First Nat. Bank v. Weiss

211 N.W. 979, 54 N.D. 883, 1927 N.D. LEXIS 110
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 3, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 211 N.W. 979 (First Nat. Bank v. Weiss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Nat. Bank v. Weiss, 211 N.W. 979, 54 N.D. 883, 1927 N.D. LEXIS 110 (N.D. 1927).

Opinion

In this case the plaintiff seeks to foreclose a certain chattel mortgage admittedly given it by the defendants, Henry Weiss and Magdalena Weiss, his wife. The real issue involved is whether this chattel mortgage was obtained by fraud. Both sides admit that this is the real issue. Respondents say in their brief "at the very outset, appellant asserts, in substance, that there is one and only one issue in the case at bar, and that is whether or not the plaintiff bank, as an inducement to the defendants Weiss to execute the mortgage in question, made certain promises as claimed by defendants, and, if they did, in that event, there is fraud and the said mortgages are a nullity. To this we agree, — the whole controversy, then, resolves itself into an issue of fact."

The facts leading up to the incidents surrounding the taking of the mortgage are practically undisputed. Whatever contest there is is merely perfunctory. So far as the law of the case is concerned the parties are in agreement. There are practically no citations, for each side admits the trial court properly placed the burden of proof, required the proper quantum of proof, and, as appellant says in its brief, "since the whole suit hinges on facts, rather than on points of law, we have omitted any citations through the whole of our argument." He follows *Page 885 this with a mere statement of law calling the attention of the court to the presumptions which apply in this case.

It seems that prior to October 6, 1923, the defendants Weiss were indebted to the plaintiff bank upon long standing accounts and gave their promissory note for $3,200, dated October 6, 1923, due October 1, 1924, with interest at ten per cent. At that time the defendant, Henry Weiss, was the owner in fee of the N.E. 1/4 and the S.W. 1/4 of section 23, township 148, range 71, in Wells county and had purchased the N.W. 1/4 of the same section from his father under a contract for deed, and by the terms of this contract was to deliver one half of all of the crops produced. Henry Weiss was a man of about fifty-five years of age, a farmer living on this land with his family consisting of his wife, Magdalena Weiss and some ten children, seven of whom were living at home. The land which he owned in fee was effectually covered by six mortgages; — first, to the Union Central Life Insurance Company for $4,000, second, to the same company for $2,500, third, a commission mortgage for $425, fourth, to T.L. Beiseker for $4,000, fifth to T.L. Quarve for $2,494.45, sixth, to the plaintiff for $4,000. Interest had been paid on some of these mortgages and possibly some small payments on the commission mortgages; but the amount due in the aggregate had grown because of interest. For instance, the Beiseker mortgage "had climbed to the sum of $7,000 in round figures." Besides this real estate which the defendants Weiss had so thoroughly and impartially plastered, they owned considerable personal property consisting of a large number of cattle, horses and the usual amount of farm equipment. The greater part of this was already mortgaged to the plaintiff bank and to the defendant bank. To secure this indebtedness, the plaintiff bank had obtained a mortgage on the crop for 1922 but had no crop mortgage for 1923. At the time they executed the note for $3,200, referred to before, defendants Weiss executed a note to the plaintiff for $422.75 due October 1, 1924, with interest at ten per cent and as security for the payment of these two notes, plaintiff alleges, the defendants Weiss executed a chattel mortgage upon all of their personal property including hogs and hens and "all small grains, potatoes, corn, corn fodder, grass and hay (wild and tame) and seed therefrom, clover, alfalfa and millet hay, and the seed therefrom, which may have been or may hereinafter be sown, grown, planted or harvested *Page 886 during the year 1924, on the N. half and the S.W. 1/4 of section 23, etc." Default having been made in the payment of these notes, the plaintiff seized the crop in the fall of 1924. The defendant Wells county State Bank obtained a chattel mortgage upon this same personal property on September 30, 1924, to secure the sum of $7,018.64, and under this mortgage claimed the crop alleging that plaintiff's mortgage had been obtained by fraud. In addition to this we find there were two other actions pending affecting this same crop. Two sons of the defendant Henry Weiss had filed labor liens against this crop, aggregating the sum of $406, which liens had been assigned to the plaintiff bank, and were the subject of an action to foreclose. There was also an action brought to foreclose a thresher's lien for some $475 held by one Rudel. By stipulation of the parties disposition was made of these actions on the liens so that the real issue centers around the chattel mortgage obtained by the plaintiff.

The defendants, while admitting the execution of the notes sued upon and the chattel mortgages sought to be foreclosed, allege that the same were given under a state of facts substantially as follows: — that the Wells county State Bank was threatening to foreclose its mortgage upon the real estate of the defendants Weiss and the plaintiff bank was insisting upon payment of the indebtedness due it, or partial payment and more security; that the defendants informed the plaintiff that they had to reserve some of their security to satisfy the defendant bank and prevent a foreclosure of their homestead, and that thereupon plaintiff bank agreed with the defendants to take up and take over all of the indebtedness due to the said defendant bank and carry the defendants on their indebtedness due the plaintiff for another year "provided these defendants would give to the plaintiff their chattel mortgage upon all of the chattels and crops — and also on other crops and other personal property;" that believing these promises and relying thereon they executed the notes and chattel mortgages sued upon and "another note and chattel mortgage in the sum of $697.20;" that the plaintiff bank after receiving and accepting these notes and mortgages neglected and refused and failed to take up the indebtedness due the defendant bank and the defendant bank foreclosed its mortgage against the homestead of these defendants and by reason of the plaintiff taking the crop of 1924 they were unable to redeem their real property. The defendants *Page 887 Weiss asked for a rescission of the contract set forth in the notes and chattel mortgage. As usual in such cases there is a sharp conflict in the testimony relative to the situation surrounding the giving of these notes and mortgages. The trial court was called upon to determine the weight of the evidence, and the credence to be given each witness. The court decided in favor of the defendants and held that the notes and mortgages had been obtained by fraud, that defendants had the right to rescind the same and ordered the return of the property to the defendants. The plaintiff appeals and demands a trial de novo. In such case the findings of the trial court are entitled to appreciable weight. This is a settled rule in our state and it is not necessary to cite decisions in support thereof other than Doyle v. Doyle, 52 N.D. 380, 202 N.W. 863.

Eight witnesses testified in the case, including the register of deeds who identified some instruments, and the sheriff who seized the property. The remaining witnesses, with the exception of Henry Weiss, were connected with the contending banks as officers and employees, hence practically all of the witnesses were more or less affected by the case. The defendant Henry Weiss, testified to the effect that he met the president of the plaintiff bank, H.

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Bluebook (online)
211 N.W. 979, 54 N.D. 883, 1927 N.D. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-v-weiss-nd-1927.