Fyten v. Cummins

203 N.W. 178, 52 N.D. 445, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 32
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 11, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 203 N.W. 178 (Fyten v. Cummins) 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
Fyten v. Cummins, 203 N.W. 178, 52 N.D. 445, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 32 (N.D. 1925).

Opinion

13 umziíun, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment quieting title in tlie plaintiff to certain lands 'and awarding a recovery of $6,113.55 and costs as a personal judgment against the defendant A. J. Cummins.

The plaintiff Edla II. Fyten was the owner of a section of land near Niagara in Grand Forks county. In October, 3 918 she entered into a contract for the sale of the land to the defendant A. <T. Cummins for a consideration of $35,200.00, payable as follows: “The equal one-half of all grains and produce raised upon and from said farm each and every year until the whole amount thereof is paid, with interest on all deferred payments running from this date at the rate of 7 per cent per annum.” It- was further provided that Cummins should assume, as a part of the purchase price, a mortgage of $7200.00. No *447 cash or other payment was made at the time the contract was entered into. The contract provided for the doing of the threshing each year on or before October 15th and for an annual adjustment on the latter date, at which time the grain and produce should be divided and applied, first, to the payment of interest on the unpaid purchase price, and, second, to the principal, and it further provided that until division and sale the grains and salable produce should be put into 'an elevator at Niagara under the direction of the seller and be stored in her name and sold by her on or before October 15th. It was agreed that the purchaser should pay all taxes and assessments, work out road taxes, keep buildings insured for the benefit of the seller in amounts of at least $5,000.00 o'" outbuildings and $3,000.00 on the dwelling house. The purchaser was to furnish seed, tools and machinery' and operate the farm, keeping down foul weeds and keeping the buildings in repair at his own expense. The purchaser was to haul out and properly spread accumulated manure, to keep in good repair a certain electric light plant and hot water plant, and to plant each of the first two years not to exceed fifty acres of potatoes upon the parts of the lands that would be most benefited thereby, and after the annual adjustment and the payment of the amount due each year the title and possession of the potatoes to rest in the purchaser. The seller reserved the right to perform the purchaser’s covenants upon the failure of the latter to do so, charging the purchaser with the actual costs, payable out of the purchaser’s share of the crops. The purchaser covenanted not to encumber the lands or the crops without the written consent of the first party. He purchased certain quantities of seed for an agreed consideration of $1,842.00, which amount with 10 per cent interest he agreed to pay the seller on October 15, 1919 out of his half of the grains, and in the event the yields were less than a stated amount, he was to pay less and the' seller was to carry the balance over at the same rate of interest. The purchaser went into possession under the above contract in the fall of 1918. The contract was filed for record in the office of the register of deeds on October 19, 1918, and on September 25, 1919 the parties agreed to a further stipulation that the contract should be personal and that the land should not be rented or the contract sold or assigned without the written consent of the seller. This stipulation was attached to a copy or duplicate original contract and *448 executed by the parties but not filed for record until September 17, 1920.

During the period of Cummins’ occupancy of the premises under the above contract, he failed to keep certain of the covenants therein contained. The evidence in this respect shows in general the following: That while he raised a good crop in the year 1919 and made substantial payments on his contract, he raised poorer crops in 1920 and 1921 and permitted the land to deteriorate through improper cultivation and lack of attention to the eradication of noxious Aveeds; he permitted the buildings to become in a state of disrepair and inflicted damages upon the house and outbuildings; he permitted the heating plant in the house to become damaged and put the electric light plant out of commission; he permitted the fences to become more or less dilapidated and he used certain parts of the premises in the operation of an illicit still for making moonshihe for his own use and for sale. Chving to this general situation, the seller Avas desirous of canceling the contract and resuming possession of the premises, and during the seasons of 1920 and 1921 she negotiated Avith the purchaser with this end in view.

These negotiations were somewhat complicated by the fact that the purchaser had become indebted to the firm of English & Pickard and to the Security State Bank, both of Niagara, and had assigned his purchase contract to Chas. M. English as security for the indebtedness so OAving. By i’eason of this assignment, English became interested in the negotiations betAveen Mrs. Eyten and Cummins, looking toAvard the cancellation of the contract and the resumption of possession by the former. In a letter Avritten by English to the attorney for the seller, dated in November, 1920, he stated his interest in collecting the indebtedness owing by Cummins to himself, to English & Pickard and the Security Bank and volunteering his assistance in making a settlement between Mrs. Eyten and Cummins on condition that his interests Avere protected. He suggested assigning to Mrs. Eyten his assignment from Cummins. It seems that the indebtedness for Avhich the English assignment Avas made Avas also secured by a chattel mortgage on certain live stock and machinery. Cummins remained on the farm during the season of 1921 and the plaintiff’s continuing desire to cancel the contract led to further negotiations, some of Avliioh were *449 carried on through her attorney and an attorney representing English. As a result of these negotiations 'an agreement was substantially reached between the attorneys whereby Mrs. Fyten would pay $1,300.00 to English and pay certain expenses incurred in raising the 1921 crop, and the latter would procure a quitclaim deed from Cummins and wife and cause the latter to remove from the farm, leaving the 1921 crop for Mrs. Eyten. This proposition was submitted to the x>faint-iff at her home in Minneapolis by her attorney, but almost immediately afterward and before the arrangement was carried out, the plaintiff learned that Cummins and wife had removed from the farm several days previously, whereupon she immediately took steps to revoke the authority of her attorney to settle on the basis indicated and to resume possession of the farm. Such possession being resumed, she began this suit to cancel the contract and remove it as a cloud upon her title.

The court below made findings of fact to the effect that the defendant Cummins had broken his contract in the respects indicated in the above statement and further found that the defendant English h'ad never at any time taken possession of the premises under his assignment and that no contract- of settlement had in fact been made between the plaintiff and the defendant English; that the defendant Cummins had voluntarily quit and removed from the premises and at the time of his removal was indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $6,113.55, which sum was “equal to or in excess of the amount of any equity” that the defendant had in the land at any time during the life of the contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
203 N.W. 178, 52 N.D. 445, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fyten-v-cummins-nd-1925.