Fransen v. State

240 N.W. 503, 59 S.D. 432, 1932 S.D. LEXIS 149
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 1932
DocketFile No. 7168.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 240 N.W. 503 (Fransen v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fransen v. State, 240 N.W. 503, 59 S.D. 432, 1932 S.D. LEXIS 149 (S.D. 1932).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, P. J.

Plaintiff has instituted this action in this court predicating jurisdiction and authority to sue upon section 2109, R. C. 1919, reading as follows: “It shall be competent for any person deeming himself aggrieved by the refusal of the state auditor to allow any just claim against the state, to commence an action against the state by filing with the clerk of the supreme court a complaint setting forth fully and particularly the nature of the claim. He shall at the same time file an undertaking in the penal sum of five hundred dollars, with two or more sureties, to be approved by the state treasurer, to the effect that he will indemnify the state against all costs that may accrue in such action, and pay to the clerk of said court all costs in case he shall fail to prosecute his action, or to obtain a judgment against the state; and thereupon the action shall be placed upon the calendar of said court.”

The cause now stands for our disposition upon demurrer by defendant state of South Dakota to plaintiff’s complaint challenging the sufficiency of the facts therein stated to constitute a cause of action, and challenging jurisdiction of this court over the defendant *434 and the subject of the action. We therefore recite as facts (confessed for present purposes by the demurrer) the allegations of the complaint and necessary inferences therefrom, in substance, as follows:

In 1921, the state of South Dakota took two' mortgages upon a quarter section of land in Sully county; the first mortgage (which we will hereafter call the rural credit mortgage) securing a rural credit loan, and the second mortgage (which we will hereafter call the land settlement mortgage) securing a land settlement loan. Both mortgages were duly recorded in 1921. After 1925 (see chapter 272, Daws 1925), the rural credit board was in charge of both mortgages. In November, 1929, default existed in the terms and conditions of both mortgages, and defendant state, through the agency of the rural credit board, undertook to foreclose by advertisement the second or land settlement mortgage. Notice of foreclosure sale was published pursuant to law, containing all information required by the provisions of section 2880, R. C. 1919. The notice did not give, or purport to give, any information, either directly or inferentially as to whether the mortgage being foreclosed was a first lien on the premises. The land was advertised to be sold by the sheriff of Sully county November 20, 1929. On that date the value of the land was $3,200. The principal and interest due on the second mortgage being foreclosed was $2,553.37. The principal and interest due on the prior or rural credit mortgage (which' was also' ripe for foreclosure 'by virtue of default and condition broken) was approximately $2,900. If the state of South Dakota acquired title to the premises in question by purchase upon the foreclosure of the land settlement mortgage, then by virtue of statute (section 2a, chapter 187, Daws 1927) the rural credit first mortgage might be canceled and the accounts of the rural credit board might be credited with the land in lieu of the mortgage. Prior to the sale, the rural credit board had directed the sheriff of Sully county to bid at the sale, in behalf of the state, a sum equal to accrued principal and interest on the land settlement mortgage, plus statutory costs of sale.

Plaintiff is a farmer, comparatively inexperienced' in business, knowing little of real estate titles. He was familiar with the land in question, -had a little money to invest, and believed the land at that time to have a value of twenty to' twenty-five dollars per acre. *435 He thought that the state of South Dakota could lawfully take only first mortgages. He believed therefore that the fact that the mortgage being foreclosed was given to and being foreclosed by the state of South Dakota necessarily indicated that it was a first lien. He did not in fact have any knowledge of the existence of the first, or rural credit, mortgage, though of course chargeable with constructive notice thereof from the record. He made no effort to investigate the title in any manner, but acted entirely in reliance on his belief that the mortgage being foreclosed was in fact a first lien. He attended the sale and made a bid of $2,720, being $3.29 more than accrued principal, interest, and costs of sale. The land was struck off and sold to him. He paid his money and received a certificate of sale. The money, less overplus and costs of sale, went into the rural credit funds. Plaintiff did not learn of the existence of the first mortgage until January, 1930, when demand was made upon him by the rural credit board for payment of certain delinquent installments thereon if he wished to avert foreclosure. He immediately consulted counsel, and, within a very few days, advised the rural credit board in writing of the mistake under which he had labored when he made his bid, tendered to the board an assignment and transfer of his certificate of sale, and requested the return of his money. Receiving no> satisfactory response, he shortly thereafter gave formal notice of rescission, again tendering the certificate and demanding his money. Thereafter he filed a claim with the state auditor for the money in question, and, the same being disallowed, he instituted this action, in which he again tenders transfer of the certificate of sale and prays the recovery of his money.

We will consider first the question raised by the demurrer as to whether the facts alleged are sufficient to entitle plaintiff to the relief sought.

On this phase of the case, defendant contends that plaintiff finds himself in his present unenviable position solely because of his own negligence, which, of course, is true. On this premise defendant argues that equity will never relieve from the results of a unilateral mistake of fact arising from the utter failure of the party making the mistake to exercise ordinary care and diligence. Mistake of fact as ground for equitable relief is discussed at some length in 23 Har. L. Rev. 608, and is the subject of an extensive *436 case note in 59 A. L. R. at p. 809. We doubt if the rule that equity will not relieve from unilateral mistake occasioned by negligence is as inflexible as defendant maintains. It rather seems the trend of the more modern decisions to grant or withhold relief, according to the circumstances of the particular case. Cf. Home Investment Co. v. Clarson, 21 S. D. 72, 109 N. W. 507; Bennett v. Campbell, 48 S. D. 285, 204 N. W. 177.

In the instant case, plaintiff’s erroneous impression that the state could hold only first mortgages is by no means a sufficient excuse for his negligence in failing to ascertain whether or not the mortgage being foreclosed was in fact a first lien of record. The fact remains, however, that plaintiff, negligent as he was, did make this bid and 'pay his money on the assumption that the land settlement mortgage was a first lien. He paid practically the value of .the property. Defendant foreclosed the land settlement mortgage for- almost the value of the property with full knowledge that it was the holder of a prior mortgage on the premises for an even greater amount. It was not reasonable to suppose that substantial bids would be made at the foreclosure sale under the circumstances, and defendant did not anticipate that such bids would be made, but expected to be compelled itself to bid in the premises, and had so directed the sheriff.

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Bluebook (online)
240 N.W. 503, 59 S.D. 432, 1932 S.D. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fransen-v-state-sd-1932.