Hansen v. Kohler

550 P.2d 186, 1976 Utah LEXIS 836
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 1976
DocketAmended 14099
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 550 P.2d 186 (Hansen v. Kohler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hansen v. Kohler, 550 P.2d 186, 1976 Utah LEXIS 836 (Utah 1976).

Opinions

MAU'GHAN, Justice:

On appeal is a judgment of the district court dismissing plaintiffs’ (hereafter Hansen) complaint against defendants (hereafter Kohler) and awarding a money judgment in favor of intervening defendants and cross-claimants (hereafter Pierce) against Hansen. The matters on appeal will be dealt with in that order. We reverse both judgments, and remand with instructions. Because of the error in granting Kohler’s motion to dismiss,1 at the close of Hansen’s evidence, tne state of the record here requires further proceedings to allow Kohler to present his case, if he chooses. It is not necessary for Hansen to present his case anew; however, he may supplement the record in chief or in rebuttal, with such evidence as would have been admissible at the initial trial.2 Costs awarded to Hansen against both defendants.

Sometime prior to the first of April, 1969, Kohler, a realtor, secured the signatures of Hansen and one Robinson on an earnest money receipt and offer to purchase. By its terms Robinson was to pay Kohler a commission of $2,364 and Hansen was to convey to Robinson, as a downpayment, a piece of property he owned in Howell, Utah, having an agreed value of $7,500. The other terms of the contract are not material here. Robinson is not a party to this lawsuit.

On the first of April 1969, Hansen and Robinson, as buyer and seller, executed a Uniform Real Estate Contract reflecting the terms of the earnest money agreement. On April 2, 1969, Hansen executed two warranty deeds describing the Howell property, and showing Kohler as grantee. The warranty deeds are the result of a collateral agreement between Robinson and Kohler, whereby Kohler was to pay Robinson $2,000 and waive his real estate commission, due from Robinson. This arrangement was abandoned by the parties. The testimony of Hansen, that originally the conveyance to Kohler was to be absolute, is consistent with this abandoned agreement. As the subsequent arrangements unfold, the deeds were given a different significance.

A short time later, a title search disclosed that the Howell property was included in a mortgage on Hansen’s farm. Thus, on April 28, 1969, a supplemental agreement was executed between Hansen and Robinson. This agreement recited that Hansen would pay to Robinson an advance payment of $1,000 as a demonstration of good faith, and that both parties desired to fulfill their contract obligations.

On June 12, 1969, another supplemental agreement was engaged, by Hansen and Robinson, noted as an amendment to the contract of April 1st. At Robinson’s suggestion, it was agreed that Hansen would transfer his automobile to Robinson; the [188]*188contract reciting “possession of automobile to be transferred on May 10, 1969.” The contract further recited “buyers agree to transfer title to home and acreage in Howell, Utah” to Kohler, “warranty deed was executed 1 April 1969.” The concluding sentence of the contract recites, “Buyers and sellers agree that this together with other terms defined in said contract constitutes the down payment.” This agreement was drawn in Kohler’s office.

Prior to this time, the automobile had been taken by Robinson, for the purpose of determining its reasonable value. Its value was determined to be within the range of $5,000 to $5,300.

It is the contention of Hansen that the execution of the warranty deeds on April 2, 1969, constituted a security transaction whereby Kohler would be assured of his commission, which Hansen had agreed to pay; because Robinson did not want to accept the Howell property. Hansen testified, without contradiction, that the transfer of the automobile at a figure of $5,-136, to Robinson, together with the $2,364 commission owed to Kohler, amounted to the $7,500 down payment and acquitted him of his obligations to both Robinson and Kohler. Thus, the difference between the value placed on the Howell property, viz., $7,500 and the $2,364 commission to be paid to Kohler was to rebound to his credit. It is Kohler’s contention that the Howell property was deeded to him outright in payment of the only obligation owed to him, viz., his commission of $2,364, and that this is so because of the risk Kohler would have assumed by accepting the property subject to its encumbrances. Such is the way the transaction was represented to the court in Kohler’s opening statement:

So the transaction as it was rearranged then was that Kohler would not pay the $2,000 [to Robinson], he would take the property subject to the $19,900 mortgage and see what he could do with it and Mr. Hansen would transfer The Thunderbird.

The difficulty with this claim is that Kohler did not take the property subject to the mortgage; he took the property, but Hansen paid off the mortgage. Thus Kohler was left wtih a piece of unencumbered property, the agreed value of which was $7,500, in payment for a real estate commission of $2,364. In addition, Hansen transferred to Robinson property with a value of $5,136.

It is Kohler’s claim that the deeds are absolute on their face; so they appear to be, but when viewed in connection with the subsequent agreements particularly the one of June 12, 1969, ambiguities are injected into the transaction, which destroy such a claim, and render necessary a more searching look into the evidence. That the deeds of April 2, 1969, were indeed evidence of a security transaction is borne out by the agreement of June 12, 1969, in which Hansen then agrees “to transfer title” to Kohler. Up until that time, it is apparent there was no delivery. In addition, in that same amendment of June 12, 1969, it is agreed that the considerations mentioned therein, together with the terms defined in the contract of April 1, 1969, constitute the down payment. The automobile, together with the Howell property, amount to a down payment of $12,636 — Hansen was credited with only $7,500 as a down payment.

Further uncontradicted testimony of Hansen is that Kohler was to sell the Howell property, recover his commission of $2,-364, together with a commission for the sale of the Howell property (amounting to $450), return the balance to Hansen, and settle up with Hansen on rents and taxes.

Because of the ambiguities apparent on the face of the record, we do no injustice to the parol evidence rule in determining that the deeds of April 2, 1969, absolute in their terms, were intended as security instruments. As was stated in Corey v. Roberts: 3

In determining whether a deed, absolute in its terms, is intended as a mort[189]*189gage, some of the essential elements to be considered as laid down by the authorities are: Whether or not there was a continuing obligation on the part of the grantor to pay the debt or meet the obligation which it is claimed the deed was made to secure; the question of relative values; the contemporaneous and subsequent acts; the declarations and admissions of the parties; the form of the written evidences of the transactions; the nature and character of the testimony relied upon; the various business, social, or other relationship of the parties; and the apparent aims and purposes to be accomplished.

Examining the facts in the light of these considerations, we are convinced that the Howell property was intended as security for the payment of Kohler’s commission, of $2,364; that the automobile, together with the commission, was to constitute the down payment of $7,500; and that the difference was to be returned to Hansen.

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Bluebook (online)
550 P.2d 186, 1976 Utah LEXIS 836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hansen-v-kohler-utah-1976.