Felland v. Vollmer Milling & Mercantile Co.

53 P. 268, 6 Idaho 120, 1898 Ida. LEXIS 33
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 13, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 53 P. 268 (Felland v. Vollmer Milling & Mercantile Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Felland v. Vollmer Milling & Mercantile Co., 53 P. 268, 6 Idaho 120, 1898 Ida. LEXIS 33 (Idaho 1898).

Opinion

HUSTON, J.

— This is an action brought for an accounting, for the setting aside oí a sale under a chattel mortgage, and for declaring a deed absolute upon its face to be a mortgage. The facts, as alleged in the complaint, are substantially as follows: In the month of March, 1891, plaintiff and two of the defendants, Ole Edwardson and Ole 0. Edwardson, entered into a copartnership, for the purpose of engaging in the business of manufacturing lumber and doing a general sawmilling business, under the firm name and style of Felland, Edwardson & Son. In the course of their business, and between said month of March, 1891, and the third day of March, 1894, said firm had become indebted to the defendants the Yollmer Milling and Mercantile Company in the amount of $2,500, which indebtedness was evidenced by divers promissory notes executed by said firm to the said Vollmer Milling and Mercantile Company, which notes were secured by a chattel mortgage executed by said firm to said Vollmer Milling and Mercantile Company upon certain personal property described in the complaint. That all of said notes secured by said mortgage became and were due long prior to March 3, 1894. Said notes were further secured by a mortgage upon real estate described in the complaint, executed by said firm, or the members thereof. That all of said notes so secured became and were due long prior to March 3, 1894. The complaint alleges the property covered by the chattel mortgage to be of the value of $6,000, and that the real estate is of the value of $2,000. The complaint further alleges that some time prior to March 3, 1894, the said Vollmer Milling and Mercantile Company entered into an agreement with Ole Edwardson, one of the defendants, and a member of said-firm of Felland, Edwardson & Son, by which it was agreed that the said mortgagee should, for the purpose of cheating and defrauding the plaintiff, foreclose said chattel mortgage, and at the sale thereunder bid in the property covered thereby for the use and benefit of said Ole Edwardson. The complaint further alleges that it was also agreed between said parties that unless the firm of Felland, Edwardson & Son should deed the property described in the real estate mortgage to the Vollmer Milling and Mercantile Company, the said real estate mortgage [123]*123would also be foreclosed, and that said property should be purchased by said corporation for the sole use and benefit of the said Ole Edwardson; it being a part of the said agreement that as soon as the said corporation should realize enough money out •of the use of said property and proceeds of the business to pay the indebtedness due from said firm to said corporation, or as soon as said debt should be paid by said Ole Edwardson, all the said property should be transferred to the said Ole Edwardson, and that the said Yollmer Milling and Mercantile Company should take possession of said property, and conduct and manage the business of manufacturing saw logs into lumber, and should account to said Ole Edwardson for the proceeds derived therefrom, until such time as the indebtedness should be paid. The complaint proceeds to state that a sale of the property included in the chattel mortgage was had. It is not pretended but the sale was regularly and legally conducted, but the plaintiff avers that “said sheriff’s sale was conceived in fraud, and that it was not made in good faith, and that, while regular upon its face, it was used, and was intended to be used, by said Yollmer Milling and Mercantile Company and said Ole Edwardson as a means through which to cheat, defraud and deprive plaintiff of his interest in said business and said property, etc.” Not a single fact or circumstance is stated that tends in the slightest degree to establish fraud. Something more is required, we apprehend, in a pleading intended to establish or set forth a fraudulent transaction, and seeking relief therefrom, than a mere reiteration of the words “cheat, wrong and defraud.” The complaint shows a bona fide indebtedness due and owing from the firm of Felland, Edwardson & Son to the Yollmer Milling and Mercantile Company; that the same was secured by a chattel mortgage and a real estate mortgage. The chattel mortgage was regularly, properly and legally foreclosed after default made. No fraudulent acts on the part of the mortgagee are shown, or attempted to be shown. The plaintiff says the sale wias “conceived in fraud,” but there is no statement that such alleged fraudulent conception ever culminated in a birth, to the injury, damage or deception of plaintiff. Conceding that the mortgagee had agreed, after the sale under the chattel mort[124]*124gage, that he would convey the mortgaged property to Ed-wardson, either for a consideration or without consideration, wherein is the plaintiff defrauded thereby? After the sale the property became the property of the purchaser, and, whether that purchaser was the mortgagee or another, he had the right to dispose of it (there being no right of redemption) to whomsoever he saw fit, and upon such terms as he pleased.

It further appears from the complaint that, as an additional security for the sum owing from the firm of Felland, Edward-son & Son to the Yollmer Milling and Mercantile Company, the firm had assigned to said Yollmer Milling and Mercantile Company certain notes and accounts, the property of said firm. By an order of the court this matter was submitted to a referee, who reported to the court that the sum of $601.79 had been collected by the Yollmer Milling and Mercantile Company upon said notes and accounts, which sum was credited upon the indebtedness of said firm to said Yollmer Milling and Mercantile Company. It is also alleged in the complaint that after the sale under the chattel mortgage the Yollmer Milling and Mercantile Company, mortgagee in the real estate mortgage referred to as executed to them by the said firm, threatened to foreclose the same, and by means of said threats induced the members of said firm, to convey to said mortgagees, by deed, the real estate described in said mortgage; said Yollmer Milling and Mercantile Company, at the time of the execution of' such deed, giving to said firm an instrument in the following words, viz.:

“Yollmer, Idaho, March, 1894.
“This is to certify that we do hereby agree to sell to and give to Felland, Edwardson & Son, or either of them, a warranty deed to lot four (4), section three (3), township thirty-nine (39) north, range 3, W. B. M., any time within eight (8) months from date; provided, we are at that time in possession of said lot of land; and provided, further, that said Felland, Edwardson & Son, or either of them, shall pay or cause to be paid to us the amount of money that shall at that time be due us by the said Felland, Edwardson & Son on notes and accounts, together with the purchase price of the above-described land, [125]*125and the sawmill located on same; purchase price amounting to $1,525.00.
«THE VOLLMER MILLING AND MERCANTILE COMPANY,
«By OSCAR LARSON,
«Sect. & Treas.”

This paper would seem to be a direct negation of the whole theory of the plaintiff, that a conspiracy was entered into between the Vollmer Milling and Mercantile Company and Ed-wardson to defraud him. The plaintiff has the same option of purchase, and upon the same terms, under this instrument, that his partners, or either of them, have. It was given with full knowledge of its contents by all the members of said firm, and would appear to have been acquiesced in by them all.

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Bluebook (online)
53 P. 268, 6 Idaho 120, 1898 Ida. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/felland-v-vollmer-milling-mercantile-co-idaho-1898.