Cotten v. Halverson

207 N.W. 795, 201 Iowa 636
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 16, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 207 N.W. 795 (Cotten v. Halverson) 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
Cotten v. Halverson, 207 N.W. 795, 201 Iowa 636 (iowa 1926).

Opinion

Albert, J.

I. In 1922, appellee Cotten was the owner and holder of three separate promissory notes secured by mortgages, amounting in all to approximately $10,000. Among these 'were a mortgage and note for $3,500, covering 120 acres of land, in Warren County, Iowa, purporting to be executed by one Carl A. Chris-£engen an(j wjfe> These notes and mortgages *637 had been bought by Cotten, at some previous date, from Willard H. Halverson. Cotten desired to dispose of the Christensen mortgage, and approached the Security Loan & Investment ■Company, of Des Moines, Iowa, with the idea of selling the same. The president of that company was struck by the familiarity of the name and the description of the property in the mortgage, and on investigation found that his company was the holder of a $5,000 mortgage made by the same parties on the same land. Further investigation disclosed that Christensen was not the owner of the land, that the abstracts accompanying the loans were false, and that the entry of recording on the back of each mortgage was false. Thereupon, on the 14th of August, 1922, Cotten approached Halverson, called his attention to these matters, and requested him to take up the three mortgages and notes. Halverson claimed that the difficulties were not of his making, but that some other person was responsible therefor. However, he paid Cotten $4,000 in cash at one time, and $900 at another, and executed the mortgage and note in suit for $5,778.50. It seems to be conceded by all parties that the three Mortgages formerly held by Cotten, which were turned over to Halverson, together with the notes accompanying the same, were all forgeries. Halverson was subsequently adjudged a bankrupt, and his trustee is a party to this action and one of the appellants.

The Shaffer State Bank held a mortgage subsequent to the Cotten mortgage, as did Bogle, another appellee. The trustee in bankruptcy filed a cross-petition herein against some of his codefendants. A motion was made to consolidate it in this action, and later, a motion was made by appellee Cotten to strike the cross-petition from the file. The motion for consolidation was overruled, and the motion to strike was sustained. The rulings on these motions are assigned as errors.

The real defense in the case is that the mortgage and note sued on herein were given under a promise, agreement, or understanding, expressed or implied, between Cotten and Halverson, for the purpose of compounding or concealing a felony, or not to prosecute the same, or not to give evidence thereof; that, therefore, the consideration for the mortgage and note was *638 illegal. To this latter proposition we will first give our attention.

While these matters arose under the Cqde of 1897, the identical sections involved herein occur in the Code of 1924, as follows :

“Section 13168. If any person, having knowledge of the commission of any offense punishable with-imprisonment in the penitentiary for life, take any money or valuable consideration or gratuity, or any promise therefor, upon an agreement .or understanding, expressed or implied, to compound or conceal such offense,- or not to prosecute the same, or not to give evidence thereof, he shall be imprisoned in the penitentiary, not more than six years, or be fined not exceeding one thousand dollars. ”

“Section 13169. If any person, having* knowledge of the commission of any offense punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary for a limited term of years, is guilty of the offense described in the preceding section, he shall be imprisoned in the county jail not more than one year, and be fined not exceeding four hundred dollars. ” L

“Section 13757. A person may be indicted for having, with the knowledge of the commission of a public offense, taken money or property .of another, or a gratuity or reward, or engagement or promise therefor, upon agreement or understanding, express or implied, to compound or conceal the offense, or to abstain from a prosecution therefor, or to withhold any evidence thereof, though the person guilty of the original offense has not been indicted of tried.”

An analysis of these three sections shows that, to make any one of them operative, there must be an agreement or understanding, expressed or implied, (1) to compound or conceal such offense, (2) not to prosecute the same, (3) or not to give evidence thereof. It will be noted that all of said statutes áre founded on an agreement or understanding, and, in event that there is no such agreement or understanding, it necessarily follows that none of these three sections would be violated. It is equally true that, although there might be an agreement between the parties, if the agreement was other than that of compounding or concealing the offense, not to prosecute the same, or not to *639 give evidence thereof, then none of these statutes would operate. We have, on numerous occasions, construed these several sections, and nowhere have we attempted to enlarge or limit their meaning, but in all instances have held to the strict letter of the statute, which is, as suggested above, that there must be an agreement or understanding, either expressed or implied, as a foundation for such defense as made herein. Whether such agreement or understanding, expressed or implied, existed in the given case is a jury question. Shaulis v. Buxton, 109 Iowa 355; Joyce Co. v. Rohan, 134 Iowa 12; Baird v. Boehner, 77 Iowa 622; Henry v. State Bank, 131 Iowa 97. In Peed v. McKee, 42 Iowa 689, we held that a mortgage and note given to cover a son’s embezzlement, accompanied with an expressed agreement that the son should not be prosecuted, was void. The case of Deere & Co. v. Wolff, 65 Iowa 32, is exactly parallel in principle to the one at bar. Wolff had borrowed money from the Shenandoah National Bank, and gave his note therefor, with which certain other notes were given as collateral, the signature and indorsement to which latter notes were forged. When the bank learned of this, and confronted Wolff with the facts, he gave them a mortgage on certain real estate and a chattel mortgage on certain personal property. Subsequently, Wolff transferred and delivered the personal property to the bank in satisfaction of the claims held by it. We there said:

“No direct evidence was introduced showing that the mortgage and transfer of the personal property was extorted from Wolff through fear, on his part, of prosecutions for forgery to be instituted by the bank. Nor was there any such evidence of an agreement by the bank, in consideration thereof, not to prosecute him, nor to give evidence against.him, to conceal evidence of forgery, or to ‘stifle and hinder’ prosecutions therefor. ’ ’

It was held that the mortgage of the bank was valid. A similar holding was announced by this court in the case of Live Stock Nat. Bank v. Collins, 147 Iowa 107.

These rules being applied to the case at bar, it was incumbent upon the appellants setting up this defense to prove by a preponderance of evidence that, at the time the mortgage and note sued on herein were executed and delivered by Halverson *640

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Bluebook (online)
207 N.W. 795, 201 Iowa 636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cotten-v-halverson-iowa-1926.