Conkling v. Levie

94 N.W. 987, 66 Neb. 132, 1902 Neb. LEXIS 496
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 1902
DocketNo. 10,893
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 94 N.W. 987 (Conkling v. Levie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conkling v. Levie, 94 N.W. 987, 66 Neb. 132, 1902 Neb. LEXIS 496 (Neb. 1902).

Opinion

Dtjfpie, C.

. This is an action to foreclose a mortgage held by the appellee, Conkling. The mortgage was given under the following circumstances: The appellant, Levie, and one William T. McKim, were joint owners of a farm in Fur-nas county, Nebraska. They worked the farm in partnership for a year or more, and April 20, 1895, divided it between them. They effected this division by joining in a quitclaim deed of the farm to one - Bergstrom, who in turn deeded the west half of the farm to Elizabeth M. Levie, the wife of Alvin Levie, and the east half to McKim. At the time of this division it is quite apparent from the evidence that McKim was indebted to one Perry L. Hole in the sum of $650, and Levie was indebted to Hole in the sum of $810. To secure the payment of these sums McKim and Levie and Avife joined in a mortgage to Perry L. Hole covering the whole farm. Three notes were executed by the parties; íavo by Levie and wife — one for $600 and one for $210. McKim executed his individual note for the sum of $650, making the total amount secured by the mortgage $1,460. April 23, 1895, in consideration of the sum of $600, Perry L. Hole sold and assigned the $600 note of Levie and Avife to one Thomas Bloodworth, and executed an assignment of the mortgage to him, hut the evidence tends to show that the mortgage itself was not delivered. Hole was the agent of the appellee, Conk-ling, in loaning money for him in Furnas county; and [134]*134either because a portion of the amount secured by the mortgage belonged to Colliding, or for the purpose of accounting for other moneys due Conkling in his hands, Hole, on November 18, 1895, in consideration of $650, assigned to him the $650 note and made to him a second assignment of the mortgage by which it was secured. It will be noticed that the note assigned to Conkling was the McKim note, and the note assigned to Bloodworth was the note of Mr. and Mrs. Levie. Prior to the commencement of this action Levie and wife paid the note for $210, and on September 15, 1897, procured an extension of time on their note held by Bloodworth and executed a new note for $600, maturing March 1, 1899. Bloodworth, at the time of this extension, released the mortgage made to Hole, and took a new mortgage on the premises securing the note of September 15, 1897. July 3, 1897, McKim, in consideration of $50, quitclaimed to Alvin Levie his interest in the premises, thus vesting Mr. and Mrs. Levie with the legal title to the whole farm. December 27, 1897, Conkling filed his petition asking a foreclosure of his mortgage. He made Thomas Blood-worth a party defendant, alleging in his petition that Bloodworth, without any authority, had released the mortgage of record and asked to have such release set aside and. his mortgage foreclosed in due course of law. Blood-worth fil ed a cross-bill asking for the foreclosure of his mortgage made to secure the sum of $600. A decree.was entered foreclosing both mortgages and ordering a sale of the premises. No complaint is made by the appellants of the action of the court in foreclosing the Bloodworth mortgage, but it Avas insisted upon the trial by Levie and his wife that the mortgage signed by them, and now held by Conkling, covered only the half of the farm deeded to Mrs. Levie on the division made on April 20, 1895, and that the mortgage which was executed was made to secure the íavo notes made by them to Hole, one for $210 and one for $600, and that it did not include the McKim note for $650. A careful reading of the evidence dis[135]*135closes that Levie and Ms wife were, perhaps, under the impression at the time they executed the mortgage that it stood as security for their own debt, and that the McKim note for |650 was not included therein. They may also have believed that it covered only the land deeded to Mrs. Levie, but the evidence is quite conclusive that the mortgage has not been changed in any respect since its execution, that it covered the whole farm, and was made to secure not only the debt of Levie, but included the indebtedness due from McKim as well. Not only is there evidence to support the finding of the district court in this respect, but if the question Avas submitted to us as an original proposition, our finding would haA’e been the same as the finding of lire district court.

Another question is urged upon our attention. It is stated that there was no consideration of any kind given to Mrs. Levie or her husband to support the mortgage on the wife’s land to secure the payment of the McKim note. Had the title stood originally in the name of Mrs. Levie, this proposition would probably be unanswerable; but it must be remembered that Alvin Levie and McKim Avere originally joint owners of this land, that both were indebted to Perry L. Hole, and that at the time of taking title to this land Mrs. Levie executed the mortgage in question and took title thereto subject to that mortgage. The making of the deed to her and the execution of this mortgage on her part was one and the same transaction, and the case is very different from one Avhere a married Avoman, without any consideration \Ahatever, executes a mortgage upon her separate estate to secure the debt of a third party.

We therefore recommend that the decree of the district court be affirmed.

Ames and Albert, CC., concur.

By the Court: For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, the decree of the district court is

Affirmed.

Mortgage: Married Woman: Separate Estate: Present Consideration. A mortg-ag'e executed by a married woman upon her separate estate, without present consideration and merely to secure an antecedent debt oí her husband or of a third person, is void.

The following opinion on rehearing was filed October 22, 1902. Judgment beloio reversed:

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Bluebook (online)
94 N.W. 987, 66 Neb. 132, 1902 Neb. LEXIS 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conkling-v-levie-neb-1902.