Anderson v. Kain

169 N.W. 501, 40 N.D. 632, 1918 N.D. LEXIS 115
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 6, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 169 N.W. 501 (Anderson v. Kain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Kain, 169 N.W. 501, 40 N.D. 632, 1918 N.D. LEXIS 115 (N.D. 1918).

Opinions

Birdzell, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the defendants entered in an action to foreclose a mortgage. The facts .are as follows:

The defendants, John Fain and Mattie S. Fain, on December 17th, 1909, gave to A. C. Anderson a promissory note for $518 which was due approximately two years after its date and was secured by a real estate mortgage on the east half of the northwest quarter and the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of Section 27, Township 150 N., Range 64 W. of the 5th P. M. The land described in the mortgage was government land upon which John Fain had filed but upon which he had not, as yet, earned a patent. The note and mortgage were afterward transferred and assigned to the State Bank of Warwick, the Farmers’ & Merchants’ Bank of Warwick, and to the plaintiff in this, action. In so far as the circumstances in connection with these transfers are material to a consideration of the questions raised on this appeal, they will be later considered.

In December, 1911, there was a settlement of mutual accounts between .A. C. Anderson and the defendants, as a part of which the defendants gave some notes to Anderson, among which was a new note for $622.23. All the notes given as a part of this settlement were secured by a chattel mortgage. Following the settlement, Charles Anderson, attorney in fact for A. C. Anderson, gave the defendants a statement showing that the $622.23 note was a renewal of the $518 note above referred to.

In the fall of 1912, some conferences were had between representatives of the Andersons and defendants at which the question of raising the necessary money to enable the Fains to make final proof on their homestead was discussed. The plaintiff contends that at these conferences an understanding was reached whereby Siver Serumgard, who represented the Andersons, was to endeavor to raise an amount [635]*635of money sufficient to enable the Kains to make their final proof and obtain their patent. The defendants contend that such an agreement was not reached; but that, on the contrary, Mr. McClory, who represented them at the conference, was to raise the money, and that they definitely refused to accept the money that had been obtained for them by Serumgard and preferred to let the matter of the final proof go for another year. In this respect there is a clear conflict between the testimony of Serumgard and that of the defendants. It appears, however, that final proof was made in December, 1912, and that the money required to make the necessary payment to the government Land Office was raised by the Andersons under the direction of Serumgard. The defendant John Kain received the patent and accepted it with knowledge that the proof money was supplied by Charles Anderson, •or by Serumgard as agent for Anderson and his wifé, A. O. Anderson. A further fact of some significance is that, though the pleading in the case foreshadowed the issue as to the source of the money with which final proof was made and the authority to apply it on behalf of defendants, the record does not account for the failure of the defendants to procure the testimony of P. J. McClory who represented them in the conference which was had with Serumgard.

Among other findings, the trial court found that the Farmers’ & Merchants’ Bank of Crary, of which the plaintiff, Edgar Anderson, is an officer, advanced to Charles Anderson $300 on a note executed by him, and as security the bank held the oral guaranty of Edgar Anderson, the plaintiff; that Edgar Anderson took an indorsement and assignment of the notes and mortgage in suit; that at the time the renewal note for $622.23 was given it was given with the express understanding that “Charles Anderson would return to the said defendant, John Kain, the note sued upon in this action.” From these findings the court concluded “that the defendants, by the payment of the said notes and mortgage in December, 1911, extinguished the lien of said mortgage as to the plaintiff, Edgar Anderson,” and “that the defendants are entitled to a judgment canceling and satisfying said mortgage of record. . . . That the plaintiff does not have any lien on the lands of the defendants for the sum of $323 paid into the United States Land Office at Devils Lake as the government price of said lands, nor for any portion of the sum.”

[636]*636The vital question presented upon this appeal is whether or not the indebtedness represented by the $518 note and secured by the mortgage sought to be foreclosed has been paid. The findings of the trial court are favorable to the respondents as to this question, and in support of these findings" upon this appeal the respondents’ main argument is from the testimony which tends to support the finding. The testimony principally relied upon is that of the defendant, John Kain, Sr., and John Kain, Jr. Upon direct examination, John Kain, Sr., testified that Charles Anderson had requested him to give a new note in place of the original $518 note; that the subject of his indebtedness to Charles Anderson and the security given therefor was discussed, and that Charles Anderson, as agent for A. C. Anderson, had expressed the desire to have chattel security in view of the questionable nature of the mortgage -security upon the homestead upon which final proof had not been made or patent earned. He testified that it was the understanding that the old notes were to be given back and that after the new notes were given,' Anderson, being unable to find the old notes about the store, gave him, at his request, a receipt showing for what the new notes had been given. On cross-examination he testified in answer to questions as follows:

Q. Hid you ever make a demand on Charles Anderson or anyone else for the satisfaction of the real estate mortgage securing exhibit 1?
A. We made a demand on Charles Anderson and he tried to get it for me but said he couldn’t find it, he didn’t know just where it was but he would get it for me and give the notes to me the next time I came in.
Q. You never asked for a satisfaction?
A. When I saw that he could not produce the notes or didn’t produce the notes I asked for a receipt for those notes.
Q. You never asked for a release of the mortgage on this piece of land?
A. I asked for a release of everything and he was to record his new notes and hold them in the place of the old notes. That was the agreement.

There is nothing in the testimony of John Kain, Jr., going to establish an understanding that the mortgage was to be satisfied. His [637]*637testimony fully corroborates that of his father to the effect that it was agreed that the new notes should operate as a renewal of the old notes .and that the old notes should be surrendered up. The testimony above quoted, together with that which goes to establish the understanding with which the new notes were given, does not satisfactorily establish that it was any part of the understanding that when the new notes were given the mortgage was to be satisfied. In the receipts that the Kains took the new notes were referred to as renewals of the $518 note and there is no showing that they ever attempted to have the mortgage satisfied. Even though it were the understanding that the old notes were to be surrendered, it does not necessarily follow that it was also agreed, that the debt was to be regarded as paid. The debt is the principal thing and the notes are but the evidence thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
169 N.W. 501, 40 N.D. 632, 1918 N.D. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-kain-nd-1918.