Brown v. Leeak

203 N.W. 185, 52 N.D. 398, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 34
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 11, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 203 N.W. 185 (Brown v. Leeak) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Leeak, 203 N.W. 185, 52 N.D. 398, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 34 (N.D. 1925).

Opinion

*400 JoiiNsoN, J.

This is an action to foreclose a mortgage upon a half section of land in Traill County, executed by the defendants, Noah Leeak and his wife. The complaint is in the usual form. The Leeaks defaulted. The trial court decreed a foreclosure of the mortgage. A deficiency judgment was entered against the defendant McMillan. He 'appeals and asks for a trial de novo.

The following statement of facts is contained in appellant’s brief, and is conceded to be correct by the respondent.

“On November 6th, 1920, the defendants, Noah Leeak and Tillie Leeak, executed and delivered to the plaintiff, Nellie B. Brown, four notes for the sum of $1,000 each, payable on the first day of December in the year 1921, 1922, 1923 and 1924, and one note for $11,000 payable on the first day of December, 1925, all of the notes bearing six per cent interest from December first, 1920, payable annually on the first day of December each year thereafter. To secure the payment of these notes, the makers' thereof executed and delivered to the payee, Nellie B. Brown, a mortgage covering the North-half of Section eleven, in Township 144, Range 52, situated in Traill County, North Dakota, and designated in this Brief as the Traill County land or property.

“On October 15, 1921, the defendants, Noah Leeak and Tillie Leeak convoyed a portion of this land, viz.: the northeast quarter, to the defendant McMillan, by warranty deed (Exhibit 3), such deed containing a clause . . . that the same are free from all incumbrances, except an incumbrance of Seventy Five Hundred Dollars ($7o00.00) being one-half of a mortgage for the sum of Fifteen Thousand Dollars, given by first parties to Nellie B. Brown, covering the North Half *401 of Section 11, in Township 144 North, of Range Fifty-two (52) West of the Fifth Principal Meridian.” This transaction was made in accordance with the terms of a prior exchange agreement (Defendant’s exhibit “100”) executed on the 10th day of October, 1921, wherein the defendant Leeak agreed to convey the 'above mentioned northeast quarter to the defendant McMillan in exchange for certain property therein described and situated in the State of Missouri, which property was then owned by the defendant, McMillan.

“By the terms of the Agreement for Exchange of Land (Defendant's exhibit '100’), McMillan agreed to convey to Leeak two pieces of property located in Missouri (and hereafter designated as the Missouri property) at the price of $11,200 (P. 105, line 23) Leeak in turn agreed to convey the Traill county property to any party McMillan might designate (P. 106, line 13 S. C.). This tract was priced at $85 per acre or $13,450, and being subject to a $7,500 mortgage, the equity was figured at $5,950 (P. 106, line 1). The note for $1250, mentioned in Defendant’s exhibition MOO’ represented earnest money and was later returned.

“Default having been made in the payment of the first two notes secured by the mortgage, and in the payment of the accrued interest on the remaining notes, the plaintiff on the 3rd of June, 1923, caused the thirty day statutory notice of intention to foreclose to be mailed to Noah Leeak and T. II. McMillan, and the amounts in default not having been paid, the plaintiff thereafter commenced an action in the district court of Traill county, North Dakota, to foreclose the mortgage and to hold the defendants, including T. II. McMillan, liable for deficiency judgment. The defendant, T. II. McMillan interposed his separate answer denying that- he had assumed and agreed to pay a part of the mortgage as alleged in the complaint. No answer was made by the other defendants. The matter was tried before Honorable A. T. Cole, one of the Judges of the district court of Traill county, on the 4th day of April, 1924, and on the 3d clay of June, 1924, the court made its findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law and Order for Judgment, finding that the defendant McMillan had assumed to pay half of the mortgage as 'a part of the purchase price (P. 29, lines 2 'and 3 S. C.) and adjudging that said McMillan was personally liable for the sum of $8,217.50, together with statutory costs, *402 etc. (Page 32, line 21), and further, if the proceeds from the sale of the premises conveyed by the mortgage and decreed to be sold were insufficient to pay the same, that a deficiency judgment be entered against T. H. McMillan, for the amount still remaining due. On the 6th of June, 1924, judgment was so entered. The Northeast quarter, now owned by McMillan, was sold on execution, pursuant to said judgment, for the sum of $6,400 and judgment for the deficiency of $2112.-15, was entered against the defendant, T. H. McMillan, from which judgment of deficiency, the defendant T. H. McMillan appeals.”

Defendant’s Exhibit 100, is the contract of purchase and sale between Leeak and McMillan. In the paragraph describing the consideration agreed to be paid by Leeak for the transfer to him of the Missouri property, is a clause as follows: “$5,250.00 in mortgage or mortgages in said land which second party hereby assumes and agrees to pay or to give as followsthen follows a recital of three mortgages aggregating $5,250.00 two payable December first, 1923, and one July first, 1924. It appears from the contract that Leeak agreed either to execute a mortgage on the McMillan property or to assume existing mortgages. McMillan testifies that he arranged loans for Leeak on the McMillan property. He says:

Q. In exchanging this property, that is, your property in Missouri for this quarter section of land, did Leeak, that is, No'ah Leeak, has Noah Leeak, as a matter of fact, paid you any cash at all?
A. He has not; he did not.
Q. Did he give you any note of any kind that you retained to pay anything in the future ?
A. I placed some loans for Mm as a part of the transaction.
Q. And that became an incumbrance on the property you deeded to him?
A. It did.

It is, therefore, a fair inference from the testimony that at least some of the mortgages,, which Leeak assumed and agreed to pay when the Missouri property was conveyed to him, were mortgages securing loans made for him by McMillan, as a part of the deal.

It is contended by McMillan that it was error to order a deficiency judgment against him; that he did not assume and agree to pay the incumbrance on the Traill county land when the transfer was made *403 to him by the Leeaks; that the transaction was merely an exchange of equities; 'and that the finding that he assumed the mortgage is without support in the evidence.

Plaintiff introduced three letters written by McMillan to the plaintiff dated November 21 and November 29, 1922 and January 11, 1923. She contends that these letters show an agreement to assume the mortgage and support the findings sufficiently. In the first letter, McMillan says:

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Bluebook (online)
203 N.W. 185, 52 N.D. 398, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-leeak-nd-1925.