Dixon v. Merritt

6 Minn. 160
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 15, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 6 Minn. 160 (Dixon v. Merritt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dixon v. Merritt, 6 Minn. 160 (Mich. 1861).

Opinion

By the Ooiort

Atwater, J.

— This action was brought by the Plaintiff Dixon to cancel certain notes and a mortgage given to secure the same, to the Respondents. The complaint alleges that in 1855, one Edward C. Agnew and Eliza his wife made and delivered to Ira Bidwell, a mortgage on certain premises in Dakota County, as security for the note of Agnew for $600, due in two years from date, with interest at two and. a half per cent, per month. That the first year’s interest, ($180,) was paid on the same. That on the 4th day of May, 1858, said Bidwell for a valuable consideration, duly assigned said mortgage to the Defendants, together with the note secured thereby. That the Defendants foreclosed the same in due form by advertisement, and on the 22d day of August, 1859, bid in tbe premises for the sum of one thousand dollars. That the amount actually due at the time of such sale was $862, and that the costs of such sale did not exceed thirty dollars. That on said 4th day of May, 1858, the Plaintiff entered into a contract with Deiendants, through their agent, David Merritt, but without any consideration, that he would mortgage certain land in Ramsey county, for the purpose of securing to the Defendants the payment of any deficit that might remain, after the foreclosure of the premises mortgaged by Agnew aforesaid. That the Plaintiff being ignorant of the manner of writing out and expressing the aforesaid agreement, entrusted the preparation of the papers to said David Merritt, who procured a mortgage to be drawn, purporting in its terms that tbe Plaintiff bad granted and sold the lands described therein, to Defendants, for tbe sum of $1100, and conditioned to be void upon payment of four promissory notes, amounting in the aggregate to said sum, said notes being-signed by Plaintiff and said Agnew.

[164]*164That said David Merritt, as the agent of the Defendants, wilfully, falsely, and fraudulently concealed the true nature of said mortgage, and represented to Plaintiff that the execution and signing the promissory notes, was nothing more than the proper, written and legal form of tiiD agreement which he had made with said Merritt, and that trusting to the said Merritt, and believing said representatation to be true, lie signed said notes, and executed said mortgage without reading, or having read to him the same, and without receiving any consideration therefor. That said mortgage was duly recorded on the day of the date of its execution and delivery, and remains unsatisfied and uncancelled of record, and is a cloud upon the title of plaintiff, and that the notes remain in defendants’ possession.

The answer admits the execution, delivery and foreclosure oí the Bidwell mortgage, but denies that the mortgage to defendants was given for the purpose mentioned and alleges that the mortgage was given to secure the sum of eleven hundred dollars loaned to Agnew at plaintiff's request, and that the mortgage to Bidwell was assigned by Bidwell to defendants at the request of Plaintiff and Agnew, as collateral security for the payment of the said $1,100 and without any consideration from defendants to Bidwell.

A jury trial was waived, and the cause was tried by the Court, who adjudged that the action be dismissed. A motion for a new trial was made and denied, from which order Plaintiff appealed.

The first objection urged by the Appellant, is that the finding of the Court upon the facts vras contrary to evidence. A number of witnesses were examined on both sides, and the testimony was somewhat conflicting. Some of the witnesses for Plaintiff testified to facts, tending to prove that the mortgage of Plaintiff was given as collateral security only for that from Agnew to Bidwell; while some of the Defendant’s -witnesses swear positively the loan -was made directly to Agnew, at Plaintiff’s request. Without quoting the evidence at large, it may be stated it was peculiarly of that nature which renders a court or jury the appropriate tribunal to pass upon the same ; and this Court cannot disturb the finding on the ground [165]*165that it is against the weight of evidence, nor unless it is plainly contrary to the evidence. From an examination of the evidence presented by the case, we cannot conclude that the finding of the Court, on the main facts in issue, is contrary to the evidence, or even against the weight of evidence. The Plaintiff charged that he had been induced to sign his mortgage, and the notes, through fraudulent representations of the agent of the Defendants. The charge in the complaint is informal, and not expressed with the fulness and certainty desirable in pleading a fact of that nature; and it is very questionable whether the complaint upon demurrer could have been sustained. The Plaintiff avers he did not read the mortgage or hear it read, but does not state that he could not read, nor even that he did not know the contents of the mortgage ; and if lie has been imposed upon at all, it would seem to be only the result of his own negligence, and of such negligence and carelessness as furnishes no strong ground of interference in his behalf by a Court of Equity. By the Plaintiff’s own witness, it appears that Agnew received seventeen dollars from Defendants, and that Plaintiff was present when the money was paid to Agm-w. The Court foun'l the amount due or paid to Bidwell was $1,080, and this amount, with that paid Agnew, makes up nearly the $1,100 which-goes to confirm the Defendant’s statement as to the nature of the transaction.

Among the conclusions of fact found by the Judge were, “ that on the 4th day of May, 1858, the said Bidwell, for a valuable consideration, duly transferred and assigned the said mortgage and note to the Defendants.

“ That said Bidwell executed the assignment thereof here-inbefore referred to, to Defendants, as a further security to the Plaintiff’s said mortgage, for the payment of the said four notes for $1,100.”

These findings, it is claimed, are inconsistent and contradictory to each other. The first merely finds that the Bidwell mortgage was assigned to the Defendants, and the next, that it was assigned as a further security for the Plaintiff’s mortgage. These findings are not inconsistent with each other, the one only stating the fact of the assignment, and the other [166]*166the object. The .Defendants introduced in evidence the assignment of the Bidwell mortgage to Defendants, being, upon its face, an absolute assignment of the mortgage ; and Plaintiff claims that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the allegations of the answer, that it was taken as collateral security. But this was but a part of the testimony on that head, as Sanford swears that “ the Bidwell mortgage was assigned as collateral security for the Plaintiff’s mortgage.” The weight to be given to this testimony, is a matter exclusively for the Court to determine. The burden of proof rested on the Plaintiff to show that his mortgage was given for any other purpose than that which it purports on its face, ar.d the fact that the assignment upon its face was absolute, would not tend to prove or disprove, of itself, the main issue in the case.

It is also claimed that the Defendants cannot contradict the written evidence, under seal, oftheir own transaction, without alleging accident, fraud, or mistake.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Minn. 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dixon-v-merritt-minn-1861.