Duerden v. Solomon

94 P. 978, 33 Utah 468, 1908 Utah LEXIS 21
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedApril 6, 1908
DocketNo. 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 94 P. 978 (Duerden v. Solomon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duerden v. Solomon, 94 P. 978, 33 Utah 468, 1908 Utah LEXIS 21 (Utah 1908).

Opinion

STEAUP, J.

This action was brought by plaintiff against James Solomon and his wife and Nephi and William S. Duerden to have an instrument purporting on its face to be a deed declared a mortgage, and the title to the real estate described therein quieted in plaintiff upon payment of the mortgage indebtedness. The case was tried to the court, who found the facts substantially as follows: In 1891 the plaintiff, who then was the owner and in possession of the real estate, mortgaged it to one Charles Morrell to secure an indebtedness in the sum of $2,-000. At its maturity Morrell demanded payment, and threatened foreclosure proceedings. In August, 1897, plaintiff ex•ecuted. and delivered a deed to Morrell, with the understanding that it should be a mortgage, and, as such, it was received and accepted by Morrell for the security of the indebtedness which then amounted to $2,210, which the plaintiff was required to pay within one year thereafter together with interest at the rate of eight per cent, per annum. In June, 1898 [471]*471tbe plaintiff and tbe defendant James Solomon entered into an agreement by tbe terms of wbicb Solomon agreed to pay tbe amount due Morrell for tbe use and benefit of tbe plaintiff, and to bold tbe premises mortgaged to Morrell as security for tbe payment of the indebtedness until tbe sum was paid to Solomon by'plaintiff, together with interest at tbe rate of eight per cent, per annum. In pursuance of tbe agreement Solomon paid Morrell $2,240, the amount of tbe indebtedness. Morrell executed and delivered a deed to him as security, but as a part of tbe transaction, and in consideration thereof, it was agreed between plaintiff and- Solomon that tbe deed, though an absolute conveyance upon its face, should be treated and considered as a mortgage to secure tbe payment made by Solomon to Morrell. In November, 1897, Solomon also loaned plaintiff an additional sum of $1,100, wbicb was to be repaid by plaintiff, together with interest at tbe rate of ten per cent per annum, wbicb loan was also secured by mortgage, in form an absolute deed, upon other property belonging to tbe plaintiff. From time, to time the plaintiff paid Solomon interest on both loans, which were treated by tbe plaintiff and tbe defendant as one indebtedness. Tbe total amount of interest paid by plaintiff was tbe sum of $1,713.40. Tbe payments as made were not applied to each loan separately, but were applied generally to both loans as and for payment of interest. Tbe court applied tbe payments of interest first to the $1,100 loan, and tbe remaining payments to tbe $2,240 loan, wbicb made $790.80 interest paid on tbe latter loan. In February, 1906, Solomon entered into an agreement to convey to tbe defendant Nepbi Puerden three acres of tbe premises in question for the sum of $1,000. Tbe contract of sale was made in tbe presence of plaintiff, and with bis consent. In March, 1906, Nepbi Puerden paid Solomon $500 on account of tbe purchase and in April following an additional sum of $500, at wbicb time Solomon executed and delivered to him a deed of conveyance for tbe three acres. At about tbe same time tbe plaintiff offered to pay Solomon tbe balance remaining due on tbe indebtedness, and tendered him a sum in excess of the [472]*472actual' amount of' the indebtedness, including interest and principal, and demanded a reconveyance of the property to himself, less t-hat portion oonvej^ed to Nephi Duerden. Solomon refused to reconvey upon the claim made by him that he was the sole owner of'the property. During all the time in question the plaintiff remained in possession of the premises and paid the taxes on the property. Giving the plaintiff credit for the $1,000 received by Solomon from Nephi Duerden and the sum of $790.80 interest paid, the court found that there was still due Solomon both principal and interest the sum of $1,843.24. The court thereupon found that the deed held by Solomon, though in form an absolute conveyance, was in fact a mortgage which had been given to secure the payment of $2,240 paid by Solomon to Morrell, and that the amount remaining due, including principal and interest was $1,843.24. The court thereupon adjudged that the plaintiff was required to pay that sum within thirty days from the entry of judgment and upon such payment the title of the premises, less the portion conveyed to Nephi Duerden, was quieted in plaintiff. From this judgment the defendant <Solomon has prosecuted this appeal. It is claimed by him that the findings are not supported by the evidence.

It is not contended that it was incompetent to show the real object of the deed by evidence aliunde the instrument. It is conceded that in cases such as this courts of equity will look beyond the terms of the instrument to the real transaction, and, when that is shown to* be one of security and not of sale, they will give effect to the actual contract of the parties, and that the rule which excludes parol evidence to contradict or vary written instruments does' not forbid an inquiry into the object of the parties in executing and receiving the instrument. The contention made is that a presumption arises that the instrument is what it purports on its face to be, an absolute conveyance of the land; that to overcome this presumption and to establish its character as a mortgage the evidence must be clear and convincing; and that the evidence was not sufficient to overcome this presumption, especially in that’ the evidence did not sufficiently show that any in[473]*473debtedness existed between the plaintiff and tbe defendant. Whether the instrument should be treated as a deed or mortgage of course depends upon the facts and eircum-stancep of the transaction,' the object and purpose for which it was given and received, and whether it was given as security or for a bargain and salé of the land. Upon an examination of the record we are well satisfied that there is sufficient evidence to support the findings. It is not practical, nor do we deem it necessary, to set ■forth in an opinion an abtract of all the evidence which we think tends to support the findings. Reference to only a few of the prominent features as shown by the evidence is, we think, all that is necessary to warrant the finding that the •transaction was one of security, and not of sale. That the deed held by Morrell, though in form an absolute conveyance was in fact a mortgage to secure the payment of an indebtedness of $2,210 and interest owing by plaintiff to Mor-rell, and that the defendant had knowledge of such fact, is not disputed. The plaintiff testified that after the claim had been placed in the hands of Morrell’s attorneys, Messrs. Stephens & Smith, for collection, he sought Solomon for the purpose of obtaining a loan from him to meet the payment and that Solomon agreed to make the loan; that thereupon he and Solomon," in June, 1898, went to the office of Morrell’s attorneys, who had-charge of the business for Morrell and there the plaintiff, in the presence of Solomon, said:- “Mr. Solomon’has come to lend me the money and pay Mr. Morrell.” Mr. Stephens testified that plaintiff said: “Brother Solomon had arranged to let him have the money to pay off Mr. Mor-rell, and they wanted to know how much it was, and I told them. Duerden said that he couldn’t pay it all at once, and I told him that it would not make any difference; that all that Morrell wanted was to get his money and interest. I said that I would procure a deed from Mr. Morrell to Mr. Solomon, provided he would pay the amount of money which was due, principal and interest, and I believe there was an attorneys’ fee of $50. That Solomon stated he was going to let Duerden have the money, or lend it to him; that he was [474]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 P. 978, 33 Utah 468, 1908 Utah LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duerden-v-solomon-utah-1908.