Brinkman v. McKellip

202 N.W. 125, 199 Iowa 1369
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 17, 1925
StatusPublished

This text of 202 N.W. 125 (Brinkman v. McKellip) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brinkman v. McKellip, 202 N.W. 125, 199 Iowa 1369 (iowa 1925).

Opinion

Arthur, J. —

I. Plaintiff was the owner of a quarter section of land in O’Brien County, Iowa. On the 15th of April,. 1919, plaintiff and defendant entered into a written contract, whereby defendant purchased said land. The consideration was $52,000. The contract provided for a down payment of $1,500, which was made. The contract further provided for. the payment of $10,500 on the 1st day of March, 1920, and said payment was made. Resting on said land was a first mortgage for $6,000, executed by plaintiff’s, immediate grantor, Phares Sehoeh, to the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, dated February 8, 1917,-bearing 5 per cent interest, due in 5 *1370 years. Also upon said land was a second mortgage for purchase price, executed by D. H. Brinkman to Phares Schoch, for $20,200, given February 28, 1918, due March 1, 1928, bearing 5 per cent. In said mortgage it is provided that the grantee has the privilege of paying first mortgage, and to have a new mortgage for the amount of the first and second mortgages. The contract- provided:

.“Second party [McKellip] to assume mortgage-or mortgages in the sum of $26,200, together with interest thereon at the rate, of five per cent from and after March 1, 1920, which said mortgage or mortgages shall not become due prior to March 1, 1928, and with optional payment privilege on interest pay dates. Six thousand dollars to run for a period of two years from and after March 1, 1920, with interest at the rate of five per cent per annum, payable annually, from March 1, 1920, and on March 1, 1922, when same became due, second parties ,are to give back to first party a mortgage on the south half of said southeast quarter of Section 4 — 97—42, in the sum of $6,000 in payment thereof, same to become due on March 1, 1930, and draw interest at the rate of five per cent from and after March 1, 1922.”

The contract further provided for the execution of mortgages by McKellip to secure other payments on the north half of said quarter, and for renewal of prior mortgages, etc. The contract further provided that grantor was to deliver warranty deed and abstract showing good and marketable title to the south half of said-quarter on March 1, 1922, and to the north half of said quarter on March 1, 1923.

About ten days or two weeks prior to March 1, 1920, when, by the terms of the contract, the payment of $10,500 was to be made, McKellip asked to' see the abstract of the land, which Brinkman produced; and McKellip, accompanied by Brinkman, took the abstract to John McCandless, an attorney of Sheldon, Iowa, for examination. McCandless examined the abstract, and, in the presence of both parties, told McKellip that the abstract did not disclose the due date of the $6,000 mortgage to the Northwestern Mutual Insurance Company, and approved the abstract as showing good and merchantable title, with this exception. Thereupon, Brinkman and McKellip had a conversation with *1371 reference to this defect, in which conversation Brinkman told McKellip, in substance, that he would see to it that the $6,000 mortgage was renewed so.as to become due in 1928, and would pay all expenses incident thereto. After examination of the abstract by McCandless, and after the conversation above related, McKellip made the payment of $10,500, and thereafter, on March 1, 1920, went into possession of the land. Sometime later, McKellip sold the land. The person to whom McKellip sold the land failed to carry out the contract, and forfeited a $2,500 payment, and the contract was canceled, McKellip retaining possession of the land. Later, McKellip leased the land for a period expiring March 1, 1923.

On March 1, 1922, Brinkman tendered a deed to the south half of the quarter, as provided by the contract, and an abstract. McKellip refused to accept the deed, assigning as his reason that the abstract did not comply with the contract, in that it did not show good and merchantable title. The only defect complained of was the failure of the abstract to show when the insurance company mortgage would be due. On March 3, 1922, McKellip served notice of rescission and demand for return of the payments made under the contract, less the reasonable rental value of the premises from the time he went into possession up to March 1, 1922. The notice also recited that McKellip surrendered possession of the premises. Thereupon, this suit was instituted, to enforce specific performance of the contract.

II. The only objection urged to the abstract, when it was examined by McCandless shortly before March 1, 1920, was that it did not disclose when the $6,000 mortgage held by the insurance company would be due. The abstract, when delivered with the deed to the south half of said quarter section, on March 1, 1922, was the same in this respect as it was in 1920, and constituted the principal reason for rejecting same. On this defect in the abstract, and some minor objections, defendant predicates his right to terminate and rescind his contract of purchase, and recover payments made.

The evidence is voluminous, and it would not be useful or practicable to set it forth in detail. "We have carefully examined the entire record. There is some conflict in the testimony as to whether an agreement was reached between the parties *1372 when McCandless examined the abstract, in February, 1920, in regard to what would be done about extension of the $6,000 mortgage. In this connection it is pertinent to consider a conversation between the parties which the record shows took place at the time the contract was drawn. The contract did not, in terms, describe the $6,000 first mortgage to the insurance company and the $20,200. second and purchase-money mortgage. The recital in the contract with reference to these mortgages was:

“Second party to assume mortgage or mortgages in the sum of $26,200, together with interest thereon at. the rate of five per cent from and after March 1, 1920, which said mortgage O'r mortgages shall not become due prior to March 1, 1928.”

The reason for not more definite wording of the above quoted assumption in the contract appears in the record. Brink-man testified that he stated to McKellip, at the time the contract was drawn, that .he had bought the land under a contract in regard to the $6,000 insurance company mortgage that became due in 1922; that Schoeh, from whom he bought the land, had the privilege of paying the $6,000 mortgage and receiving a mortgage for $26,200, to cover the amount of the $6,000 mortgage and the $20,200 mortgage, or he could enlarge the insurance company mortgage and reduce his mortgage, or he could extend or renew the insurance company mortgage. This same matter is taken care of in the contract in suit, without stating the particular reasons therefor. Brinkman says that, at the time the contract was drawn, he showed McKellip his contract with Schoch, containing the matters which he told McKellip. McKellip denied seeing the Schoch contract. There is some conflict in the testimony as to what occurred, and whether or not an agreement was reached between Brinkman and McKéllip in regard to the $6,000 mortgage at the time McCandless examined the abstract, shortly before March 1, 1920. The abstract showed date of the mortgage to be February 8, 1917, but did not show when it would become due. Under the contract, “the mortgage or mortgages” therein mentioned were not to become due, for McKellip’s assumption of them, until March 1, 1928.

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202 N.W. 125, 199 Iowa 1369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brinkman-v-mckellip-iowa-1925.