Boevink v. Christiaanse

95 N.W. 652, 69 Neb. 256, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 44
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1903
DocketNo. 12,857
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 95 N.W. 652 (Boevink v. Christiaanse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boevink v. Christiaanse, 95 N.W. 652, 69 Neb. 256, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 44 (Neb. 1903).

Opinion

Hastings, C.

This is a suit in equity brought by plaintiff and appellee to establish his right to be subrogated to the ownership of a mortgage executed February 5,1887, by Abraham Christiaanse to the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company upon 80 acres of land in Lancaster county. The original mortgage was for $700. Before its maturity the mortgagor died. At its maturity application was [257]*257made to plaintiff for a loan with which to pay off the amount remaining due, $500. The executrix and plaintiff applied to the county judge for instructions in the matter, and were told by him and by attorney Philpott that she had been authorized to renew the mortgage. Plaintiff advanced the $500. The widow executed to him a note and mortgage, dated May 12, 1892, payable in five years with seven per cent, annual interest. By some mistake it was drawn for $525, and $25 was indorsed upon it the day of its date, leaving the amount $500. The note and mortgage were signed by the widow, as executrix, and purported to be made by such authority. The widow kept the interest paid until some time in 1895. Afterward default was made in the payments of interest and this action was instituted.

The petition alleges that the 80 acres of land covered by the insurance company’s mortgage was the homestead of the mortgagor and of his widow, and was worth less than $2,000 in excess of the incumbrances against it. The petition sets out the making of the .note and mortgage by the widow, as executrix, and the obtaining of money upon it from plaintiff; that the loan was made in good faith and under the supposition of both parties that the executrix was authorized to make it.

Demurrer was filed to the petition on the ground that it did not furnish facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and that the cause of action sued on did not accrue within four years before the commencement of the suit. Leave was taken by plaintiff to amend his petition by interlineation, with leave to defendants to plead by the following Monday. At that time a motion was filed to require the plaintiff to separately state and number the causes of action, and a demurrer to the petition, also, on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; that there was defect of parties defendant, in that the administrator and the executrix, the person alleged to have executed the mortgage, and the insurance company, the original mortgagee, were not [258]*258named parties defendant. The motion and demurrer were, severally overruled. Subsequently, permission seems to have been obtained to renew the demurrer, and it was again overruled. The defendants excepted.

Catharine Christiaanse answered, setting up a life interest-in this land by a devise from the mortgagor. She denied the execution of plaintiff’s note and mortgage by the executrix and denied each allegation of the petition; alleged that plaintiff’s cause of action did not accrue within four years, within five years nor within ten years of the commencement of the action; alleged that no authority was ever given executrix to mortgage the land; that the cause of action did not accrue against the defendant alone but jointly with the personal representative of the mortgagor, his executrix, or her successor; that there was a defect of parties defendant; that the mortgagor’s estate, the mortgagor’s executrix, the person executing the plaintiff’s mortgage, and the Connecticut Mutual Life-Insurance Company, were not made parties; that no attempt was made by plaintiff from May 12, 1892, when he advanced the money, until November 5, 1900, to obtain subrogation to the mortgagee’s right in the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company’s mortgage; that no attempt has been made to collect the money from the mortgagor’s estate though it was amply sufficient to meet the claim; that the estate had been distributed during the eight years plaintiff had failed to assert his rights and that such rights had been waived, and asked judgment for costs. The other defendants answered alleging their descent from the mortgagor and claiming title in fee to the lands. Their answers, in other respects, are substantially in the same terms as the executrix’s. Plaintiff replied by a general denial.

The court at the trial found, that Abraham Christiaanse died seized of the 80 acres of land, and owed the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company $500 on a mortgage covering it, and that defendants were related to him as alleged in plaintiff’s petition; that his personal [259]*259property was all consumed in the payment of liabilities other than the mortgage; that at the time of his death, the land was not worth $2,000 above the mortgage; that his wife was appointed and qualified as executrix; that, when the mortgage came due in 1892, there was nothing-on hand with which to pay except the land; that she, to prevent foreclosure, borrowed from plaintiff $500 which were paid on the mortgage; that plaintiff furnished this money under the advice and direction of the county judge of Lancaster county and J. E. Philpott, attorney, with the express understanding and agreement that he was to have a lien upon the land, and that the land would be charged with the repayment of the money and interest; that he furnished the money to the executrix to prevent sale of the land and save her possession of it, relying upon the statements of the county judge, of the executrix and of Philpott, that he was safe in so doing, and that the mortgage of the executrix to him was valid and authorized; that no order of the county court of Lancaster county was ever made authorizing the executrix to borrow money or execute a mortgage; that the executrix ever since obtaining the money had continued to live upon and enjoy the possession of and the income from the land; that she subsequently resigned as executrix, and at the time of this action there was . neither executor nor administrator, and the estate had been fully administered; that no suit at law was ever brought for the money, and that the note and mortgage by the executrix to the plaintiff were void; that the money obtained by that means from the plaintiff was paid to the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company, and thereupon the insurance company released its mortgage of record; that the interest was paid to plaintiff up to March 12, 1895, and there was due at the date of the decree in this action $739.

The court finds, as conclusions of law, that plaintiff was entitled to be subrogated to the insurance company’s mortgage; to have the release of that mortgage set aside pnd have the same foreclosed for the sum of $739, and [260]*260to recover costs. Such a decree was entered. Supersedeas bond was given and an appeal taken, and the question now is as to plaintiff’s right, upon this record, to 'such relief.

Counsel for defendants say not: First, because plaintiff’s claim of subrogation was barred by the statute of limitations at the time of the commencement of this action, namely, November 5, 1900; Second, because the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company was not made a party defendant; and finally, because the facts do not warrant any such subrogation. As to the first point they cite 24 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 322:

“The general rule is, that the claimant must take steps to enforce his right of subrogation within the period prescribed as a limitation to the enforcement of simple contracts, for this merely equitable right will not be enforced at the expense of a legal one.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 N.W. 652, 69 Neb. 256, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boevink-v-christiaanse-neb-1903.