Bush v. Froelich

84 N.W. 230, 14 S.D. 62, 1900 S.D. LEXIS 8
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 21, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 84 N.W. 230 (Bush v. Froelich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bush v. Froelich, 84 N.W. 230, 14 S.D. 62, 1900 S.D. LEXIS 8 (S.D. 1900).

Opinion

Corson, J.

This action was commenced by the plaintiff in May, X894, and findings and judgment were rendered in favor of the plaintiff. The defendants, Hole, Miller, the Valley Land and Irrigation company, and the North American Loan and Trust Company have appealed to this court from the judgment, and the plaintiff has also appealed from the same. The case was before this court on a former appeal, on demurrer to the complaint, and is reported in 8 S. D. 353, 66 N. W. 939. The findings of the court are voluminous, and we shall only attempt to give a brief summary of them. The court finds that In 1886 there was a partnership doing business and negotiating loans under the name of the Dakota Farm Mortgage Company, which was afterwards succeeded by a corporation of the same name, and this, subsequently by the North American Loan & [65]*65Trust Company, the officers being practically the same, and the facts pertaining to this case being known and binding upon all of them; that their method of doing business was to take a loan in favor of one of their officers, and a trust deed to secure the same running to another officer as trustee; that the Valley Band & Irrigation Company was composed practically of the same parties as the other companies, being separate in name only; that in October, 1886, the defendant Froelich executed a promissory note in favor of the defendant Miller for $1,650, payable five years after its date, interest payable semi-annually as per coupons annexed thereto; that this note was secured by a trust deed executed upon certain lands in Kings-bury county to J. H. Hole as trustee, who was then a member of th^ partnership, and who subsequently, when the company incorporated, became its president; that this note and trust deed were, soon after their execution, assigned to the plaintiff, who lived in Pennsylvania, and had no personal knowledge of the land or condition of the loan; that as the coupons fell due the plaintiff forwarded them to the loan company for collection, and forthwith received the money due, supposing the same'to be paid by Froelich, the debtor, and that neither the loan company nor the trustee ever advised her differently until the fall of 1893, some two years after the last coupon was paid to her; that only a part of the first coupon was paid by Froelich, all the balance being paid by the loan companies; that had the plaintiff known of this default on the part of Froelich she would have had the right to have directed the foreclosure of the trust deed and realized all her money, as the property was then sufficient in value to pay the same; that no taxes upon the land were ever paid by Froelich, the debtor, but were paid by the trustee in said trust deed with the money of said companies, and that neither the trustee nor either of the companies informed the plaintiff of the fact that said taxes were not [66]*66being paid by Froelich, or that they were being paid by the companies, until about the fall of 1893; that when the principal note fell due in October, 1891, the plaintiff forwarded the same to the loan company for collection, and in December, 1892, without any notice to plaintiff, and without any authority from her, and without advising her in any manner regarding the interest and taxes unpaid, the trustee caused the said trust deed to be foreclosed, and the property, on January 27, 1893, to be sold to the Valley Land & Irrigation Company for the full amount of the principal, interest coupons, and the taxes claimed to have been paid thereon by said trustee, amounting in the aggregate to $3,068.96; that of this sum the interest coupons, taxes, and expenses of sale amounted to about $1,170, which, as before stated, the plaintiff had been led to suppose had been paid promptly by Froelich, the owner of the land; that since the commencement of this action the appellants have paid taxes amounting to $139.92; that the Valley Land & Irrigation Company refused to turn over to the plaintiff said certificate of sale until the said sum of $1,170 and interest thereon should be paid to the loan company. From these findings the court concludes, as matter of law, that the North American Loan & Trust Company, as the successor of the Dakota Farm & Mortgage Company, were voluntary agents and trustees of the plaintiff, and as such bound to protect plaintiff from any loss from nonpayment of taxes by the owner of the land in suit, and as such trustees and agents, together with Hole, trustee named in the trust deed, they were, and each of them was, in duty bound to notify the plaintiff of any nonpayment of taxes; that none of said defendants could acquire any rights by the payment of taxes which would be adverse or superior to the rights of the plaintiff against the land in question under said trust deed, and that any rights that any of the defendants may have acquired against said lands by having paid [67]*67taxes thereon prior to the commencement of said action are, under the findings in this case, subject to, and subsequent to, the rights of this plaintiff to have the amount due her paid from this land. The court further concludes that the North American Loan & Trust Company is entitled to $139.92, paid for taxes, with interest thereon from the time of payment, January 14, 1896, and that in case the North American Loan & Trust Company, the Valley Land & Irrigation Company, and J. H. Hole, or either of them, shall pay the plaintiff, on or before April 10, 1899, the sum of $1,650, with interest thereon at 12 per cent, per annum from October 15, 1891, to the date of said payment, less the sum of $139.92, with interest from January 14, 1896, then the action shall be dismissed; but, in case such payment shall not be made, the plaintiff shall pay to the trust company the amount of $139.92, with interest as aforesaid, and the foreclosure proceedings shall stand as a valid foreclosure and judgment in favor of the plaintiff to secure the payment of the mortgage indebtedness as aforesaid.

It will be observed from the conclusions of law that the court refused to allow the defendants any amount paid by them, or either of them, as interest upon the note or taxes upon the property prior to the foreclosure of the mortgage, as against the plaintiff’s prior lien. Appellants, as we understand their brief, do not insist that they are entitled to the repayment of any of the interest paid by them, or that it is a lien upon the mortgaged premises superior to the lien of the plaintiff, but they do claim that the taxes paid -by them should be repaid, and held to be a lien superior to the lien of the plaintiff, and they base this claim upon the fact that it is provided in the trust deed that said Hole was to hold the land as trustee for said Miller and for any other person who might become the owner of said note, and that, in case there should be at any time during the continuance of [68]*68said trust any statutory lien upon said premises or any part thereof, the said trustee or holder of said principal and interest notes, or any part of them, might pay such taxes or assessments, or effect such insurance, or pay such claim, lien, incumbrance, or statutory lien, and the sum or sums so advanced should be immediately due and payable, and should, with interest thereon at io per cent, per annum from the time of payment, be deemed to be secured thereby, and the receipts of the proper officers for the payment of such taxes and assessments should be conclusive evidence of the amount and validity of the same.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 N.W. 230, 14 S.D. 62, 1900 S.D. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bush-v-froelich-sd-1900.