Funderburg v. Young

281 N.W. 87, 68 N.D. 481, 1938 N.D. LEXIS 136
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 21, 1938
DocketFile No. 6554.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 281 N.W. 87 (Funderburg v. Young) 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
Funderburg v. Young, 281 N.W. 87, 68 N.D. 481, 1938 N.D. LEXIS 136 (N.D. 1938).

Opinion

Over twenty-two years ago the plaintiffs sold to the appellant a well improved farm of 160 acres adjacent to the town of Surrey for the sum of $8000.00, of which $2000.00 was payable in cash and the balance at the rate of $500.00 per annum with interest on deferred payments at 6 per cent per annum. In June 1937, the plaintiffs instituted this action for the cancellation of the contract of sale, which was in writing. Before commencing the action application was made to the district court for permission to cancel the contract pursuant to the provisions of chapter 161, N.D. Session Laws 1937, providing for a moratorium from foreclosures and evictions in certain cases. A hearing was had at which the appellant personally appeared after which permission to foreclose was granted by the court. The appellant interposed an answer to the complaint setting up crop failures and other misfortunes tending to excuse his default and prayed the court that the "judgment provide that this Defendant be given a *Page 484 reasonable time in which to refinance said land under the present adverse loan conditions, either through mortgage loan or through payment of the balance due through crop shares or otherwise as the Court may deem just and equitable to protect the interest of all the parties to this action, . . ."

It appears from the evidence that the appellant has never farmed the land himself, but has operated it through tenants. He has been in default continuously since 1925. When the case was tried in October 1937, the default amounted to $5012.00 principal and interest. He had also failed to pay taxes for the years 1932, 1934, 1935, and 1936, amounting to $241.88. The trial court found that the appellant is unable to make any payments except such sums as he might receive from his tenants or from allotments, that he has no separate funds from which he can make good his default, that he has made and is making no definite effort toward refinancing the contract, and that the value of the property is less than the amount due the plaintiffs. The appellant demands a trial de novo in this court.

The plaintiffs made a motion in the Supreme Court for the dismissal of this appeal, thus raising a question of practice which we will consider before passing upon the merits. The record on appeal in this case contains a statement of the case certified to by the trial court and which has become a part of the judgment roll. The judgment roll also contains the papers specified by § 7688, N.D. Comp. Laws 1913, and has been certified to this court by the clerk of the district court who has also transmitted the notice of appeal and undertaking as required by § 7822, Comp. Laws. The statement of the case was not settled within thirty days after the notice of entry of judgment as provided by § 7655, Comp. Laws. After the thirty-day period had expired the trial court extended the time for settlement of the statement. The plaintiffs contend that this extension of time was not made "upon good cause shown," and that the trial court, therefore, had no authority to make such extension under the provisions of § 7666, Comp. Laws. The grounds urged by the respondent even if correct as to both law and fact, are not sufficient to justify the granting of a motion to dismiss the appeal. The plaintiffs' contentions affect only that part of the judgment roll which is embraced within the statement of the case. The remainder of the judgment roll including the pleadings, *Page 485 findings, judgment, notice of appeal, and undertaking, have not been attacked and are properly before this court on appeal. Ryan v. Bremseth, 48 N.D. 710, 186 N.W. 818. The motion to dismiss the appeal is denied.

We now proceed to the consideration of the merits of the case upon the whole record as certified to us from the district court. The appellant admits that he has defaulted under the contract but he insists that the defaults have not been the result of bad faith on his part, but are the result of actual inability to comply with the contract due to successive crop failures and conditions resulting from the depression. He asserts that the plaintiffs have waived the various and successive defaults by permitting the contract to continue in force after the defaults have become due and that the vendors are not entitled to insist upon a strict foreclosure of the contract at this time. He further urges that under chapter 161, N.D. Session Laws 1937, he should be given until July 1, 1939 in which to redeem.

This court has enunciated a general principle applicable to the various remedies for the cancellation of land contracts in Vail v. Evesmith, 62 N.D. 99, 241 N.W. 719, wherein it was said, "But whatever remedy the vendor invokes, the rights as well as the obligations of the vendee must be recognized, and, the vendee will be afforded a reasonable opportunity to preserve his interest in the property by payment of the sum due, or by redemption from the sale, as the case may be." The problem now confronting us is whether the application of the principles of equity requires a modification of the judgment of the trial court. This is not a case wherein the vendors have attempted to accelerate the due dates of any payments because of a default. All of the payments claimed to be in default are long past due under the original terms. Payments for the past several years have been negligible. Taxes have been and are now accruing against the land. No offer is made to pay any definite sum either upon the debt or upon the taxes.

The appellant quotes in his brief from Ryan v. Bremseth,48 N.D. 710, 186 N.W. 818, supra, as follows:

"In a judgment providing for strict foreclosure of a land contract, although the trial court did not err in not granting the statutory period of redemption, nevertheless, upon equitable principles it is held, that *Page 486 the vendee was entitled upon the facts as found, to a further extension of time within which to meet the defaults found, consistent with plaintiff's rights and crop production."

That case differs materially from the one which we are here considering. The contract for deed was made in July 1918. Substantial sums amounting to approximately one-half of the purchase price were paid in cash and property turned over to the vendor. The action to cancel the contract was instituted December 10, 1920. It was held that the judgment of the trial court should be modified by providing for making certain specified payments in order to give the vendee an opportunity to cure existing defaults. In arriving at this equitable determination the court said: "Pursuant to the findings, the defendant has paid the interest accruing on his indebtedness for two years and two months, up to December 1, 1920, lacking the sum of $244.65. His farming methods have not injured plaintiff's interests or the land. His defaults consist in the failure to pay his 1919 and 1920 taxes and interest on the Prosser mortgage. He has an apparent investment in this land, figured at the date of the purchase, of $9,035. Under the circumstances it is our opinion that plaintiff, seeking to avail of the harsh remedy of a strict foreclosure, must accord to the defendant an opportunity to meet the defaults mentioned if thereby his interests are not jeopardized and damaged."

In the case before us the facts do not make the emphatic appeal to equity that the facts made in the case above cited. In his memorandum opinion in this case the trial court says:

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Bluebook (online)
281 N.W. 87, 68 N.D. 481, 1938 N.D. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/funderburg-v-young-nd-1938.