Citizens' State Bank v. Christianson

152 N.W. 346, 30 N.D. 182, 1915 N.D. LEXIS 115
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 152 N.W. 346 (Citizens' State Bank v. Christianson) 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
Citizens' State Bank v. Christianson, 152 N.W. 346, 30 N.D. 182, 1915 N.D. LEXIS 115 (N.D. 1915).

Opinion

Goss, J.

Plaintiff seeks to establish title in defendant Christianson, and to foreclose a real estate mortgage given by Christianson and wife for $2,200 and interest. Defendants answered separately. Westby pleads title in himself and denies that C. ever had any interest in the quarter section attempted to be mortgaged by him, and asks that title be quieted against the mortgage sought to be foreclosed. To this plaintiff replies, alleging C. to be the equitable owner of said premises, and that Westby holds the legal title in trust for C. and procured the deed to himself to defraud and defeat the lien of plaintiff’s mortgage. Plaintiff recovered judgment, from which Hans Westby appeals, demanding a trial do novo.

Briefly stated the issues hang upon the following statement of facts: C. came to Pierce county in 1906, where W. was residing. He moved upon W.’s homestead and farmed it that year. W. was working on the railroad as a section hand. Christianson had previously married W.’s sister. W. was unmarried. C. farmed W.’s homestead that year on halves, W. furnishing 600 bushels of oats, giving the use of four horses and machinery, $10.60 in cash, and allowing C. to take all the crop that year, W;’s share amounting to $300, leaving O. indebted to him that fall in the sum of $490.60. Of the foregoing there is no dispute, nor anything upon which to question the good faith of the dealings between W. and C. In the early spring of 1901 a neighbor, defendant Ejeld, desired to sell an adjoining quarter section and the subject of this litigation. He talked with C. about his buying it, and got him interested to the extent that C. made a trip to Bugby and attempted to raise the money or credit sufficient to buy the land, but he failed and could get neither money nor credit for the purpose. During this time and throughout all times involved in this litigation, W. was working on the section in another county and away from his home, except as he would visit it over Sunday. After it became apparent that C. could not purchase this land, E., who was apparently anxious to sell, went to McCumber in Eolette county to interest W. in purchasing this land, and succeeded in negotiating a deal wherein W. agreed that E. should procure a loan of $1,200 on it and that W. then would purchase it, [186]*186assume the mortgage, and pay F. $2,500 above the mortgage, or a total of $3,700 for the farm. On F.’s first visit O. was not along, but on the second visit he accompanied F. On the 23d of April, 1907, a written contract for deed duly acknowledged was entered into between F. and W., wherein F. agreed to sell this land to W., who agreed to purchase it. The first payment thereunder due in December, 1907, was $400, the next one year later, $600, and the balance of $1,500 fell due in three annual $500 payments in December of each succeeding year, 1909, 1910, and 1911. The $2,500 to be paid drew interest at 6 per cent, while the $1,200 mortgage assumed bore 8 per cent, with W. to pay the taxes. This contract was filed for record July 27, 1907. As additional security for the performance of the contract, the payments were evidenced by notes, to secure which W. mortgaged his homestead to F. for $2,500, subject, however, to a prior mortgage thereon of $700. Thus at the commencement of the farming season of 1907 W. had purchased under written contract the Fjeld farm, and had pledged his own homestead as additional security for $2,500 of'said purchase price. And this, too, after C. had been unable to purchase said tract. This is important as the basis from which to commence an analysis of the testimony under the claim of the plaintiff that, notwithstanding the deal was thus made, it was in reality also understood as between W. and C. that the former was buying the farm for the latter; or in other words that, wFile the deal on paper was between F. and W., it was understood as between W. and C. to be actually from F. to C., with W. holding the title as security and as a conduit for title from F. to O., and that whatever W. did in the matter was not for himself, but instead for C. And plaintiff points to the attempt of O. to purchase in the spring of 1907, and his later visit with F. to W., and subsequent events, as proof of its contentions that C. was the beneficiary of whatever was done by W.; and that thereunder, -when the contract was performed and even though the deed was taken by W. pursuant to and under the terms of the contract from F. to bim; the facts in the case it is contended establish that W. did so merely as trustees of the legal title for C., the alleged equitable owner. And it may be here remarked that the reason for this claim is that two years later C. purchased 120 acres from a third party, paying nothing down, but giving the seller a purchase-price mortgage on the 120 acres and [187]*187upon this Fjeld land, then and for two years afterwards still owned by F. The said mortgage is the one in suit.

To pursue the facts in the light of the foregoing contentions, C. farmed W.’s homestead and the Fjeld land for the next five years under an oral understanding whereby one half of the crop raised on W.’s homestead each year, less the thresh bill, should belong to W.; that O. should take all the balance of the crop raised on the homestead and on the Fjeld land, but should pay the taxes, and the interest due upon the Fjeld contract and upon the first mortgage. This left W.’s share of the crop from his homestead free to be applied in reduction of principal of the contract and to meet its payments, leaving the balance of the crop on both quarters with which to pay interest and taxes, with whatever that was left to go to O. as his property and to pay running expenses. W. sold C. his farm machinery and two teams for $600 on time. W. continued to work on the section at $55 per month. Under this arrangement W.’s one half of the grain raised on his homestead netted him the following amounts. For 1907, $502.40; for 1908, $398.90; for 1909, $804.19; for 1910, nothing, a crop failure; for 1911, $319.45. In December, 1911, F. and wife deed to W., which deed was placed of record January 25, 1912, F. having been fully paid off that fall through the mortgaging by W. of his homestead for $1,000, and with the balance from his crop of that year, making a payment by W. to F. for the deed of $1,122.45. The payments made and indorsed upon the contract of purchase were all sent by C. and were all made December 23d of the respective years; to wit, 1907, $400 and interest on $2,500 to that date, $100; 1908, payment on contract $600, with one year’s interest on $2,100 to date, $126; 1909, contract payment due of $500, with one year’s interest on $1,500, $90. Nothing was paid on the principal in 1910 on account of crop failure, W. paying the interest on the mortgage, $96, and on the $1,000 still due on the contract, $60, or total interest paid of $156 that year, and a like amount of interest was paid in 1911, when the deed was taken. Thus, in addition to the $2,500 paid from four crops raised in the five years, there had been paid in interest on the contract and $1,200 mortgage, at 6 per cent and 8 per cent respectively, $436 interest on the contract and five years’ interest at $96 per year, or $480, on the mortgage, or $916 aggregate interest, or a total of $3,416 up to the time title was vested [188]*188in W., all of which was paid as a part of the purchase of this tract of land. In addition to this the $700 first mortgage on W.’s homestead was paid off in March, 1910, to pay which $150 was used of the $801.19 proceeds of W.’s share of the 1909 crop.

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Bluebook (online)
152 N.W. 346, 30 N.D. 182, 1915 N.D. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-state-bank-v-christianson-nd-1915.