Anderson v. Olson

260 N.W. 407, 65 N.D. 550, 1935 N.D. LEXIS 140
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 2, 1935
DocketFile No. 6322.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 260 N.W. 407 (Anderson v. Olson) 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. Olson, 260 N.W. 407, 65 N.D. 550, 1935 N.D. LEXIS 140 (N.D. 1935).

Opinion

*552 Burr, J.

This is an action to. quiet title to land — plaintiff claiming he is the sole owner, and demanding that he recover possession and have judgment against defendant Olson for the value of the use and occupation during the year 1933.

Defendant Fred J. Olson alleges: He purchased these premises from the plaintiff under a warranty deed wherein the plaintiff covenanted he was “well seized in fee;” that the plaintiff did not have good title to the premises; that on June 30, 1933 the plaintiff obtained a sheriff’s deed under a foreclosure of the purchase price mortgage; but before the expiration of the period of redemption agreed to extend the *553 period of redemption until he could furnish good title and to accept $1,100 for his interest; that the defendant is ready and able and willing to pay the $1,100 as soon as the plaintiff furnishes good title. As a counterclaim he alleges he made improvements worth $1,000 and' offers to surrender the premises to the plaintiff upon the repayment of the amount of the purchase price paid and the value of the improvements made.

Plaintiff replies that any claim which the defendant may have for damages is res judicata, having been determined in a prior action.

The trial court quieted title in the plaintiff upon condition that he pay to the defendant the sum of $555 “as and for damages for breach of covenant for title.” Judgment was entered accordingly and plaintiff appeals, demanding a trial de novo.

This is not an action to recover the purchase price. ' In such case the defendant could recoup because of partial failure of consideration resulting from a defect of title. Williams v. Neely (C. C. A. 8th) 134 F. 1, 5, 69 L.R.A. 232; Davis v. Bean, 114 Mass. 358; Union Nat. Bank v. Pinner, 25 N. J. Eq. 495; Youngman v. Linn, 52 Pa. 413, 416. The possibility of such an action ended with the determination of the foreclosure suit, hereinafter set forth.

The facts are practically undisputed. One Krogstad received a patent to the land from the United States and owned the premises when he died. By final decree of distribution the premises were conveyed to his heirs as follows: To his widow, Anna J. Krogstad, an undivided 1/3 interest; to each of their children, Caroline, Christian, Anna, Bessie, Martin, and Eliza, an undivided 1/9 interest. Apparently all this was prior to Jxdy 16, 1909. On July 16, 1909 the widow and the daughters Anna, Eliza, and Bessie conveyed their entire interests to the plaintiff by warranty deed. The sons, Christian and Martin, died intestate, unmarried, and withoxxt issue, in 1902 and 1904 respectively, and their mother was their sole heir. The plaintiff claims their interest in, through, and by this deed. The daughter Caroline died and her undivided 1/9 interest was decreed to her heirs as follows — to her husband Charles an undivided 1/27, and to each of her children Otto, Walter, and George an undivided 2/81 interest. Thereafter the husband Charles and the sons Otto and Walter conveyed their interests to the plaintiff. No conveyance of any interest of George was ever made *554 to the plaintiff. The plaintiff went into possession of these premises July 16, 1909. He cultivated the land, paid all of the taxes that were assessed and levied against it, and continued to reside thereon openly, notoriously, and adversely to all other persons. March 26, 1928 the plaintiff sold the land to the defendant Fred Olson for $7,250, executing and delivering a warranty deed with covenant of seisin.

There was a mortgage for $1,500 on the land. The defendant paid to the plaintiff $2,250 in cash, assumed the payment of this $1,500 mortgage and gave a second mortgage on the land to secure the remainder of the purchase price — $3,500. In this mortgage Olson agreed to pay the taxes, the interest upon both mortgages as they became due, and, that if he defaulted therein, the plaintiff could declare the whole sum due and payable and could proceed to collect by a sale of the premises. Olson further agreed to insure the buildings for at least $3,000 with loss payable to the plaintiff, and to deliver the policies to the plaintiff as further security and until the mortgage was fully paid and satisfied. The defendant then went into possession of the land in 1928 and has remained in possession ever since. The only payments which the defendant made after the receipt of the warranty deed were one year’s interest of between $50 or $60, one year’s taxes —$94.58—$1,400 which he received in settlement of a policy of insurance upon the barn on the premises which burned to the ground, and an additional $100. The defendant made improvements upon the place and farmed the land during all of those years — sometimes making a net profit and sometimes taking a loss. There is testimony to the effect that the fair, annual cash rental of the land was $3 per acre though defendant says cash rent for land was $1 per acre in places adjacent thereto.

Plaintiff commenced foreclosure proceedings by advertisement, which proceedings were enjoined and the plaintiff was compelled to proceed by action. In that action the plaintiff set forth Olson’s failure to pay the taxes and the interest on both mortgages, declared the whole sum of the second mortgage due and payable and demanded judgment of foreclosure. Olson answered admitting the execution of the notes and second mortgage; but claimed they had been obtained by fraud and misrepresentation. At the same time he set forth a *555 counterclaim, based on tbe same state of facts claiming damages in the sum of $2,500.

The District Court found in favor of the plaintiff, adjudged foreclosure, and the premises were sold on execution sale March 16, 1932. No appeal was taken-by Olson, and the sheriff’s deed was duly executed after the expiration of the year of redemption.

Olson claims that just prior to the expiration of the year of redemption Anderson agreed to get marketable title, give Olson an additional year to redeem and accept $1,100 at that time for his interest in the land.

In August-, 1933, Olson brought- action against Anderson praying for an injunction preventing Anderson from ousting him from the land until Olson could complete negotiations in progress to mortgage the land in the sum of $3,965 out of which to pay Anderson $2,485 admitted to be due him and $1,480 to one Ellingrud. In November 1933 the parties stipulated to dismiss this injunctional proceeding “with prejudice and without costs to either party.” Thereupon the plaintiff commenced this action to quiet title.

The demand for right to redeem is abandoned by defendant. He admits he cannot redeem, and at the same time insist on rescission; but urges the claimed extension merely to show that as he was given an extra year and yet cannot redeem he may now rescind.

Defendant’s claim of right to rescind is not well founded. Assuming, without deciding, that one may rescind under similar circumstances, rescission to be effective must be promptly exercised upon the discovery of the facts giving grounds for rescission. The defendant learned of the defect in the title in the fall of 1933. However, he still remained in possession of the premises. In December, 1933, he made an application for a loan to the Federal Land Bank.

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Bluebook (online)
260 N.W. 407, 65 N.D. 550, 1935 N.D. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-olson-nd-1935.