Clark v. Chapman

239 N.W. 797, 213 Iowa 737
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 17, 1931
DocketNo. 41122.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 239 N.W. 797 (Clark v. Chapman) 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
Clark v. Chapman, 239 N.W. 797, 213 Iowa 737 (iowa 1931).

Opinion

Evans, J.

The mortgage in suit was made January 5, 1928, and was for $8300. The mortgaged property consists of about two acres of ground, divided into many lots, and situated upon East 14th Street in the city of Des Moines. It comprises two residence houses, one of which was, at the.time of the conveyance, occupied by the Boudinots as a homestead, and the other was rented to a tenant. This occupancy was begun by Lewis Y. Boudinot and his then family in 1917. Prior to the year 1924 his wife died, survived by her husband and two children. In 1924 Boudinot married his present wife (Genevieve) and has continued to occupy the property with his family since that time. In December, 1926, this husband and wife conveyed this property, including both houses, to Birdie V. Chapman (sister of Lewis V. Boudinot), by a warranty deed with full covenants, subject, however, to liens of record. While holding the title thus conveyed, Birdie Y. Chapman and her husband executed the mortgage in suit. There was no controversy or friction of any kind between the Chapmans and the Boudinots, either prior to, or since, the execution of the mortgage. They all testified that they acted in good faith in the negotiation and delivery of said mortgage. If they have since been guilty of bad faith, it is not as against each other, but against the plaintiff, and jointly. The contention of the Boudinots now is that the warranty deed was intended as a mortgage, to secure, a debt owing to Birdie Y. Chapman; that there was no intention on the part of the Boudinots to part with their homestead rights; that by the continued possession of the property they maintained their homestead rights; that the mortgage in suit was void as to them because they did not sign the same.

It appears on behalf of plaintiff that Chapman, the husband of Birdie, solicited this loan from the plaintiff, and that Boudinot was with him when ho did it. Chapman represented to the plaintiff that his wife was the owner of the property. This was done in the presence of Boudinot, as the latter testified. *740 The plaintiff wont with them to view the property. Boudinot conducted him through the house which he was occupying. The other tenant conducted him through the other house. By this conduct the plaintiff was led to believe, and did believe, that Boudinot was the tenant of his sister on this property and that the other was tenant of the same purported owner. Upon the trial herein, Boudinot testified that he was not the tenant of his sister, but was in control himself of both properties, and collected rent from the other tenant.

Ignoring some of the facts herein suggested, the defendants contend broadly that they never parted with their homestead right, and that in some way they reserved it, and that it is superior to any rights accruing either to Birdie V. Chapman or to her mortgagee.

Concededly it is open to a grantor to prove that his warranty deed was intended as a mortgage. The proof, however, of such a contention must be clear and convincing. At this point we defer the consideration of that issue, and consider first another feature of the case. For that purpose, and for the moment, we assume as true the following testimony of Mrs. Chapman as a witness for the defendants:

“Q. You tell in your own words what the agreement was at the time you took that deed. A. My brother owed us about $1800.00, and his health was not good, and so he wanted to secure us, and his banker advised him to secure us, and he trusted me in the belief that if anything should happen to him that I would care for the rest of the property for his children, what was left of it, and that is the way it was. Q. If Mr. Boudinot, paid you the indebtedness which he owed you and j'-our husband, what were you going to do? A. To deed it back. ’ ’

It may be laid down as a self-evident proposition that the rights conferred upon Clark by the Chapman mortgage were at least equal to the rights conferred upon Birdie Y. Chapman by the warranty deed. The evidence discloses that the property was incumbered for $8300, and that the purpose of the loan negotiated with the plaintiff was to meet that incumbrance, which had matured. The transaction was closed at the Peoples Savings Bank, where the other incumbrance was held. The *741 plaintiff’s check was turned in by the parties to the Peoples Savings Bank, and the previous mortgage was cancelled and delivered to the plaintiff. Not a dollar of the proceeds of the loan was diverted to any other purpose than to take up the existing incumbrance and -thereby to conserve the property. Boudinot was present at this closing transaction. But even if he were not present, and even if he knew nothing about it at that time, could he challenge the transaction as against his sister and repudiate the right in her to effect this change of creditors or mortgagees for the purpose of conserving the property? If she had a claim upon her brother for $1800, it was nevertheless inferior to the existing mortgage. Her .claim could not be saved to her out of the property unless she first paid the prior lien. If she had paid the lien out of her own funds, could Boudinot challenge her right to reimbursement? These questions quite answer themselves. The fact that there was an existing mortgage upon the property and that the loan from plaintiff was made for the purpose of discharging it and that it was thus discharged, is entirely ignored in appellant’s opening argument. The question is met in the reply argument by the statement that:

“Nowhere in the record is there any testimony that the appellant Genevieve Boudinot ever signed any mortgage or deed other than the mortgage which was signed in favor of Birdie V. Chapman. ’ ’

Mrs. Chapman testified:

“Q. And you knew Mr. Clark was furnishing the money? A. Yes. Q. You was present up at the bank, were you, at the Peoples Savings Bank, when he turned the money over? A. Yes. Q. He turned over $8,300.00 and then that was used to pay off the incvimbrances on the place? A. Yes.”

Boudinot testified:

“Q. Was there anything said there by the Chapmans while you were present about how much money they would have to have? A. Yes. He told him he would have to have around $8,000.00; the loan was $8,000.00, and that he would have to have a little better than that. Q. It was going to take up another mortgage loan that you had made before you deeded it to Birdie? A. I presume so.”

*742 The plaintiff testified in substance that the contemplated loan was to be for $8G00, but was increased to $8300 because such an amount was necessary to discharge the existing mortgage. The denial in appellant's reply brief that there was any mortgage which had been signed by Genevieve is inconclusive. At the time the deed was made to Mrs. Chapman, the marriage of Genevieve was comparatively recent. Her husband had owned the property since 1917. If the existing incumbrance antedated the marriage, it was no less valid and enforceable because of the marriage. The marriage imposed no infirmity upon existing mortgages. Appellants make this further response in their reply argument:

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Bluebook (online)
239 N.W. 797, 213 Iowa 737, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-chapman-iowa-1931.