Brinckley v. Sager

286 N.W. 570, 232 Wis. 88, 1939 Wisc. LEXIS 251
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 286 N.W. 570 (Brinckley v. Sager) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brinckley v. Sager, 286 N.W. 570, 232 Wis. 88, 1939 Wisc. LEXIS 251 (Wis. 1939).

Opinion

Martin, J.

On July 21, 1934, plaintiffs obtained a judgment of foreclosure for the sum of $2,796.75, damages and costs. The amount of the unpaid taxes was not included in the judgment. The amount due for taxes does not appear. There is no bill of exceptions. A foreclosure sale was had of the mortgaged premises on September 18, 1935. Plaintiffs bid in the property at this sale for the sum of $1,600. *90 They then moved for a confirmation of the sale and for a judgment for the deficiency in the sum of $1,429.79. It appears that upon the hearing some testimony was offered as tO' the market value of the premises at the time of and immediately before the sale, and on October 12, 1935, the court filed a written decision, the material part of which is as follows:

“Testimony was adduced on the hearing of the motion to confirjtn the sale to establish the following facts:
“1. The market value of the premises at the time of the execution of the mortgage.
“2. The market value of the premises at the time and immediately before the sale.
“3. The actual value of the premises for the purposes said property could be used.
“4. The effect of the economic conditions existing at and prior to the sale upon the market value of the premises.
“There was the usual confusion among the experts called to testify as to the value and there is entered on the record diametrically opposed views and greatly divergent opinions. If the testimony adduced in favor of the plaintiff is to be believed in toto, I would be forced to the conclusion that the property has no value, market or actual, and no potentialities.
“The mortgage in the instant case was executed after the foreclosure of another mortgage on the same premises running in favor of the Seymour State Bank, and in connection with the testimony of those individuals, it is interesting to note that in the first foreclosure sale held on the 5th day of March, 1918, the premises were struck off to the Seymour State Bank as the highest bidder at the then foreclosure sale at the sum of three thousand dollars. There is no showing made that the then mortgagor was uncollectible, but on the contrary an intimation at the hearing in this case was to' the effect that the then mortgagor was collectible. It is, therefore, utterly impossible to reconcile the testimony offered by the plaintiffs that the property is now practically worthless and that their bid of sixteen hundred dollars was too high and from which they would like to be relieved and the accepted bid of three thousand dollars at the foreclosure sale in *91 March, 1918. The further claim that there is no difference in the market value of the premises now and in April, 1918, when the mortgage in the instant case was executed, makes their testimony all the more incomprehensive.”

The court then refers to the testimony of two disinterested witnesses offered by defendants as to the market and actual value of the mortgaged premises in question. One of said witnesses fixed a value of $4,017.50, the other, a value of $5,742.50. In the absence of their testimony we have no means of knowing how these values were arrived at. However, the trial court makes this statement:

“It is utterly impossible to be anything but ridiculous in attempting to arrive at what is strictly called present market value of real estate because the market for a long time has been so depressed that one can only arrive at potentialities or actual values of the property, having in mind the purposes for which the property can be used in normal times. There is no presumption that the property sold for its fair market value at the sale but on the contrary the statute provides that no such presumption shall be indulged in.”

The court then concludes as follows :

“I have come to the conclusion that the highest actual value that can be placed upon the premises at the present time is forty-five hundred dollars, and that the lowest is three thousand dollars, and that a fair upset-price to be fixed is the sum of thirty-five hundred dollars.
“The sum of thirty-five hundred dollars will, therefore, be credited upon the mortgage debt. . . '. ”

On the same day the court entered an order for resale in which order the court made the following finding:

“1. That the highest market value of the premises at the present time is forty-five hundred dollars, and that the lowest market value is three thousand dollars.
“2. That the sum of sixteen hundred dollars bid at the sale is unfairly inadequate and inequitable.
“3. That the sum of thirty-five hundred dollars be credited against the mortgage debt.”

*92 Continuing, the order provides:

“It is hereby ordered that the sum of thirty-five hundred dollars be credited upon the mortgage debt or that in the alternative a resale of the premises may be had at the instance of the plaintiffs on or before sixty days from the date hereof.”

The appeal from the order of October 12, 1935, not having-been taken within six months from the date of the entry of said order, that appeal must be dismissed. See sec. 274.01, Stats.

A resale of the mortgaged premises was had on February 1, 1936. The date of the first publication of this sale was on December 19, 1935, more than sixty days from the date of the order for a resale. Upon the resale plaintiffs again bid in the property, but this time at $1,500. So far as the record discloses, no further action was had until December 31, 1938, on which day plaintiffs moved for a confirmation of the second sale and for a deficiency judgment in the sum of $1,587.68. On said date the court entered an order confirming said second sale, also denying any deficiency judgment and further directing:

“That the sum of thirty-five hundred dollars, a reasonably fair value of the premises at the time of the sale, be credited against the mortgage debt.”

The apparent reason for the order confirming the second sale, denying any deficiency judgment, and ordering that the sum of $3,500 be credited against the mortgage debt, is disclosed by the following language of the trial court’s decision filed in connection with the entry of said order:

“The price bid at the first sale was $1,600 and the price bid at the second sale was $1,500. The second sale was held on February 1, 1936, and now almost three years after said sale and in total disregard of the court’s order that the option of resale be exercised within sixty days, the plaintiffs now appear asking that the sale be confirmed and that a deficiency judgment in a large amount be entered in favor of the plaintiffs.
*93 “The sale will be confirmed and the sum of $3,500, a reasonably fair value of the premises at the time of the sale be credited against the mortgage debt.”

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Bluebook (online)
286 N.W. 570, 232 Wis. 88, 1939 Wisc. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brinckley-v-sager-wis-1939.