Ferber v. State Bank

133 N.W. 611, 116 Minn. 261, 1911 Minn. LEXIS 980
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 15, 1911
DocketNos. 17,397—(100)
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 133 N.W. 611 (Ferber v. State Bank) 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
Ferber v. State Bank, 133 N.W. 611, 116 Minn. 261, 1911 Minn. LEXIS 980 (Mich. 1911).

Opinion

Bunn, J.

This action was brought to set aside two mortgages and the notes secured thereby, made by plaintiff and her husband to defendant April 15, 1908. The complaint charged in substance that Loomis F. Irish, the president of defendant bank, was acting as her adviser in the settlement between herself and her brother of their rights [262]*262in the estate of her father, and induced her to make the notes and mortgages by representing that it was necessary in order to carry out the terms of a settlement that he had arranged; that plaintiff received no consideration, and was ignorant of the fact that the papers she signed were mortgages. The answer denied that defendant was acting as the adviser or attorney of plaintiff, denied any representations, trick, or artifice, and alleged that the notes and mortgages were given to secure an indebtedness of plaintiff’s husband to defendant. The case was tried on these issues, and special questions theretofore framed by the court were submitted to the jury and answered in plaintiff’s favor. Defendant moved to set aside these answers and for a new trial. The motion was denied, and defendant appealed from the order.

Respondent’s motion to dismiss the appeal is denied. Buzalsky v. Buzalsky, 108 Minn. 422, 122 N. W. 322.

1. The main contention of defendant is that the answers of the jury to the special questions submitted are not sustained by the evidence. Following is an outline of the facts as they appear from the record:

Plaintiff was a married woman, who had lived all her life in the vicinity of Pine 'Island. She had no experience in business matters. She was the daughter of a farmer, who died August 18, 1907, intestate, and the wife of George Ferber, who at the time of the transactions involved was a saloon keeper in Pine Island. Plaintiff and her brother, with their mother, were the heirs of the deceased, and difficulty arose between them relative to the division of their father’s estate. Loomis F. Irish was the president and owner of substantially all of the stock of defendant bank. He had been a banker in Pine Island, and had known plaintiff and her father for twenty years.

On September 21, 1907, Irish called at plaintiff’s home, and procured her signature to a note for $1,500 and a mortgage covering an undivided one-third of the real estate owned by plaintiff’s father at the time of his death. Plaintiff testified that Irish stated that he would help her settle the disagreement with her brother, and asked her to sign the note, so that he could show her brother that [263]*263“he had something against me;” that the note would amount ■ to nothing, and would be returned at any time plaintiff wanted it. Irish flatly denied making such statements, and testified that the note and mortgage were given to secure a then existing indebtedness of George Ferber to the bank on notes and overdraft and a further sum to be advanced him. Irish claimed that plaintiff had signed the prior notes with her husband.

Plaintiff and her brother did not reach an agreement as to their differences, and plaintiff did not see Irish again in regard to the matter until April 15, 1908. Irish prior to this time had written to her brother, requesting him to call at the bank. He called April 15, and agreed to a proposition of settlement that Irish outlined to him. The brother then went to the office of the bank’s attorney, where he met plaintiff and her husband, whom Irish had telephoned. The terms of the settlement were read over. They had apparently been reduced to writing before the meeting. The property of the deceased father was to be divided, so that the plaintiff and her brother would own their shares in severalty. Plaintiff’s share was n certain eighty-acre tract. Deeds were executed by the parties to carry out the terms of the settlement, and Irish then requested plaintiff to come into the bank. Hpon her arrival there Irish presented for her signature the notes and mortgages to set aside which this action was brought. Plaintiff testified that Irish stated to her that it was necessary for her to sign these papers in order to hold the land she had acquired by the settlement. Irish denied any such statement, and claimed that the $2,000 note and mortgage was to take up the $1,500 note and mortgage of September, 1907, with interest, amounting to $85.25, to cover a $300 note, with interest, of George Ferber, Gust Adler, and Ed Adler, taxes paid, registry tax on the two mortgages, attorney’s fees for drawing the mortgage, expenses of recording, bills for light, and a deposit in the bank to the credit of George Ferber for $57.21; all of these items making a total of $2,000.

The $2,000 note drew five per cent interest. The other note, also secured by a mortgage, was for $1,000, and represented an additional five per cent interest on the $2,000 note. This note was pay[264]*264able, $100 on April 15 of each year for ten years, with interest at ten per cent on each payment after due until paid. It contained a clause giving tbe holder the right to declare the principal sum due upon default in payment of any instalment. July 12, 1909, defendant, having declared the entire principal sum due for a default in payment of the instalment’due April 15, 1909, began proceedings to foreclose the mortgage, which resulted in a foreclosure sale to defendant for the sum of $819.35.

The jury found, by the answers to the special questions submitted that:

1. Irish, at the time the note and mortgage of September 21, 1907, were executed, was acting as plaintiff’s adviser in the settlement of her father’s estate.

2. Such note and mortgage were executed by plaintiff to aid Irish in effecting such a settlement.

3. At the time of the execution of the notes and mortgages of April 15, 1908, Irish was acting as plaintiff’s adviser in the settlement between her and her brother.

4. Irish represented to plaintiff that the notes and mortgages were papers necessary to complete such settlement; and

5. Plaintiff was moved to execute the notes and mortgages solely by reason of such representation.

We are of the opinion that each of these findings is sustained by the evidence, within the familiar rule that must be applied where the testimony is conflicting and the trial judge has approved the action of the jury. If the jury 'believed plaintiff’s testimony, the answers were clearly compelled. We are not prepared to say that her testimony was so improbable or opposed to the uncontradicted evidence as to be unworthy of belief.

It is admitted that she mortgaged land of which she was the sole owner, without receiving one dollar of money. Not only is this true, but she consented, if her story is not true, to most burdensome and extraordinary conditions and terms. The jury was fully justified in refusing to believe that any sane woman would knowingly mortgage all her real estate, bind herself and her property to pay ten per cent compound interest, with the right to declare due the [265]*265entire principal and a large part of the unearned interest on any default in'the payment of interest, without receiving a cent of the proceeds and simply to secure the debts of her husband and of others.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 N.W. 611, 116 Minn. 261, 1911 Minn. LEXIS 980, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferber-v-state-bank-minn-1911.