Hanson v. Hanson

202 N.W. 645, 52 N.D. 146, 1924 N.D. LEXIS 129
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 202 N.W. 645 (Hanson v. Hanson) 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
Hanson v. Hanson, 202 N.W. 645, 52 N.D. 146, 1924 N.D. LEXIS 129 (N.D. 1924).

Opinion

*149 CiiRisTiANSON, J.'

The defendant, State Bank of Yerona, brought an action against the above named defendant, Alfred Hanson, and the above named plaintiff, Oliana Hanson, to foreclose a mortgage on certain lands in LaMoure County, in this state, which mortgage had been executed and delivered to it by the defendant, Alfred Hanson. Shortly thereafter the above named plaintiff, Oliana Hanson, brought this action to foreclose an equitable lien which she claimed upon the same premises. Alfred Hanson and State Bank of Yerona were named as defendants therein. The defendant, Alfred Hanson, made default. The State Bank of Yerona, interposed an answer wherein it asserted that its mortgage was a lien prior and superior to any lien plaintiff might have. The parties agreed that the two actions be tried together. They were so tried. In this case, viz.: — the action brought by Oliana Hanson to foreclose an equitable lien, the trial court held that the plaintiff did not have an “equitable lien which can be made the subject of foreclosure under our laws.” Judgment was entered accordingly, and plaintiff has appealed.

The material facts are not in dispute, and were found by the trial court to be:

“That Johán Hanson, also known as J. J. Hanson was at the time of his death and prior thereto the husband of Oliana Hanson, the plaintiff herein, and the father of Alfred Hanson, one of the defendants herein, and that said Oliana Hanson is the step-mother of said Alfred Hanson.
“That at his death and prior thereto, Johan Hanson, owned of record and was the owner in fee of the southwest quarter of section Twenty-seven, and the north half and 'the southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section Twenty-six, of township one hundred and *150 thirty-five, range fifty-nine, consisting of two hundred and eighty acres, together with other lands, in LaMoure county.
“That about 1915, said Johan Hanson made an oral arrangement for the sale of 120 acres of said land to his son Alfred Iianson, but that no part of the purchase price agreed upon was ever paid. That Alfred farmed said 120 acres during 1915 and 1916, and that no written contract or deed was ever entered into in connection with said arrangement.
“That shortly prior to, and in anticipation of, his death, J ohan Hanson and Oliana Hanson, the plaintiff herein, and their children with the exception of Alfred, got together and agreed upon a division of the lands owned by said Johan Hanson, which division and agreement was carried out by making separate deeds of different tracts of land to the children of said Johan Hanson. These deeds were delivered to the children with the exception of the deed to Alfred Hanson, which was delivered to Oliana Hanson. This deed contained not only the One Hundred and Twenty acres mentioned above, but 'one hundred and sixty acres more, the consideration named being One Dollar.
“That the deed running to Alfred Hanson, in his' absence, was with the account book in which was kept an account against Alfred Hanson for the sum of $5,667.54, delivered to Oliana Hanson, by Johan Hanson upon substantially the following conditions, as stated to her by her husband, ‘You take this deed and this account. "When Alfred pays you this account,’ referring to the $5,667.54, ‘that’ (meaning the proceeds derived from the payment of the account), ‘is yours. Do not deliver the deed to Alfred until he pays you that account.’ That Oliana Hanson has had exclusive possession of said deed and account ever since they were delivered to her to the date of trial.
“That Alfred was informed of the arrangement between his father and mother with relation to the deed and the account, and, by his conduct, assented to and accepted that arrangement and went into possession of the land described and conveyed to him in the deed and farmed them for 'a year or so. He made no improvements and later abandoned the land and moved out of the State. He has never paid any part of the account given to Oliana Hanson, as her share of the estate.
“That after his father’s death, and after he knew of the existence of *151 tibe deed and its terms and tbe condition upon wbicb it was delivered to his step-mother, as security of the payment of the sum due from him to her, Alfred Hanson mortgaged said lands to the First State Bank of Verona, to secure a note of $1,762.30. At the time that said mortgage was given, the deed was in the possession of Oliana Hanson and had not been put on record, and had not- been filed for record at the date of trial. The land conveyed in said deed to Alfred Hanson standing at all times on the books and records in the office of the Register of Heeds in the name of Johan Hanson. There is some evidence that the bank had knowledge of the conditions and terms under which the deed was delivered to Oliana Hanson, but that is disputed.
“That in the adjustment and division of his property Johan Hanson treated and considered the account against Alfred Hanson as an asset and part of his property and gave it to 'Oliana Hanson, his wife, as a part of the share of the property she was to receive. That the administrator of the estate of Johan Hanson treated the lands described in the deed as the lands of Alfred Hanson, subject to a lien created by the delivery of the deed to Oliana Hanson, to be held, by her as security for the payment to her of the account of $5,667.54 by Alfred Hanson, and treated the account as belonging to Oliana Hanson, and not part of the estate.
“That unless Oliana Hanson has an equitable lien 'on the land described in the deed by virtue of the delivery to her of the account and the deed, a very substantial injustice may be done to her, and the land described in the deed will revert to and become part of the estate of Johan Hanson, subject to division among all the heirs.”
From these findings of fact the trial court concluded, as a matter of law, “that the assignment and transfer of the account in the sum of $5,667.54-, with interest thereon from and after January 1st, 1919 at the rate of 6% per annum, by delivery of the account book became a valid assignment of said account to Oliana Hanson by her husband Johan Hanson;” that said “Oliana Hanson is entitled to judgment against the defendant, Alfred Hans'on, therefor”; but “that the deed under the circumstances herein does not grant an equitable lien which can be made the subject of a foreclosure under our laws.”

In her brief, appellant says: “This case presents a single question of law. The question whether the deed herein under the circumstances *152 created an equitable lien which can be made the subject of foreclosure under our laws. We maintain that the deed created an equitable lien which can be foreclosed.”

In our opinion appellant’s contention must be sustained. Let us summarize the controlling facts: J. J. Hanson, being very ill, and anticipating death, determined to divide all his property among his wife and three sons. A considerable time prior thereto he had sold a 120 acre tract of land to his son Alfred, under an oral contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
202 N.W. 645, 52 N.D. 146, 1924 N.D. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanson-v-hanson-nd-1924.