Ditto, Et Ux. v. Bank of Gillette

264 P. 1013, 38 Wyo. 120, 1928 Wyo. LEXIS 26
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 13, 1928
Docket1418
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 264 P. 1013 (Ditto, Et Ux. v. Bank of Gillette) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ditto, Et Ux. v. Bank of Gillette, 264 P. 1013, 38 Wyo. 120, 1928 Wyo. LEXIS 26 (Wyo. 1928).

Opinion

*123 Kimball, Justice.

This is an action to have a deed declared a mortgage.

Until May 5, 1925, the plaintiffs, Samuel D. Ditto and wife, were the owners of 1,160 acres of land on which there were two mortgages. The first mortgage, held by the Denver Joint Stock Land Bank, hereinafter called the “land bank,” was a so-called amortization mortgage for about $7,500, on which, on the above mentioned date, there was past due the sum of $861. The second mortgage, held by the defendant, was in the ordinary form, with power of sale, *124 and secured a debt of $3,600 and interest which., on said date, amounted to $3,851, then past due. This debt to defendant was also secured by a chattel mortgage on livestock and hay belonging to plaintiffs.

On May 5, 1925, the plaintiffs executed and delivered to the defendant a warranty deed to the lands. The deed is unconditional and by its terms conveys to defendant the absolute title to the lands, with a release of the wife’s rights of homestead, subject only to the mortgage to the land bank. On the same day, the plaintiffs transferred to defendant by bill of sale the personal property covered by the chattel mortgage. Also on the same day, the plaintiff Samuel D. Ditto and defendant signed a writing which, after designating the defendant as party of the first part and Mr. Ditto as party of the second part, reads as follows :

1. “WITNESSETH: The first party hereby agrees to sell to the second party, and the second party agrees to purchase from the first party, the land hereinafter described, and on the terms and conditions hereinafter set forth. The conditions of this Contract are such that,

2. “WHEREAS, The second party and his wife, Carolyn J. Ditto, have heretofore and prior to the date of this Contract, been indebted to the first party in the sum of $3851.23, and,

3. “WHEREAS, Said indebtedness has been secured by a real estate mortgage on the land hereinafter described, and being the land included in this Contract, and,

4. “WHEREAS, The Denver Joint Stock Land Bank has a first mortgage, on said land, amounting to about $7500, and,

5. “WHEREAS, The indebtedness to the first party is now past due, and the second party has given Deed this day to said land to the first party in payment of the indebtedness hereinbefore mentioned, and,

*125 6. “WHEREAS, Such Deed and transfer of said real estate from the second party to the first party has made unnecessary a foreclosure by the first party, and,

7. “WHEREAS, In consideration of the execution of said Deed, the said first party is granting, by this Contract, to the second party, the right to re-purchase said land within a period of eight (8) months from the date of this contract.

8. “NOW THEREFORE, IT IS MUTUALLY UNDERSTOOD AND AGREED, That in consideration of the premises hereinafter set forth, that-the first party will re-transfer, by Deed to the second party, the land included in this Contract and hereinafter described, if and when, on or before the 2nd day of January, 1926, the second party shall pay to the first party the sum of $3851.23, together with interest at the rate of Ten (10%) per cent annum thereon from the 2nd day of May, 1925, together with any and all taxes that shall have been paid on said property by the first party, together with all interest or principal that may have then been paid by the first party to the Denver Joint Stock Land Bank on the indebtedness of the second party to the said Denver Joint Stock Land Bank. Second party to have lease on said premises and remain in the possession of same for year 1925 for consideration of $1.00.

9. “IT IS FURTHER UNDERSTOOD AND AGREED, That the second party gave a Bill of Sale to the livestock and hay included in the Chattel Mortgage issued as further security to the first party and dated December 29th, 1924, which said livestock and hay is to be sold at Public Auction by the first party within the next 45 days, and the proceeds thereof applied to the payment of taxes and interest due the Denver Joint Stock Land Bank on their notes and mortgages, and the balance, if any, deducted from the amount to be repaid by the second party in fulfilling the terms of this Contract, and re-obtaining title of said land.

*126 10. “The laud included in this Contract is all of the land owned by the second party prior to the date of this Contract, and is the land this day Deeded to the first party by the second party and more particularly described as follows:

(here follows description of lands)

11. “IT IS FURTHER MUTUALLY UNDERSTOOD AND AGREED, That the first party shall have the right to assign and transfer or dispose of its interest in said land subject only to the conditions contained in this Contract.’7

This contract is dated May 2, 1925, but the evidence shows that it, the deed and the bill of sale were all executed at practically the same time on May 5, as stated above. In our discussion, in referring separately to those instruments, we shall call them, respectively, the deed, bill of sale and contract.

On January 2, 1926, the last day for plaintiffs to exercise their right to repurchase the lands in accordance with the contract, this action was commenced. The plaintiffs in their petition allege that they are the owners of the lands in question; that they executed and delivered to defendant an instrument entitled “warranty deed” to the lands, “which instrument was in truth and in fact not a warranty deed, but an instrument of defeasance, or a mortgage, and it was not intended by plaintiffs to be taken as an instrument of conveyance as a warranty deed to the said lands; and that there was no consideration for the execution of the said instrument entitled 'warranty deed. 7 7 7 They then allege that plaintiff Samuel D. Ditto, on behalf of himself and his wife, entered into the contract, as quoted above, with the defendant. It is then alleged “that the defendant has not foreclosed its said mortgage, or the plaintiffs of their right to redeem77 the lands; and that some of the moneys received by defendant from the sale of the personal property mentioned in the contract has not been applied according to the terms of the contract. It is then alleged that defendant is threatening to sell and convey the lands *127 to other persons. The prayer is that the defendant be restrained from selling the lands and from recording the deed; that the deed be declared a mortgage; that an accounting be had to settle the amount of the debt secured; and for such other relief as may be equitable.

On the filing of the petition a temporary restraining order was issued restraining the defendant from conveying the lands or recording the deed. It appears, however, that the deed had been recorded May 8, 1925, three days after its delivery. This temporary restraining order was dissolved on January 22, 1926, when plaintiffs failed to comply with an order requiring a bond in an increased amount.

The questions raised on the appeal do not require any particular notice of the defendant’s answer.

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Related

Moore v. Beverlin
1939 OK 339 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1939)
Fitch v. Ditto, Et Ux.
264 P. 1017 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
264 P. 1013, 38 Wyo. 120, 1928 Wyo. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ditto-et-ux-v-bank-of-gillette-wyo-1928.