206 N.W. 645 | Minn. | 1925
1. In 1923 the plaintiff was constructing an apartment building in St. Paul. There was upon it a first mortgage of $54,000. More money was needed. On June 25, 1923, the plaintiff without consideration executed to Joseph Supornick a second mortgage for $28,000. This is the mortgage which the plaintiff claims is usurious. It was recorded June 27, 1923. On June 28, 1923, an assignment was executed, the name of the assignee blank. In September the names of the defendants were inserted as assignees and the assignment was recorded on September 28, 1923. The defendants paid $21,000. So far the facts are not in dispute.
The plaintiff claims that in June, 1923, it entered into negotiations with the defendants for a usurious loan to be secured by a second mortgage; and in substance its contention is that the transaction *344
was a loan by the defendants to the plaintiff, the mortgage being made to Supornick and the assignment to the defendants at their suggestion to conceal usury. There is in evidence support of this theory. The defendants claim that the mortgage was made by the plaintiff to Supornick so that he might sell it and raise the needed money; and that in September, 1923, after some negotiation, they purchased it from Supornick in good faith. There is evidence in the record in support of their contention; and if true the mortgage is valid. Jackson v. Travis,
2. The defendants required a bond to protect them front liens. One was furnished with the plaintiff as principal containing this recital:
"The condition of this obligation is such that whereas the said A.D. Kleinman and H. D. Michael have heretofore loaned the said principal the sum of Twenty-eight Thousand ($28,000) and has taken as security * * * the note of said principal, secured by a mortgage on the following described property." * * *
The plaintiff contends that the recital estops the defendant from showing the fact to be that they were assignees of the mortgage and not mortgagees; and it offered the bond in evidence claiming for it the effect of a conclusive admission or estoppel. We do not give it that effect. The suit is not upon the bond. If the recital was inaccurate through mistake the bond was subject to reformation. The plaintiff is in the position of claiming that it may show, for the purpose of establishing usury, and concededly it may, that the mortgage and assignment, contrary to their import, represent a loan by the assignees to the mortgagor; but that the defendants may not show that the recital, which is consistent with that theory, and which is offered in proof of it, was inserted by mistake. The taking and retention of the bond is a circumstance, in the nature of an admission, to be considered in determining the real relationship of the parties; but the recital is subject to explanation by parol. *345
Many cases are cited by both parties and we have examined all of them. No one is directly in point and we would not expect one to be found. They are illustrative and helpful, but a discussion is not required. We note 2 Wigmore, Ev. (2 ed.) §§ 1056-1059; 21 C.J. 1091, 1096-1099; 10 R.C.L. 685. The recital is nothing more than an admission subject to explanation. The trend of the cases cited in the briefs leads to that conclusion.
3. In explanation the defendants offered evidence tending to show that they did not notice the recital until shortly after the bond was delivered; that they objected, and sought a correction; and that before anything was accomplished the opportunity for liens to accrue had passed, and with it all need of correction.
The objection urged against this evidence, and overruled, was that it was incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial. Such an objection does not present the claim that the testimony is hearsay or self-serving. Larson v. Anderson,
4. But this aside, little of the evidence received was objectionable as hearsay or self-serving; and none of it of that character was so substantially objectionable as to require a new trial. Testimony which otherwise was relevant and material in explanation of the recital, whether involving conversations or correspondence, was not hearsay because not with the plaintiff or in its presence, nor was it self-serving. State Bank v. Strandberg,
There are other assignments relative to rulings and findings. We have examined them and find nothing of merit.
Order affirmed. *346