Bartleson v. Munson

117 N.W. 512, 105 Minn. 348, 1908 Minn. LEXIS 531
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 7, 1908
DocketNos. 15,737-(208)
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 117 N.W. 512 (Bartleson v. Munson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bartleson v. Munson, 117 N.W. 512, 105 Minn. 348, 1908 Minn. LEXIS 531 (Mich. 1908).

Opinion

LiLIOTT, J.

On July 1, 1905, George R. Robinson, the owner of a farm of one tndred sixty acres of land situated in Hennepin county, and his ife, Florence Robinson, mortgaged the same to Helen Conhaim to cure the payment of the sum of $3,400. George R. Robinson died ovember 17, 1905. Conhaim foreclosed the mortgage, and on iptember 18, 1906, the property was sold to her in one parcel for ,734:75. November 23, 1906, Conhaim assigned her sheriff's cer[350]*350tificate to Fred Hodgdon. George R. Robinson’s will was duly admit ted to probate, and on January 29, 1906, letters testamentary wer issued to his daughter, Georgia Robinson. On May 1, 1906, the sout' half of the farm was assigned to Florence Robinson as her homesteac March 23, 1907, the executrix under authority from the probate corn conveyed the north eighty acres of the farm to her sister, Maud Robin son, for a consideration of $250. March 25, 1907, Maud mortgage the north half and her remainder interest in the south half to Georg T. Halbert to secure payment of a note for $3,500. This mortgag was recorded March 30. In November, 1906, Frank R. Bowler se cured a judgment on the mechanic’s lien against a part of the pren-ises. September 16, 1907, Florence Robinson, the widow, mortgage her life estate in the south half of the land to the appellant Parson to secure a note for $8,402.82, and the mortgage was recorded Sej tember 18,' 1907. September 3, 1907, Maud Robinson mortgaged th north half of the land to Charles J. Bartleson to secure the paymer óf a note for $80, and this mortgage was recorded on Septembe 18, 1907.

No redemption was made by any one as owner from the foreclosurl sale under the Conhaim mortgage. September 18, 1907, the last dal of the year allowed by the statute to owners to redeem, HalberS Parsons, and Bartleson each filed with the register of deeds due anl proper notice of his intention to redeem from the foreclosure sale s| a creditor having a lien upon the premises by virtue of his respecti-vl mortgage. On the same day Bowler filed a like notice of intentiol to redeem under the mechanic’s lien judgment. September 23, i90'| Bowler, the senior lien creditor, redeemed and succeeded to all cl I-Iodgdon’s rights in the land. On September 28, 1907, within tl'l second five days, Halbert redeemed by paying $4,151 to the sheri I of Hennepin county, and received from him a certificate of redem™ tion, which was on September 30, 1907, duly filed and recorded. Ol October 7, 1907, Bartleson redeemed by paying $7,788.63 to the sherij of Plennepin county, and received from him a certificate of redemu tion, which was duly filed and recorded. On September 24, Parsorj paid Bowler the sum of $4,125, and Bowler executed and delivere to Parsons a certificate of redemption, which was filed and recordej on the same day.

[351]*351The consideration for the $3,500 note and mortgage given by Maud Robinson to Halbert was $250 in cash and the execution and delivery to her by Halbert of his negotiable promissory note for $3,-250. When Maud Robinson gave Halbert the $3,500 mortgage, she entered into a written contract which recited that-Halbert had loaned her $250, to be used in purchasing the eighty acres of land in question other than the homestead eighty, subject to the Conhaim mortgage, which had been foreclosed, and that Maud Robinson should give to Halbert a mortgage on the lands to secure the payment of a note for $3,500. Halbert agreed to take steps to have the owners redeem the premises from the foreclosure sale; but, if no such redemption was made, he was to redeem as a lien creditor. If by this means he acquired title, the note and -mortgage given him by Maud Robinson for $3,500 was to be fully paid and satisfied thereby. If the owners redeemed, the mortgage to Halbert was to stand as security for the $250 and other sums actually advanced, and the $3,250 was to be applied on the payment of the $3,500 note. If Halbert acquired title by redemption, or if the note and mortgage for $3,500 was paid by the redemption over Halbert’s redemption by a subsequent lien creditor, Halbert was then to pay the $3,250 note .which he had given Maud Robinson.

Bartleson, claiming that Parsons had not redeemed, because his payment to Bowler was out of order, his lien being junior to that of Halbert, and the subsequent tender to Halbert insufficient in amount, commenced an action in forcible entry and unlawful detain-er against Munson and Parsons in the municipal court of the city of Minneapolis. When this action came on for hearing, Munson and Parsons appeared and entered pleas of not guilty. After some evidence had been taken it appeared that title to real estate was involved, and the case was thereupon certified to the district court as required by the statute. In that court the defendants moved to dismiss the action on the ground that the court had no jurisdiction. The motion was denied, and, a'witness being called by the plaintiff, the defendant objected to any evidence being received on the ground that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The complaint was then amended, and, after a similar objection to the reception of evidence under the amended complaint had been made [352]*352and overruled, the trial proceeded, and resulted in an order for judgment in favor of the plaintiff.

The appellants contend that the action should have been dismissed' in the municipal court, because an action of forcible entry and unlawful detainer will lie only when the relation of landlord and tenant exists, or has existed, and is the foundation of the action. Ordinarily the parties to such an action stand in that relation, but the statute expressly authorizes the proceeding “when any person holds over lands or tenements after a sale thereof on an execution or judgment, or on-foreclosure of a mortgage by advertisement, and expiration of the-time for redemption.” Section 4038, R. L,. 1905. The Conhaim-mortgage was foreclosed by advertisement. The time for redemption had expired, and Munson, who had been in possession during the year,, was holding over. Munson is certainly within the express provision of the statute. Parsons does not seem to have made any effort to-have the action in the municipal court dismissed on the ground that he was not in possession of the_ premises when the action was commenced. It appears that on the day after the action was commenced, Parsons, claiming that he had redeemed, took the possession of the premises from Munson and made some arrangement with Munson by which the latter was to remain on the land as the tenant of Parsons. The court found that on the trial in the municipal court Parsons admitted “the allegations- of said complaint respecting the possession.” He was in possession at the time of the trial in the district court, and offered “evidence for the purpose of establishing title to said real estate and the right to hold and possess the same in himself.” The action was properly transferred to the district court, and was there tried anew. It was then, to all intents and purposes, an action in ejectment. Ferguson v. Kumler, 25 Minn. 183. Parsons was then in possession, and asserting the right to possession on the ground that he was the legal owner of the land. His rights were litigated in that action with his consent, and it is now immaterial whether he was in possession of the land when the proceedings in the municipal court were instituted.

There is no merit in the claim that the amended complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action in ejectment. The point is that the complaint alleged that George R. Robinson was the [353]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 N.W. 512, 105 Minn. 348, 1908 Minn. LEXIS 531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bartleson-v-munson-minn-1908.