
It is claimed by the defendants that the debt for which the deeds were given as security has been paid, and that, if not paid, it has not been identified as the debt described in the settlement, made on the 20th day of November, 1894. The plaintiff was sworn as a witness in his own behalf, and inquiry made of him as to certain exhibits that were offered in evidence. These exhibits may be resolved into two classes. Certain notes given by Thomas O’Toole to third parties, and evidently purchased by Omlie were offered for the purpose of showing how the original indebtedness arose, and he testified on this subject, over objection, that he was disqualified under the statute relating to one party testifying in his own behalf
The defendants offered in evidence two notes given by O’Toole to Omlie on the day the second deed was acknowledged, and marked “Satisfied,” under date of February 7, 1889, and -they concede that these notes evidence the indebtedness for which the deed was given as security, 'but contend that the indorsement of the words “Satisfied, February 7, 1889,” indicates that they were paid, and that indebtedness canceled and that the deeds should have been canceled. Other notes were offered in evidence bearing date between then and the 20th of November, 1894, having a tendency to show thaf there was a continuous indebtedness, and Mr. J. H. Frame, an attorney at Grafton, testified that he had acted for Omlie and O’Toole in the preparation of the instrument bearing date November 20,
Under all the circumstances, we think that the fact that the notes given at the time the deed was acknowledged and conceded by the defendants to be the indebtedness secured by the deed were marked
Having concluded that the debt on the 24th day of November, 1894, evidenced by the notes aggregating $1,800, represented the original debt, the plea of the statute of limitations is disposed of. The amount for which judgment was entered in the district court is less, rather than more, than the original debt, with interest and taxes and interest paid. Finding no other error and the plaintiff not complaining of this, the judgment of the district court is affirmed, with costs to respondent.