123 Minn. 13 | Minn. | 1913
This is an appeal by the plaintiff from an order of the district court of Hennepin county sustaining the demurrers of certain of the defendants to the complaint.
On September 29,1875, Thomas Lowry was appointed guardian of the plaintiff and his brother. About November 1, 1875, Lowry received $1,966.66 as guardian of his two wards.
On January 18, 1874, Francis P. Sweet, the father of the plaintiff, died intestate leaving a widow and the plaintiff and his brother as his sole surviving heirs. At the time of his death he was the owner of certain land in Hennepin county, occupied as a homestead, subject to a mortgage.
On April 3, 1877, this property was sold on mortgage foreclosure sale, Lowry being the attorney of the mortgagee, for $515. At the time of the foreclosure and during the period of redemption, the value of the property was in excess of twice the amount necessary to redeem from the sale, and during such period Lowry had in his possession, as guardian, moneys sufficient to redeem. No redemption was made. The plaintiff’s mother had a life estate in the property.
No settlement of the guardianship matter was ever had in probate court.
On February 4, 1909, Lowry died. His estate was probated in Hennepin county, and his executors were discharged prior to February, 1912.
The defendants, Beatrice Lowry, Horace Lowry and Mary Schwyzer are devisees of Lowry and received large amounts of money from the estate.
William W. Herrick and E. W. Herrick were bondsmen for Lowry
This action is, in substance, to compel the defendants to account for the present value of the foreclosed property. The theory of it is that, since the estate of Lowry has been closed and the executors have been discharged, his devisees who have received property from his estate can be required to make the accounting which he should have made; and that, since a default cannot be established in the probate court, the heirs and devisees of the bondsmen may be brought into this action and their liability determined. The cause of action, if any, is in equity.
The demurrers are upon the ground of want of jurisdiction, defect of parties plaintiff, defect of parties defendant, and that the facts stated are insufficient.
We are not in accord upon the question whether the district court has jurisdiction. We leave this and the other grounds of demurrer specified and pass to the question of the sufficiency of the facts stated.
The particular claim is that the plaintiff, conceding that he once had a cause of action, has lost it through laches.
The plaintiff was born in 1871. In 1892 he became of age. In 1912, 20 years later, he commenced this action. The acts which he claims give him a cause of action occurred 35 years before.
The complaint alleges that the “plaintiff never discovered, knew or was in any way put on inquiry as to his rights under the said guardianship or knew or had any intimation, indication or ground of inquiring as to his' part ownership with his brother of the said real estate and the said moneys until the month of February, 1912.” It is clear that the plaintiff knew of the guardianship when he became of age. It is not shown that any inquiry or investigation was made as to the execution of the trust, nor is an excuse offered for not making inquiry, nor is it shown that such inquiry would have been result-
In Wetzel v. Railway Co. 65 Fed. 23, 12 C. C. A. 490, affirmed in 169 U. S. 237, 18 Sup. Ct. 307, 42 L. ed. 730, the court said:
“The plea of laches does not always depend for its support upon mere lapse of time, but upon the manifest inequity of permitting the claim to be enforced, in view of some change in the condition of the property or in the relations of the parties to the controversy. It is .also a well-established rule that when a suitor applies to a court of chancery for relief, for any considerable length of time after the wrong complained of was committed, it is incumbent on him to show, .both by ayerment and proof, some sufficient excuse to justify the delay.”
In Schmitt v. Hager, 88 Minn. 413, 415, 93 N. W. 110, the court said:
“But the defense of laches is not, like the statute of limitations, .exclusively a matter of time, for it is purely an equitable defense, .based upon grounds of public policy, which require, for the peace of society, the discouragement of stale demands, and is addressed to the Round judicial discretion of the court, under the facts of each particular case,”
It is a circumstance of importance, in determining whether a plaintiff has been guilty of laches, that the situation of the parties has .changed, or that material witnesses have died, or that because of lapse of time evidence has otherwise been lost, so that the ascertainment of the essential facts is made difficult, and the exact facts upon which the rights of the parties depend must necessarily be in doubt. Mackall v. Casilear, 137 U. S. 556, 11 Sup. Ct. 178, 34 L. ed. 776; Hammond v. Hopkins, 143 U. S. 224, 12 Sup. Ct. 418, 36 L. ed. 134; Ripple v. Kuehne, 100 Md. 672, 60 Atl. 464; Badger v. Badger, 2 Wall. 87, 17 L. ed. 836.
The folbwjng Minnesota cases are pertinent upon the question of laches: Brandes v. Carpenter, 68 Minn. 388, 71 N. W. 402; Hanson v. Swenson, 77 Minn. 70, 79 N. W. 598; Marcotte v. Hartman, 46 Minn. 202, 48 N. W. 767; Sanborn v. Eads, 38 Minn. 211, 36 N. W. 338.
We decide the demurrers upon the narrow ground that under the allegations of the complaint laches is shown. Whether there is a showing that Lowry, in failing to redeem the property, rendered himself liable is a question of some doubt. We may say in passing that there is nothing in the situation which gives the plaintiff, if in fact he has a cause of action, the right to recover the present value of the foreclosed property or an amount based upon its present value.
Order affirmed.