Belote v. Morrison

8 Minn. 87
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 15, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 8 Minn. 87 (Belote v. Morrison) 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
Belote v. Morrison, 8 Minn. 87 (Mich. 1863).

Opinion

By the Court

Flandrau, J.

The complaint in substance alleges that the Plaintiff was, on the 30th day of January, 1861, seized in fee simple and possessed of certain lands. That he bargained and sold the same to Mary Morrison, and executed and delivered to her a bond for a deed, in the penal sum of five thousand dollars, by which he agreed to convey the premises to her on the payment of a note of*$2,000, executed by her and Wilson C. Morrison, on the same day with the bond, to wit, the 30th of January, 1861, and payable on or before the 26th day of May, 1861, and also on the payment of all taxes, &c., on the premises. That the Defendants have not paid the notenor the taxes; that the Defendants are insolvent; that the bond is recorded, that Mary Morrison claims an equitable interest in the land under the bond ; that the Plain tiff has executed and tendered a deed demanding payment, and asks as relief that the bond be cancelled of record, and delivered up.

The answer set up that the land, on the 26th day of November, 1860, was the property of Wilson C. Morrison ; that a mortgage was upon the same, which was being foreclosed in the United States District Court, and the Defendant, Wilson 0. Morrison, could not meet the demand, bnt applied to the Plaintiff for a loan for that purpose, and they agreed that as security for the loan, the Plaintiff should purchase in the property and fake the master’s deed in his own name, and execute the bond to the Defendant, Mary Morrison, tor a sale upon the repayment of the money, both Defendants giving their note for the amount; that the deed of the master was to be held merely as security for the loan, and that this arrangement was carried into effect. The transaction is set out with great particularity and fullness, showing clearly that the same amounted to a loan, and was so intended by the parties. I merely state [91]*91ao outline in brief of the allegations of the answer. Ihe answer denies that the Plaintiff is entitled to the relief he seeks, and prays judgment for the Defendant.

The answer is demurred to by the Plaintiff.

Before proceeding to an examination of the question of whether the answer makes out a defence, I will state some things that do not appear in the answer. There is no allegation that the sum advanced by Belote was less than the full value of the land he purchased, nor any other circumstance or fact that shows that the Defendants would be in any way injured should the Plaintiff be allowed to retain the land, and the bond be ordered cancelled. The Defendants simply claim that the transaction, although in law is a conditional sale, is in equity a mortgage, and ask that the Plaintiff be turned out of Court. They do not aver tender of payment, or readiness or willingness to-pay the'sum due to the Plaintiff, nor do they a«k any affirmative relief whatever, but simply insist that upon the facts alleged and admitted, the Plaintiff must fail in his action, and as a consequence be driven to some other form of action for his relief.

The Court below decided the demurrer well taken, upon the supposition principally, that the cases of Pross vs. Dahl, 6 Minn., 89, and Yoss vs. De Freudenrich, Id. 95, were in point and controlling. We think the Court misapprehended the effect of those decisions. In the first named case the complaint was very similar to the one in the case at bar. The Defendant demurred to it on the ground that it disclosed a mortgage. We held that it was not a mortgage, and differed widely from such an instrument. That it was a sale of the land conditioned upon the payment of a sum of money. The relation of borrower and lender had never existed between the parties, and no loan had ever been made. The complaint, therefore, was not demurrable. There can be no similarity between that case and the one at bar, where the answer sets up a series of facts showing a loan, and that the Plaintiff never was the real owner of the land he pretended to sell, but received it under an arrangement by which he was to hold it merely as security, and the answer and not the complaint is demurred to.' Had the Defendant in this case demurred to [92]*92the complaint, the case would have presented the same features as that of Pross vs. Dahl.

In the case of Moss vs. Freudenrich, the complaint was in all substantial particulars similar to that in Pross vs. Dahl. The Defendant did not demur, but put in an answer which amounted to a statement that the times were so hard he could not meet his engagements, and asking delay. The answer was demurred to and held bad. It is true that in both these cases the Defendants insisted that the transactions, as alleged in the complaints, amounted in equity to mortgages, but they were in this respect mistaken, because they were in both cases clearly conditional sales, without a single element that goes to make up a mortgage. In the case at bár, however, the Defendant does not claim that the transaction, as disclosed by the complaint, is in equity a mortgage, but sets up facts affirmatively showing, as he claims, that the real agreement is not made apparent by the complaint, but by his facts alleged in the answer, and that such facts constitute a mortgage in equity. The questions in the cases commented upon and the one at bar are widely dissimilar in every respect, and the one can have no influence as authority upon the other.

The Court makes no reference to the case of McClane vs. White, 5 Minn., R., 178. But the counsel for the Defendant does, and endeavors to show that the language of the Court on the subject of the admissibility of parol evidence, to show that a deed, absolute in terms, was intended as a mortgage, is too broad when applied to a Court of Equity. The evidence offered in the case of McClane vs. White, to show that the Plaintiff held the title to the land as ‘security only, although by an absolute conveyance, was shown by this Court to be immaterial, and properly rejected for that reason, because there was no allegation in the answer that the bond was received by the Plaintiff as a security only, but simply that Patrick Wha-len had sold and assigned it to him as security, this Court holding that to make such a defence good, the allegation should be full that the Plaintiff had received and accepted it as security. That to make such a transaction a mortgage security, in contradiction of the written evidence of it, the understanding must have been mutual, and not merely upon the [93]*93part of tbe Defendant, or those under whom the Defendant claimed.

The Judge, who wrote the opinion, in'a further discussion of the question of when such evidence is admissible, cites with approbation the case of Webb vs. Rice, 6 Hill., 219, p. 188, as holding that “such evidence cannot be received in a court of law, nor even in a court of equity, except on the ground of fraud, mistake or surprise in making or executing the instrument,” and also the case of Stevens vs. Cooper, 1 Johns. Ch. R., 429, to the same effect, both of which cases go to the full extent claimed for them.

After a careful examination of the authorities and much discussion, we are satisfied that the language used by the Judge, in McClane vs. White, on page 188 of the case, that parol evidence cannot be .received in a court of equity, except on the ground of fraud, mistake or surprise in making or executing the instrument,”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Minn. 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belote-v-morrison-minn-1863.