97 N.W. 856 | N.D. | 1903
The controversy m this case arises over the ownership and the right to the use and possession of the southwest quarter of section 24, township 157, range 58, in Walsh county, N. D. The plaintiff claims in his complaint to be the absolute,,pwner thereof, and asks to have the title quieted in himself, and defendant’s interference with his possession permanently enjoined. Defendant claims, in his answer, to be the equitable owner of said lands, and claims that he has been in the continuous possession thereof since 1897; that he purchased said land from the Security Improvement Company, of Grand Forks, in 1897, and received from said company a contract of sale, under which he was to secure full title to said land upon payment to it of $850 from the crops raised on the land; that in January, 1898, he was indebted to McEwen & Dougherty, of Park River, and assigned said contract of sale to said firm as security for the payment of said indebtedness; that defendant was indebted to plaintiff and his .partner in November, 1899, in the sum of about $300, and plaintiff about said time requested that defendant authorize McEwen & Dougherty to assign said contract of sale to plaintiff, and that plaintiff would thereupon pay said McEwen & Dougherty’s debt, and hold said contract as security for the payment of plaintiff’s debt, as well as the amount paid to McEwen & Dougherty to secure the assignment of the contract to plaintiff; that plaintiff paid McEwen & Dougherty what was their due, and received from them the assignment of the contract of sale; that plaintiff thereafter wrongfully presented said assignment to the Security Improvement Company, at Grand Forks, N. D., paid the amount due on said contract, and demanded that a deed be executed and delivered to him, by said company; that said company issued such deed to him, which was duly recorded in the office of the register of deeds of Walsh county; that plaintiff procured said deed without authority or right to do so, and without defendant’s authority or knowledge. The relief demanded by defendant is for an accounting; that plaintiff be adjudged to have received such deed in trust for defendant, and as security for the amounts owed by defendant to plaintiff; that, “upon payment to plaintiff by defendant of the amount found due to plaintiff, that plaintiff be compelled to deed the land In flispute
Unless an accounting must be made between the parties, the issues are: (1) Was'the transaction of November 1, 1899, between plaintiff and defendant, whereby the contract of sale was assigned by McEwen & Dougherty to plaintiff, a security, or an absolute assignment? (2) If not a security assignment, has ffie defendant parted with, conveyed, or abandoned his interest in the contract of sale ?
Upon the first question, it is not difficult to .reach a conclusion, based on evidence that preponderates in plaintiff’s favor, and is thoroughly convincing, that defendant’s version of the affair is not the true one. The facts out of which the differences between the parties arose are as follows: On the 3d' day of June, 1897, the defendant entered into a contract for the purchase of the land in suit from the Grand Forks Security Improvement Company, on the crop-q>ayment plan of purchase. Possession of the premises was given him by said contract, and' he went into what is deemed in law actual possession thereof, and in 1898 broke forty-three acres, and cropped this and the eighty acres of land already broken thereon when he purchased it. He also cultivated this land and cropped it in 1899. There were no buildings on the land. In January, 1898, the defendant was in debt, and owed the firm of McEwen & Dougherty $741. He owed the plaintiff and his partner about $300. He also owed the Security Improvement Company $752.25, the unpaid balance on the purchase price of the land; being $850. He owed other debts, also. At this time defendant assigned to McEwen & Dougherty the land contract received from the Security Improvement Company, by an assignment absolute in form, indorsed on said contract. At the same time McEwen & Dougherty gave defendant a memorandum acknowledging 'that such assignment was for security purposes only. Later, and in the spring or summer of 1899, the plaintiff met the defendant to settle a seed-'lien transaction, and to get a lien on the crop; and, during a conversation then had, defendant proposed that the plaintiff buy the land in question from him. The plaintiff, after they had talked over the price, said that he would see about it later. The defendant also
The rule is well settled that, to show a deed or other instrument absolute on its face to have been intended only as security, the evidence must be clear, convincing', and satisfactory. Jasper v. Hazen, 4 N. D. 1, 58 N. W. 454, 23 L. R. A. 58; McGuin v. Lee, 10 N. D. 160, 86 N. W. 714; Sargent v. Cooley, 12 N. D. 1, 94 N. W. 576; Forester v. Van Auken, 12 N. D. —, 96 N. W. 301. Under the rule stated and the cases above cited, we have no hesitation in saying that the transaction was intended as an absolute sale, and not as. a security transaction.
Defendant’s main contention, however, is that he has never parted with the title to the contract in question, nor with equitable ownership of the land conveyed thereby. His position is that the assignment to McEwen & Dougherty was admittedly as security only,, although in form absolute, and that the assignment from McEwen & Dougherty to plaintiff could .convey no greater interest in the-contract or to the land than they had — a mortgage or security interest. In other words, his contention is that he never transferred his interest in the contract or land absolutely, but only to secure-a debt of his, and that the transfer by him was oral, and invalid,, under section 3887, Rev. Codes 1899; that, if McEwen & Dougherty ■be considered as defendant’s agents to assign the contract, their authority must be in writing, under the statute. As shown heretofore, the intention of the parties at the time that defendant requested McEwen & Dougherty to assign the contract to plaintiff' was that such assignment should be made, as evidencing the sale to plaintiff. The assignment to McEwen & Dougherty indorsed on the contract, was absolute in form, and purported to ássign the contract without conditions. The defendant made no claim at the time that he told McEwen & Dougherty to assign the contract that it was as security only. For two years thereafter he made no* claim to own the land. Plaintiff paid out large sums of money on the understanding that he was getting an absolute title to the-
However, we need not rest the decision on principles of estoppel. The relief asked in the answer is that plaintiff be compelled to specifically perform the contract of sale,. and convey to defendant the title which he acquired from the vendor in the contract, the Grand Forks Security Improvement Company. Whatever defendant’s rights are, they must be. based upon that contract. Under the contract, he became the equitable owner of the land. The legal title remained in the vendor, as security for the purchase price. Nearing v. Coop, 6 N. D. 345, 70 N. W. 1044. This court has recently held that, under a contract such as the one in suit, the
The trial court awarded to the defendant two-thirds of the net proceeds of the crop of 1902, and the balance to the plaintiff. Plaintiff had been in the possession and control of the land since 1899. Defendant’s relation to the land during that time was solely what he derived as tenant of the plaintiff, whom defendant acknowledged as owner. In the spring of 1902 defendant took possession and control of the land, and, without warrant, put in the crop. Plaintiff seasonably and promptly notified the defendant of what he-before knew — that he had no right to the possession of the land. Defendant seeded the land with great haste, and against plaintiff’s, protest. He showed a disposition to resort to force to thwart plaintiff’s attempt to control the cropping of the land. He had no rights.
The district court is directed to modify its judgment so far as the defendant is therein given judgment for the sum of $575.23, and to award the whole of the crop of 1902 to plaintiff. Plaintiff will recover costs in district court and in this court. In all other respects, the judgment is affirmed.