Bowles v. Reisinger

212 N.W. 178, 170 Minn. 147, 1927 Minn. LEXIS 1386
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 4, 1927
DocketNo. 25,746.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 212 N.W. 178 (Bowles v. Reisinger) 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
Bowles v. Reisinger, 212 N.W. 178, 170 Minn. 147, 1927 Minn. LEXIS 1386 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

Taylge, C.

Plaintiff appeals from a judgment in favor of defendant Garlson. The facts are not in dispute; the controversy is concerning the conclusions to he drawn therefrom.

Defendant Reisinger executed a mortgage to plaintiff upon certain real estate in the city of Winnipeg in the province of Manitoba in 1915 to secure the payment of the sum of $4,575 borrowed from plaintiff. No promissory note was given for the debt, but Reisinger covenanted in the mortgage to pay the interest thereon and a small instalment of the principal semi-annually, and to pay the balance *148 thereof on January 1, 1918. It was stipulated in the mortgage that if a default occurred in any of the payments the entire principal should thereupon become due and payable. After executing the mortgage Reisinger conveyed an undivided one-half of the property to defendant Carlson. When the mortgage became due an agreement was executed extending the time of payment until January 1, 1923. This agreement recited the conveyance of an undivided one-half interest in the property from Reisinger to Carlson, and that a balance of $3,624.95 remained unpaid on the mortgage. In this agreement Reisinger and Carlson jointly covenanted to pay the interest on this balance semi-annually, to pay $500 of the principal in 1919, and to pay the remainder thereof on January 1, 1923. In this .agreement it was stipulated that if the

“parties of the second part (Reisinger and Carlson) shall make default in payment of the interest secured by the said mortgage or any part thereof or in the performance of any of the covenants contained in said mortgage, the extension hereby given shall, if the Party of the First Part (plaintiff) so elect, become void and the said principal money and every part thereof shall become due and payable, and the said Party of the First Part shall be at liberty to take any proceedings he may see fit for the purpose of enforcing payment of the said principal and interest, or of the interest only, and performance of the said covenants in like manner as if these presents had not been executed.”

Default was made in the payment of the interest and plaintiff employed an attorney to enforce collection. On December 8, 1921, this attorney wrote a letter to Reisinger in which he recited the defaults and the covenants in the mortgage and in the extension agreement, and notified him that the plaintiff

“has and does hereby elect and does hereby declare said extension agreement as void and of no effect, and the principal money and every part thereof, together with interest thereon as due and payable, and does hereby demand of you the payment of the sum of $3,343.69, that being the sum due at the date hereof.”

*149 Or the same date he wrote a letter to Carlson in which he recited the defaults and the covenants made by him in the extension agreement and notified him that the plaintiff

“has elected and does hereby elect to declare, and does hereby declare the principal money and every part thereof, together with interest thereon, as due and payable, and does hereby demand of you the payment of the sum of $3,343.69, that being the sum due at the date hereof.”

On December 12, 1921, plaintiff commenced an action against Eeisinger and Carlson to recover the sum of $3,343.69, the amount claimed to be due. The complaint sets forth the execution of the mortgage and the covenants of Eeisinger contained therein; the execution of the extension agreement and the covenants of Eeisinger and Carlson contained therein; the defaults; and that on December 8, 1921, plaintiff had given the defendants and each of them notice of the defaults,

“and declaring the extension heretofore given by said plaintiff in the payment of the principal sum due under said mortgage as null and void, and declaring the principal money and every part thereof as due and payable, and demanding payment of said defendants and each of them.”

The defendants interposed a joint answer in which they admitted the mortgage, the extension agreement, the default, the giving of the notice and the amount due. They then set forth that the mortgage was given in Canada upon real estate in Canada and was governed by the laws of Canada; that under the laws of Canada, if a default occurs in making a payment due under a mortgage by the terms of which the whole principal becomes due by reason of such default, the mortgagor may pay the amount in arrears together with accrued costs at any time before sale or foreclosure, and shall thereupon be relieved from the acceleration of the time of payment of the money not due by lapse of time; and that they had tendered to plaintiff the amount in arrears with costs and had paid it to the clerk of the court. They denied that plaintiff had declared the extension agreement *150 void and alleged that lie bad affirmed it by suit against Carlson and that it

“is now and at all times since tbe making thereof has been in full force and effect and that tbe principal sum of said mortgage * * * will not be due and payable until January 1st, 1923.”

They asked judgment for dismissal of tbe action. Thereafter and on January 20, 1922, tbe parties stipulated that, in consideration of tbe payment of tbe amount tendered by the defendants,

“tbe above entitled action is dismissed without prejudice, and that tbe legal status of tbe mortgage and extension, agreement referred to in tbe pleadings in said action be the same as it was prior to tbe bringing of said action.”

When tbe mortgage became due by tbe terms of tbe extension agreement it was not paid, and in January, 1921, plaintiff brought this action to recover tbe amount thereof from defendants under tbe covenant in that agreement. Reisinger made no defense. Carlson answered alleging that by tbe notice of December 8, 1921, plaintiff bad declared tbe extension agreement void and bad thereby released him from any and all liability thereunder. Tbe court held that tbe notice of December 8, 1921, annulled tbe extension agreement and released Carlson therefrom and rendered judgment in bis favor. Plaintiff appealed therefrom.

We have stated tbe transactions chronologically, and probably at an undue length, to show clearly the facts from which tbe parties draw their diverse conclusions, quoting those portions of tbe several documents bearing most directly upon tbe question in dispute.

Carlson was not a party to tbe covenant in tbe original mortgage, but joined in tbe covenant in tbe extension agreement made after be became owner of an undivided half interest in tbe property. Unless liable on that instrument be is not liable at all. He does not question tbe validity of tbe extension agreement as originally executed, nor that be became liable thereon for tbe debt tbe payment of which was extended. His claim is that plaintiff canceled and annulled that agreement and thereby annulled bis covenant to pay.

*151 The original mortgage contained an acceleration clause which provided that upon default in any payment all deferred payments should become immediately due and payable.

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Related

In re Estate of Anderson
273 N.W. 89 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
212 N.W. 178, 170 Minn. 147, 1927 Minn. LEXIS 1386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowles-v-reisinger-minn-1927.