Fleck v. State

71 N.W.2d 636, 4 Oil & Gas Rep. 1905, 1955 N.D. LEXIS 126
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 26, 1955
Docket7473
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 71 N.W.2d 636 (Fleck v. State) 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
Fleck v. State, 71 N.W.2d 636, 4 Oil & Gas Rep. 1905, 1955 N.D. LEXIS 126 (N.D. 1955).

Opinion

’ GRIMSON, Judge.

This is an action to .determine adverse claims to real estate. The. issue involved is the ownership of. one-half of the oil, natural gas and minerals in Section 24, Township 145, Range 95. .

On March 19,1938, the plaintiffs; John M; Fleck; and his wife, Elizabeth, made a loan of $4,400 from the permanent school fund of the State of Nbrth Dakota, due’Dec. 1, 1949. To secure the loan they gave a real estate mortgage on Section 24, Township 145, Range 95. Defendants defaulted in the payment of interest. On October 28, 1941, the plaintiff mailed to the defendant by registered mail, a notice of intention to foreclose, showing $842 in past due interest. Plaintiffs acknowledged receipt thereof by a written, receipt signed by John Fleck. A notice of real estate mortgage foreclosure sale of said land, dated Nov. 29, 1941, was thereupon published in six successive issues of the Killdeer Herald, next preceding the date of sale. Such sale was had and sheriff’s certificate issued Jan.13, 1942.

The plaintiff, John M. FÍeck, testified that he could not read nor write except his name but that his wife noticed this foreclosure sale. He then testified that he went to a banker at Dickinson, North Dakota to see if he could make arrangements for a loan to redeem the' premises. He claims süch banker agreed to make him a loan and told him "to draw his check on the bank for what he needed to pay and return to give the bank a mortgage therefor. The plaintiff, John M. Fleck, testified further that after making that arrangement he went to Bismarck and had a conference with some one in the office of the State Land Commissioner. By description he identified that man as N. B. Jensen, deputy state land commissioner. The date of that visit is not certain but John M. Fleck claims it to have beén about two weeks after the- foreclosure sale. He further claims that upon telling Jensen the arrangements he could make Jensen told him that he did not" need to borrow money at 7 percent interest when the state would let him redeem at any time within three *638 years at 4 percent interest. John M. Fleck claims that thereupon, and in reliance thereon he abandoned making any deal with the bank. He claims he then gave the state land department a check for $369.72 to apply on the redemption. There was then about eleven months left within which redemption could have been made. Sheriff’s deed was issued to the state on Jan. 13, 1943. On April 3, 1943, the state leased the four quarters in question to the plaintiff, John M. Fleck, and he paid the treasurer of Dunn County, $291.50 rental for 1943.

On July 6, 1943, the plaintiff, John M. Fleck, signed an application to purchase this land under Section'15-0715(5), NDRC 1943, for the minimum price of $5,149.82, the amount then due on his loan. On the same date the contract for such purchase was executed and signed by plaintiff, John M. Fleck. Payments under that contract were duly made by the said plaintiffs. On Sept. 25, 1944, the state executed a quitclaim deed to the premises to the plaintiff, John M. Fleck, reserving 50 percent of oil, natural gas and minerals in the state, as provided by Chapter 165,1941 Session Laws. On the 12th day of December 1951, the plaintiff, John M. Fleck, through his attorneys, Strutz, Jansonius & Fleck, made application for a release of mineral reservations in the deed under Chapter 231, S.L. 1951. This application was denied when that law had been declared unconstitutional by the supreme court. Solberg v. State Treasurer, 78 N.D. 806, 53 N.W.2d 49.

On the 9th day of August 1952 this action was commenced. The case was tried to the court who found for the plaintiffs. Defendants appeal and assign almost every finding of fact and conclusion of law by the court as error. They ask for a trial de novo and their demand therefor is included in the settled statement of the case.

In this action -plaintiff relies "entirely on an oral contract extending the time of redemption and that he in accordance with said oral contract redeemed and recovered the whole interest in his land including all the mineral rights therein.

The proof of an oral contract for redemption. after the legal period of redemption has expired must be clear and convincing. Kenmare Hard Coal, Brick & Tile Co. v. Riley, 20 N.D. 182, 126 N.W. 241.

We will first analyze the evidence to determine what, if any, factual and legal bases there are for plaintiffs’ claims.

The plaintiff, John M, Fleck, in his testimony repeatedly makes bald statements that Jensen, the deputy land commissioner, gave him the right to redeem within three years and that on the strength of that he gave up trying to redeem within the year allowed by law. He claims to have made an arrangement with the Dickinson banker about the time of the sheriff’s sale to furnish him money to redeem. He does not bring in the banker to corroborate him on that or explain his absence. He paid $291.50 for leases for the land in 1943 and received the. original receipt. He admits signing the application for the purchase of his land and signing the contract for the purchase of the land on July 6, 1943. He admits signing a statement of the account of the purchase price of the laird which statement shows he received a copy thereof. Fie admits he went to J. K. Eckes, state’s attorney of Dunn County on August 30, 1943, within two months of the date of the contract, with his papers and was informed by him that he had a contract for the purchase of the land, not for redemption. At that time, at any rate, the evidence shows that' plaintiff, John M. Fleck, knew what his -papers contained. John M. Fleck made no complaints then to the state land department. He admits receiving the quitclaim deed of the state to himself dated- Sept. 21, 1944. He made no complaint when he received that deed. But on Oct. 7, 1944, John M. Fleck went to the bank at Killdeer and had some one there write a letter for him to the state land department which he signed, requesting the return of the insurance policy which had been omitted by oversight when the deed was sent to him. All these papers he had in his files at home. He claims that he could not read and that he believed all the *639 papers he received from the land department 'pertained to redemption. ■ His wife could read. John M. Fleck admits she told him the. contents of the notice of intention to foreclose and that she read the receipts he received on payments. She. is one of the plaintiffs and interested in this land. She did not testify nor. is her absence explained. At any rate John M. Fleck did learn what those papers were soon after he got them if he did not know at the time he got them.

After some oil men had contacted him for oil leases he, in December 1951, consulted with-attorney Al. C. Strutz who prepared for him an application for a release of 50 percent reservation of oil made by the state in the quitclaim deed as provided by Chapter 231, S.L.1951, Sec. 2. In that application, which John signed and verified, he stated that “The State of North 'Dakota quitclaimed to John M. Fleck, Killdeer, North Dakota, * * * all of Section 24, Township 155, Range 95. * * * ” (Emphasis supplied.) He also executed a check to the state for $89 as the payment to accompany the application and signed a receipt for that when it was returned upon the denial of the application.

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Bluebook (online)
71 N.W.2d 636, 4 Oil & Gas Rep. 1905, 1955 N.D. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fleck-v-state-nd-1955.