11 Colo. App. 480 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1898
delivered the opinion of the court.
Though the facts found be accepted as entirely true, and
The property in dispute is situate near Fort Logan in this county. We do not know the extent of it or its value. It was realty on which there were some buildings which had for some years both before and after the date of the transaction been occupied by one Kovsky and some persons jointly interested with him in business. In 1890 Mrs. Davis intermarried with Kovsky and for some time thereafter they either occupied it or rented it to others. Kovsky had owned the property and according to the allegations of the complaint and Mrs. Davis’s testimony, he sold to her before their marriage. As the appellee testified she carried the deed about in a bag and kept actual possession of it and never recorded it. Differences arose between them and they were divorced. Mrs. Davis alleges that while they were living together as husband and wife and working a ranch in the country above Denver, a fire happened and the deed was burnt up. During the time the property was occupied by tenants the money was sometimes paid to Kovsky, occasionally perhaps to his wife, but more generally to Kovsky’s creditors to whom he became indebted when he was carrying on business in the place either alone or in conjunction with his wife. Mrs. Kovsky had knowledge that the debts were being contracted and from time to time out of the proceeds of the business and from money borrowed, she paid some of the notes. Some of the creditprs became pressing and Kovsky was compelled to borrow money, and he negotiated a loan of some f800 or thereabouts with one of the defendants, Solf, and gave a warranty deed to secure the money. The terms, date or charac
On the conclusion of the evidence the court rendered a decree substantially deciding that Sliney was an innocent purchaser, that Mrs. Davis was the holder of a title by an unrecorded deed, and that Sliney’s title came through Solf the mortgagee. On these facts he concluded that since Sliney’s title was derived from a mortgagee he must hold as though he had been a mortgagee himself, and that he could not be an innocent purchaser under the statute and ordered judgment accordingly. The decree provided that an account should be taken of the rents and profits since the 21st of March, 1892, the value of its use and occupation ascertained, and if the sum was equal to the Sliney claim, then he should convey the legal title to the plaintiff, and if the sum found due should exceed the sum due, then plaintiff should have judgment against him for the difference. It will thus be seen that the decree failed to determine the rights of the parties in case the rents, issues and profits and the value of the use and occupation combined should be less than the sum due Sliney. In such event the plaintiff evidently ought to pay Sliney the difference between the sum which he paid for the property and what he had received. This is a very radical defect and for this reason if for no other the decree should not be allowed to stand, though whether that might not be provided for in the accounting and the court thereafter
Sliney then got a good title unless it was defeated by the fact that he got it by deed from one who was a mortgagee, though holding by a warranty deed. We recognize the universality of the rule that an absolute deed given by way of security can be shown to be a mortgage, and when the character of the instrument is thus ascertained whether proved by an independent instrument or by parol testimony, the deed ceases to be a deed, but is a mortgage security subject to all the limitations and conditions which surround such conveyances. We likewise concede as a general proposition that where a deed has been executed by way of mortgage its character cannot be changed, but it will remain a security unless its character be altered by the acts of the parties done in good faith and in such manner that a court of equity will approve the transaction. Courts of equity look with suspicion upon transactions between mortgagor and mortgagee which are supposed to change the nature of the instrument from one of mortgage to one of absolute conveyance and will always closely scrutinize what is done to prevent any oppression of the debtor. This comes from the circumstance that debtors are regarded with favor by these courts and that such is the frailty of human nature when once a debtor becomes embarrassed he submits to all sorts of imposition and oppression in order to relieve his immediate and pressing necessities. Bearing this in view when a party asserts that the deed which was given as security has, by agreement of the parties, been
Now if this be true as to the mortgagor, we see no reason why the same principle should not be applicable where the bill is filed by one asserting a title under an unrecorded deed antecedently executed by the mortgagor who had incumbered the property. How the case will stand on the subsequent trial we cannot foresee. It may be that the whole character of the case will be changed and the evidence will develop the fact that Kovsky got no part of the consideration, and that he was simply a party consenting to the execution of the deed by Solf, and that the money went to those whom he was not obligated to pay, or if obligated that the debts were of a character which would not permit a court under these circumstances to treat them as equities though Sliney paid them. We prefer not to express any decided opinion as to what our convictions might be under some other circumstances, but on the record as it stands, when it is demonstrated as it is by the finding of the court, that Sliney was a purchaser in good faith, without fraud, without knowledge of Mrs. Davis’s title, or the want of authority in Kovsky to contract and convey, and when it appears as it does from the record, that Sliney paid Iris money, that he discharged Soli’s mortgage, paid other of Kovsky’s debts, and paid the balance of the consideration to Kovsky himself, it must be true that Kovsky could not be permitted in a court of equity to assert that the deed which Sliney got was a mortgage. He would be estopped to assert that the transfer was one of security
Believing that the judgment is erroneous and ought not to stand as against Sliney on the record as now made, the judgment will be reversed and remanded for a new trial in conformity with this opinion.
Reversed.