First National Bank v. Mensing

180 N.W. 58, 46 N.D. 184, 1920 N.D. LEXIS 62
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 16, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 180 N.W. 58 (First National Bank v. Mensing) 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 National Bank v. Mensing, 180 N.W. 58, 46 N.D. 184, 1920 N.D. LEXIS 62 (N.D. 1920).

Opinions

Birdzell, J.

In December, 1911, the Union State Bank of Ashley, North Dakota, obtained a judgment against William H. Mensing and Prudie W. Mensing, his wife, for $2,115.45. Execution was promptly levied upon property of the judgment debtors, and it was sold for $1,340.35, which amount was credited on the judgment, leaving a balance of $775.10. The plaintiff herein, the Eirst National Bank of Ashley, is the successor of the judgment creditor and owner of the judgment. This action was brought against the judgment debtors and Elizabeth Mensing, a daughter, for the purpose of subjecting to the lien of the judgment the northwest quarter of section 17, township 130, range 69, in McIntosh county. The legal title to this property stands in the name of Elizabeth L. Mensing. It is claimed by the plaintiff that the defendants William II. and Prudie Mensing are the equitable owners; that the land was bought with their money and placed in the [187]*187name of the other defendant to hinder the plaintiff in the collection of its judgment.

A similar action was brought against William, Prudence, and Harold Mensing (a son), involving the northeast quarter of section 18, township 130, range 69, standing in the name of Harold Mensing, and one against William, Prudence, and R. G. Mensing (another son), involving the northeast quarter of section 7, township 130, range 69, standing in the name of the latter. The three cases were consolidated and tried as one. At the conclusion of the trial, judgment was entered in each case favorable to the plaintiff, except in one particular to be noted. The defendants appeal and ask for a trial de novo in this court.

In this action, the one in which Elizabeth Mensing is a defendant, the judgment, however, further provided that the northwest quarter of section 17, township 130, range 69, was the homestead of William and Prudence Mensing, and dismissed the plaintiff’s action as to that quarter, awarding costs to the defendants. Both the plaintiff and the defendants appeal from this judgment.

Since the evidence bearing upon each transaction in which the land was purchased in the name of a defendant other than William ■ and Prudence Mensing has more or less of a circumstantial bearing upon the other transactions, it is not practicable to treat each transaction separately. One opinion will therefore suffice for the three cases.

Elizabeth Mensing, who was twenty-seven years of age at the time of the trial of this action, testified that she purchased the northwest quarter of section 17, township 130, range 69, in December, 1916, for $2,500, $1,000 being paid in cash and the balance embraced in a mortgage assumed by her. The cash payment was advanced by her father, William Mensing, who has also paid the interest on the mortgage. She further testified that since the year 1906 she had worked away from home in various employments, and had paid to her father from $10 to $15 per month, as a consequence of which payments he was indebted to her at the time of purchase to the extent of about $1,500. The money was to be repaid to her at any time she wanted it for investment. William Mensing testified that he owed his daughter Elizabeth more than the $1,000, which he advanced, and that he acted as her agent in the purchase of the land. There was no accurate record kept of the amount advanced by Elizabeth to her father.

[188]*188The Mensing family lived upon the land, which stood in the name of Elizabeth, and the son, Harold, who was twenty years of age at the time of the trial, farmed it. Most of the machinery belonged to the father, and he received a share of the crop for its use.

The northeast quarter of section 18, which stands in the name of Harold, wars deeded to him by his sister Lina Hite, before her marriage, in consideration of $1,201, $1,200 of this consideration representing a mortgage which was assumed by Harold. Lina Hite is not a party defendant in the action involving this quarter section. The material facts with reference to its original acquisition by her, however, according to the testimony, are as follows: -

In July, 1917, she took title by warranty deed from C. A. Wenzel and wife. The consideration paid was $1,000. Five hundred dollars she obtained from her father, $300 was taken from the proceeds of a loan of $1,200, secured by a mortgage on the land, and $200 she obtained on her mother’s note in the Security State Bank of Wishek. This note was later paid by her father. The $900 remaining of the $1,200 loan was turned over to- her father. William Mensing testified that he advanced $500 on the purchase price of this Lina-Harold 'Mensing quarter, and that it represented money that he owed his (laughter on account of money she had previously turned over to him while teaching school. There is some discrepancy between the testimony of the two Mensings and the testimony of the bank cashier with reference to the net amount of the proceeds of the loan that was deposited to the credit of William after the purchase price of the land was paid. But the amount was either $900 or $700. From all of the testimony, however, it clearly appears that William' received back from this loan all of the money which he had advanced. If this quarter, then, is considered at the time of the purchase as Lina’s, so far as this record shows none of her father’s money is invested in it, and he would still owe her any money she might have advanced-to him while teaching school.

The R. G. Mensing quarter, the northeast quarter of section 7, township 130, range 09, was purchased in October, 1917, from one J. F. Frazier for the consideration of $2,000. Of this $2,000, $1,000 was paid in cash, $500 being obtained from William Mensing, the other $500 being paid by a check drawn by R. G. Mensing on his father’s account in the Ashley State Bank.

[189]*189William Mensing, however, testifies that $500 was paid “as an option” at the time of purchase, and that the balance was all paid at one time, lie professes to have no knowledge of the $500 check which the son claims to have drawn against his account. He stated that the $500 which he advanced to his son was money which he owed the son for ■deposits the latter had made with him from time to time. At the time of the purchase, and at the time the check was supposed to have been drawn upon his father’s account, the son was under age. As to the amount of money advanced by this son, R. G. Mensing, to his father, the son testified that he had made deposits in the bank for the benefit of his father to the extent of about $350, that he kept no duplicate deposit slips and had no accurate record of the amount. He was able to produce some canceled checks showing that at least $225 had been turned over to his father and mother during the year 1917, and there were also some checks subsequent to the purchase. He stated that he had paid some grocery bills for the family and settled his father’s account at the drug store; paid a note at the bank, and paid for a drill purchased by the father in 1918 for $190. He stated that he began turning over money to his father in October, 1914; that from that time to the following spring he averaged $20 a month and that summer (1915) he worked in a drug store, paying his father from $20 to $25 a month. The next fall he worked in an elevator, during which time he gave his father praotieally $50 a month. Hp to the time of the purchase of the land his approximate figures on what his father owed him were $9.25, and since the purchase he had worked for his father, earning the balance of the $1,000.

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Bluebook (online)
180 N.W. 58, 46 N.D. 184, 1920 N.D. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-mensing-nd-1920.