26 Neb. 706 | Neb. | 1889
This action was'commenced in the district court of Douglas county by David Fetz, plaintiff, against Lyman H. Tower, defendant.
The petition alleges that in March, 1880, the plaintiff was a resident of Webster county, and was owner in fee of one quarter section of land therein described, and that the ■defendant was a resident of the city of Hastings, engaged
The defendant answers, denying each and every allegation except such as are specifically admitted or denied; and admits that the plaintiff was the owner of the land; that he negotiated a-loan for the plaintiff with Fay as alleged; that not knowing whether or not one Dent made the representations set forth, denies the same, and denies that Dent was the agent authorized and empowered to make any such representations, and says that he purchased the land from plaintiff, paying therefor a valuable consideration, and, in addition thereto, ¿ssumed the mortgage and note mentioned; that the land at the time of the purchase was not worth more than the amount loaned thereon, $800, and in assuming the same defendant was paying the full value, and that the sale was made to him without any conditions whatever, and was a bona fide sale, and so understood by all parties concerned. He admits that he afterwards paid the taxes, and that on June 27, 1883, he sold the land to Wallace L. Lighthart and conveyed the same for $1,200 •„ and that he refuses to account to plaintiff for said sum, less the taxes, or for any other sum, and denies that he is indebted to the plaintiff in $1,168.82, or any other sum whatever.
The plaintiff replied, denying that the defendant purchased-said land, paying a valuable consideration, and denying that he paid any consideration whatever; denying that the land, at the time of the purchase, was not worth more than the amount loaned thereon, $800; alleging that the land was worth at that time $2,500; and denying that in assuming said note and mortgage defendant was paying its full value; and denying that the sale was made without conditions and was a bona fide sale, and so understood by all parties.
The defendant brings the cause to this court on error,, and assigns twenty distinct errors in the proceedings below, seventeen of which are for the alleged erroneous admissions, of testimony offered by the plaintiff and objected to by defendant; the eighteenth, that the decision is not sustained by sufficient evidence; the nineteenth, that the decision is contrary to law; the twentieth, that the court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial.
The last three only, will be considered, as it has been often held that where a cause is tried to a court without, the intervention of a jury, its judgment will not be reversed by an appellate court for error in the admission of testimony on the trial. (Richardson v. Doty, 25 Neb. 420; Enyeart v. Davis, 17 Neb. 228; 1 Greenleaf on Evidence, 14th Ed., sec. 49.) So that if upon the examination of the last three points it shall appear that sufficient material and competent evidence was before the court to sustain its findings and judgment, they will not be reversed for the reason that there was also before it illegal and incompetent testimony.
It appears from the bill of exceptions that in 1880 the plaintiff was the owner of a farm in Webster county, and the defendant was carrying on a loan agency and a business at Hastings. The plaintiff applied to the defendant for a loan of money on his said farm. Defendant entertained the application and sent one Dent, his brother-in-law and general agent on the outside business of his loan branch and agency, to inspect and value the farm. This, being done, resulted in the negotiation of a loan of $800 by the plaintiff through the agency of the defendant from one Edwin R. Fay, of New York, an old customer of the defendant, a. mortgage being executed upon the farm to secure the loan to Fay for said $800, drawing ten per cent interest, payable semi-annually, for five years from March, 1880, the-
The above facts, excepting those pertaining to the loan, the execution of the mortgage, the paying of one year’s interest by the plaintiff’s son, the delinquency of the second year’s interest, the notifying of the plaintiff by the defendant that unless the same was paid the mortgage would be foreclosed, the writing by defendant to Dent from the east that he would assume the mortgage in consideration of a warranty deed of the farm, and the conveyance of the farm by plaintiff and wife to defendant, are denied in general by the defendant; but there is no evidence in respect thereto in conflict with that of the plaintiff. Just one year and a day after the execution of the deed by the plaintiff and wife to the defendant, the defendant and wife made their deed of the farm to William L. Lighthart for the expressed consideration of $1,200, subject to the said mortgage and taxes.
It will be observed that the original mortgage was directly to Mr. Fay. The defendant testifies that although he did not guaranty mortgages taken by him directly to Fay, and while he did not think that he would be obliged to make good any deficiency in such loans, yet, in point of fact, he had always made good the loans, and had always felt that, without reference to any special guaranty, he should take care to make good any such loans; therefore, the defendant stood in the same attitude toward the plaintiff, in this transaction, as if the original mortgage had been made to him and he was the owner of it; and this being the case, according to the testimony of the plaintiff, which was accepted by the court, the absolute deed of the plaintiff was substituted for the mortgage, not for the purpose of con
I think that .the deed, under the circumstances in evi-dence, must be held to be of that character, and to have ■been given for the purpose, expressed by whatever contract 'was made, and such understanding as was had, between the .plaintiff and Dent at the time of its' execution by the one ■and its acceptance by the other.
It is worthy of mention that neither the note, nor the ’mortgage executed by the plaintiff to Fay, was either canceled or delivered up to the plaintiff at the execution of the deed; nor does it appear to have been done to this day.
I do not conceive the question of estoppel to be a controlling consideration in this ease, but rather that by means of this conveyance, the defendant, having the control of the -mortgage, and acting through Dent, who was clearly his -agent to receive the deed, and by the subsequent disposal «of the land, received a large sum of money in excess of that sufficient to pay all claims which as agent for and moral guarantor to Fay, or Fay himself, he was entitled to receive, in his discharge of the mortgage. This money, it «would appeal1 to be inequitable and against good conscience -to decree that the defendant should retain.
But the most important legal question presented, is «whether the trust created by and resulting from the deed, ^absolute on its face, could be proved by parol testimony. There is sufficient authority on this question; The case of Babcock v. Wyman, 19 How. (U. S.) 289, was in all material features similar to the case at bar. One Nehemiah
Supplemental to this is the case of Morgan’s Assignees v. Shinn, 15 Wallace, 105, in which the same question arose. The assignees of the plaintiff, in this case, to enforce a contribution for an advance made for the repairs and expenses-
On these considerations and precedents, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.