Baird v. Chamberlain

236 N.W. 724, 60 N.D. 784, 1931 N.D. LEXIS 232
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 22, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 236 N.W. 724 (Baird v. Chamberlain) 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
Baird v. Chamberlain, 236 N.W. 724, 60 N.D. 784, 1931 N.D. LEXIS 232 (N.D. 1931).

Opinion

Birdzell, J.

. This is a foreclosure action brought by the receiver of the Williams County State Bank to foreclose two mortgages executed by the defendants which were alleged to have belonged to the bank when it passed into receivership. The defendants answered setting up the statute of limitations as to a portion of the indebtedness for which one of the mortgages is alleged to stand as security, an accord and satisfaction as to another portion, and they claim a superior and paramount interest in the property to that of the plaintiff as a mortgagee. They also assert, as to one mortgage, that it was executed without any present consideration and for the purpose of enabling the mortgagee bank to negotiate the same to the War Finance Corporation so that the proceeds might be used to liquidate the indebtedness of the defendant Thomas Chamberlain to the Williams County State Bank; that such representations were made by the president of the latter hank and that they were *786 false and fraudulent and made for the purpose of obtaining from the defendants additional security for their existing indebtedness. The answer also puts in issue the title of the bank to the notes, pleads the bankruptcy of the defendant Thomas Chamberlain subsequent to the execution of the notes and mortgages and sets up that the property was the homestead of both defendants; also, their acquisition of the property subsequent to the mortgages in question and after the discharge in bankruptcy through repurchase from a first mortgagee who had acquired the property by sheriff’s deed on the foreclosure of its first mortgage.

In the trial court a judgment was entered giving a personal judgment against the defendant Armittie Chamberlain for the full amount of the mortgage indebtedness and costs and directing the sale of all her interest in the mortgaged premises. From this judgment both the plaintiff and the defendant Armittie Chamberlain appeal, the plaintiff claiming that the mortgages should be adjudged liens on the real estate as to the interests of both defendants and the defendant claiming that her defenses were established upon the trial and that the action should therefore be in all things dismissed. The essential facts may be stated as follows:

On December 1, 1918, the defendants Thomas Chamberlain and Armittie Chamberlain, husband and wife, executed three notes of $40 each, payable to the Bankers Mortgage Company of Williston, North Dakota. These were commission notes for services in securing a $2,000 loan. They fell due, one on the 1st day of December, 1921, one December’ 1, 1922, and one December 1, 1923, and were secured by a real estate mortgage executed on the same day. The notes bore an unsigned indorsement without recourse in the name of the payee and were stamped on their face “Collateral to Bankers Mortgage Company” and were in the bank when the receiver took charge. The Bankers Mortgage Company at that time was indebted to the Williams County State Bank in the sum of $2,500 and these notes were a portion of the collateral held as security therefor.

On October 26, 1921, the defendant Thomas Chamberlain executed a chattel mortgage, covering 42 head of cattle, ■ 11 horses, farm machinery and crops, to the Williams County State Bank to secure notes described as follows: One note dated October 26, 1921 for $3,135 *787 •due October 1, 1922; one note dated October 26, 1921 for $270 due October 1, 1922; and one note dated October 26, 1921, for $245 due November 15, 1922. These three notes are again described in a short form real estate mortgage dated December 29, 1921, which mortgage was executed by the defendants Thomas Chamberlain and Armittie Chamberlain. The first two of these notes were exhibits in the case and are signed by the above named defendants. They are marked “Renewed 11-22-22” and the renewal notes, also in evidence, are signed by Thomas Chamberlain alone. The real estate mortgage contains this covenant and recital “Mortgagor hereby covenants with mortgagee that mortgagor is now seized in fee simple of said premises, that mortgagee shall enjoy same without lawful disturbance and mortgagor warrants same to mortgagee against every person lawfully claiming same. Subject to first mortgage of $2,000.” All these real estate mortgages were recorded, so that there appeared to be a first mortgage of $2,000, a second mortgage securing the $40 commission notes, and a third mortgage securing the notes last above described. The first mortgage was assigned to the Marquette Trust Company of Minneapolis. It was foreclosed and a sheriff’s deed issued to the trust company on May 19, 1925. In November, 1923, the defendant Thomas Chamberlain was adjudged a bankrupt and was discharged May 10, 1924. During all these proceedings the Chamberlains were in possession of the land and by deed dated November 27, 1925, the Marquette Trust Company conveyed the premises to “Thomas Chamberlain and Armittie Chamberlain, his wife, and to the survivor of said parties and the heirs and assigns of the survivor, as joint tenants and not as tenants in common.”

It seems that during 1923 and succeeding years a number of banks that were creditors of the Williams County State Dank “pooled” their interests as creditors and combined for the purpose of collecting collateral. At that time the First National Bank of Minneapolis held the renewal notes, which were dated in November, 1922, and due in October, 1923, for $3,135, $365, and $100, respectively, representing the indebtedness secured by the chattel mortgage and which purports to be further secured by the short form real estate mortgage. One Drews of Minneapolis was employed by these creditor banks, including the First National Bank of Minneapolis, for the purpose of collecting the collateral, and one Berry was similarly engaged under Drews’ *788 direction. Shortly after the closing of the Williams County State Bank in the fall of 1923, Drews made an attempt to collect the Chamberlain notes, but nothing was paid on them. Chamberlain, however, signified his willingness to surrender the cattle and he claims that he did so under an arrangement whereby he would keep them on the ranch and feed and care for them at a certain rate. Drews disputes that any definite arrangement was made with reference to taking over the cattle and paying for their keep and testifies that Berry had no authority to make any such arrangement. The cattle and horses were later, with Drews’ knowledge, sold at Williston for a feed bill and also for taxes. They were bid in by Chamberlain and a year or more later they were sold on the market for approximately $4,700.

In the appeal of the plaintiff it is contended that under the covenants of warranty contained in the mortgages executed by the Chamberlains, the after-acquired title obtained through the mortgagee who foreclosed the first mortgage inured to the benefit of the mortgagee under the subsequent mortgages and that the lien of these subsequent mortgages was in no way affected by the bankruptcy proceedings in which Thomas Chamberlain obtained his discharge. Since the decision of this matter in the trial court this court has passed upon both these auestions in the case of Merchants Nat. Bank v. Miller, 59 N. D. 273, 229 N. W. 357. The covenants of warranty in the mortgages in question are in all substantial respects identical with the covenants of warranty considered in the case above cited.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
236 N.W. 724, 60 N.D. 784, 1931 N.D. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baird-v-chamberlain-nd-1931.