Crawford v. Ginn

35 Iowa 543
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 18, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 35 Iowa 543 (Crawford v. Ginn) 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
Crawford v. Ginn, 35 Iowa 543 (iowa 1872).

Opinion

Beck, Ch. J.

1. Trust: enforcement of. I. Whether defendant acquired the title of the land for the benefit of Wholihan, under an arrange-ment to the effect that it should be held by him as security for sums advanced by him in payment of his bids at sheriff’s sale and of certain judgments, is the main question in the case. Plaintiffs insist that the title of the land was acquired under such an arrangement; defendant maintains that his purchase was absolute, and that no agreement existed between himself and Wholihan whereby a trust was raised.

The evidence, to our minds, very satisfactorily establishes the fact that defendant acquired the title to the land under an arrangement with Wholihan, whereby he was to receive certain benefits and advantages. We do not deem it profitable to enter upon an extended discussion of the evidence in order to support our conclusion by argument; such is not our habit in cases of this kind in which no controverted questions of law are found. We will briefly state certain facts which we think are established by the evidence and support the conclusion we have announced. Wholihan was largely indebted. There were numerous judgments and some mortgages upon his lands which, though valuable, if disposed of at sheriff’s sale, would not probably pay the liens upon them. A contract was entered into between the parties under which defendant was to advance certain sums to discharge the liens and take a deed of the lands, which were to be sold by him. and the proceeds applied to reimbursing the amount to [546]*546be thus advanced, with a sum added thereto, as compensation for the advancement, and the balance was to be paid to Wholihan. If the sale of the land could not be effected within two years by the exercise of diligence on the part of defendant, Wholihan was to have no claim upon the proceeds of the land. The liens haying been ascertained to exceed the sum contemplated in the agreement, it was by mutual consent canceled. A deed to defendant for the land had been executed and filed for record. It was withdrawn from the recorder’s office, but no conveyance was made to Wholihan by defendant. Under this arrangement defendant appears to have acquired a judgment against Wholihan. After the cancellation of the agreement the parties seem to have entered into another agreement. Wé will briefly state some facts which, to our mind, establish its existence and terms. That Wholihan had confidence in defendant and relied upon him for assistance is shown by the fact of the execution and cancellation of the contract just referred to as well as by other circumstances disclosed by the evidence. After the contract was canceled, defendant at once made arrange» ments with Wholihan to bid off the land upon the executions. That such was the understanding between the parties there can be no doubt. Wholihan withdrew a notice he had filed requiring the land to be sold subject to redemption, and directed that it should be sold upon appraisement and without redemption. He also waived his homestead right in the land.

He relied upon the advice of defendant in the selection of the appraisex*s, and assented to the sale of mox*e land than was necessary to satisfy the executions in the hands of the sheriff. He knew that defendant had opened negotiations for the sale of the land before his pxirchase under the executions, and was advised that the consideration defendant demanded was greater than the amount of the bid at the sheriff’s sale. Other acts of the parties as well [547]*547as declarations of defendant, which we do not deem it necessary to state, are inconsistent with any other conclusion than that the purchase was made by defendant with a view to Wholihan’s benefit. We are unable to arrive at the conclusion that all the land purchased by defendant at the sheriff’s sale was to be held by him as security for the sum advanced in the purchase and other amounts paid by him in the discharge of liens, to be reconveyed to Wholihan when he should reimburse' defendant. It is not shown what was the precise amount advanced by defendant. It did not exceed $7,000. He sold a part of the land, 57S acres, to the party with whom he had negotiations before his purchase, for $8,000 in installments running from one to five years. He received also 640 acres of land in Missouri valued at $2,000, making the whole sum received $10,000. Now, as we have said, Wholihan knew of the negotiations for this sale, and the terms proposed before defendant had acquired title to the land. J3ut after it was consummated, he claimed nothing more than 25 acres of the land retained by defendant and the Missouri lands acquired in the transaction. It cannot be supposed that immediately after defendant’s purchase Wholihan would have misrepresented his rights to his own prejudice. We are of opinion that the 80 acre tract unsold, as well as the 25 acres was included in this arrangement. Our reason for this opinion is this: It seemed to be the understanding that Wholihan was to retain an interest in the lands not sold by defendant and the Missouri lands. But at the time of the conversation between himself and defendant, upon which we rely to fix the parties’ rights, Wholihan did not know that the 80 acre tract was reserved in the sale made by defendant; this information was designedly kept from him. The claim made by Wholihan which covers, as we construe it, the 80 acre tract, will preclude plaintiffs demanding any thing more.

Our next inquiry is, on what condition does the claim [548]*548of Wholihan. to the unsold land and the Missouri lands rest ? The purchaser of the lands from defendant, whose opportunity for knowing and understanding the agreements between the parties was better than any other witness giving testimony in the case, states positively that defendant was to hold the title of these lands claimed by Wholihan until certain liens on the lands bought at sheriff’s sale were paid; but he specifies only a mortgage held by Burdick & Patterson for about $5,000. We conclude that Wholihan’s right to claim these lands depended upon the payment of certain liens, including Burdick & Patterson’s. What those liens are, or their amount, we cannot determine from the abstract before us. It does not appear to have been prepared with the view of giving accurate information upon the details of the case, and its defects in this particular are poorly supplied by the arguments of counsel. In fact, we suspect that the evidence upon the point just suggested is indefinite and uncertain.

By adopting the foregoing view the arrangement between the parties approaches more nearly the terms agreed upon when the conveyance was made by Wholihan to defendant. As the parties’ minds have been brought to assent to that arrangement, it is to be supposed that a subsequent agreement approaching thereto in its effect would meet the approval of each.

It is our opinion that plaintiffs are entitled to the Nassom lands, and the eighty and twenty-five acre tracts unsold by defendant after the discharge of the liens contemplated by the agreement between the parties; these are such liens as bound the lands bought by defendant. As it is impossible to determine the amount of these liens, or. even how many they are, and who holds them, from the abstract upon which the case is submitted to us, the cause will be remanded to the district court for the determination of these questions on this branch of the case, unless counsel can agree thereon and enter into a stipulation as [549]*549to the amount, holders, etc., of these liens.

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Bluebook (online)
35 Iowa 543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-v-ginn-iowa-1872.