Condit v. Johnson

139 N.W. 477, 158 Iowa 209
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 16, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 139 N.W. 477 (Condit v. Johnson) 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
Condit v. Johnson, 139 N.W. 477, 158 Iowa 209 (iowa 1913).

Opinion

Deemer, J.

In December of the year 1908 plaintiff purchased of defendant Johnson three hundred and twenty acres of land in Saguache county, Colo., agreeing to pay therefor the sum of $10,400. Defendant Johnson was a real estate dealer, and it is claimed that he made certain representations regarding the character of the Colorado land. At any rate, he executed to plaintiff a warranty deed for the land, and thereafter plaintiff, claiming to have been defrauded, and that there had been- a breach of the covenants of warranty in the deed made to him, brought suit against defendant Johnson in the district court of Jones county to recover the damages claimed to have been suffered by him. At or about the same time defendant Johnson brought suit-against plaintiff in a Colorado court to have the warranty deed corrected so as to exempt from the covenants a railway right of way through and across the said land, To this action plain[211]*211tiff herein appeared, and claimed that the original contract for the purchase of the land had been altered after its execution. • In this condition of affairs the parties concluded to settle their differences and on the 18th day of October, 1910, they met and entered into the following written agreement:

Agreement entered into this 18th day of October, 1910, between J. S. Condit, of Costilla county, state of Colorado, party of the first part, and "Walter Johnson, of the city of Denver, state of Colorado, party of the second part, witnesseth: Said first party hereby sells to second party the north half of section twenty-eight (28), township forty-one (41), range ten (10), Saguache county, Colorado, for the sum of nine thousand five hundred ($9,500.00) dollars. Said first party agrees to transfer with said land all rights which he has received in his deed in water for irrigation purposes in connection with said land. Said conveyance to be executed and delivered by the 1st day of March, 1911, and to be by warranty deed as against all liens and incumbrances on said property, including taxes for the year 1910. But said deed is to be subject to the right of way of the railway company running through said land. Said second party agrees to pay for said land said sum of $9,500.00 in the following manner, to wit: Four thousand ($4,000.00) dollars to be paid in cash March 1st, 1911, when said deed is delivered, and that he will execute a note for five thousand five hundred ($5,500.00) dollars to the said J. S. Condit and secure same by a first mortgage upon the above described premises. Said note to draw 6 per cent, interest, payable annually and due one year from date, and to include the ordinary attorney fees in said note and mortgage in case of foreclosure. It is further agreed that said first party will dismiss the suit now pending in the district court of Jones county, Iowa, against said second party at his cost as soon as this contract is completed and delivered, and said second party agrees on his part that he will dismiss the suit pending in the district court of the state of Colorado, in and for Saguache county, entitled Walter Johnson v. J. S. Condit, defendant, and that he will pay the costs thereof. It is further agreed that this contract when fully executed and delivered shall be a full settlement of all differences between the parties [212]*212hereto, and that all contracts and agreements relative to the matters between them shall be surrendered or destroyed. Said second party agrees to accept the title of said property as complete and correct up to the time when he conveyed the same to said first party. The deed and abstract of the land, four water certificates shall be delivered to said second party at the Citizens ’ Savings Bank, Anamosa, Iowa, and the money to be paid to said first party shall be paid him at the Citizens’ Savings Bank, Anamosa, Iowa. Witness our hands the first day above written. J. S. Condit, First Party. Walter Johnson, Second Party.
I hereby guarantee that the said Walter Johnson will pay the $4,000.00 as provided in this contract and will execute said note and mortgage as required by this contract on the 1st day of March, 1911. Milton Byerly.
I hereby guarantee that J. S. Condit, party of the first part, will fully comply with the requirements of this contract on his part. Wm. A. Hale.

Thereafter, and on March 1, 1911, the parties met at Anamosa, in Jones county, for the purpose of carrying out the agreement. Plaintiff produced a warranty deed to Johnson, the tax receipts, four shares of the irrigation company stock, and an abstract of title to the land. Plaintiff had made a mortgage upon the land to E. M. Condit, but the abstract showed a cancellation of the same of record, and he, plaintiff, also presented to defendant the original note and the mortgage made to secure the same. Johnson objected to the four shares of stock, because they -showed an indorsement of $440 thereon. Plaintiff, Condit, then offered to pay Johnson the $440 received by him, or to get four other shares showing no indorsement whatever. No further objection was made to these shares. Defendant, through his attorney, then refused to perform his part of the contract because he claimed that an irrigation district had been established in Colorado, which included the land in controversy; that bonds to the amount of $530,000 had been issued by the district; that these bonds became a lien or incumbrance upon the land while the title was in plaintiff, and insisted that the land was liable for its [213]*213pro rata share of this bond issue, and that the bonds became a specific lien upon the property. He insisted that plaintiff pay his pro rata share of .this bond issue, amounting to $2,432; and upon plaintiff’s refusal to do so, he declined to carry out the contract.

1. Irrigation bonds : liens: statutes. I. This action followed, and the sole issue in the case, after eliminating all collateral matters, is whether or not plaintiff is responsible for any part of this , -, . ,. . , ., . bond issue, or, rather, whether or not it is a specific lien upon the land, and, if so, is it' such a lien as that plaintiff must satisfy it before he may recover upon the agreement of settlement. It appears that, when plaintiff originally purchased the land, an irrigation company had been organized for a district which covered the land, and that four shares of stock in this company which had been issued to Johnson passed to plaintiff with the land. These are the shares already referred to upon which the $440 was indorsed. In October of the year 1908 and prior to plaintiff’s purchase of the land from Johnson a petition had been filed for a larger and stronger irrigation company to manage and control the district in which the land in controversy was situated. This petition was signed by a majority of the resident freeholders in the proposed district. Due notice thereof had been given, and the county committee, to whom it was addressed, had granted the prayer thereof, defined the boundary of the new district, and christened it the “San Luis Yalley Irrigation District.” An election was called pursuant to the Colorado statutes for December 19, 1908, and such election was held. Upon a canvass of the votes, the board declared the district established and the officers elected, and certified copies of all the proceedings were filed in the county in which the land in controversy was located on December 28, 1908, the very day on which plaintiff received his deed. On January 11, 1909, a resolution was passed by the officers of the new company authorize ing the issuance of $530,000 bon’ds and the purchase of the [214]

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Bluebook (online)
139 N.W. 477, 158 Iowa 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/condit-v-johnson-iowa-1913.