Hart v. Casterton

218 N.W. 644, 56 N.D. 581, 1928 N.D. LEXIS 177
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 218 N.W. 644 (Hart v. Casterton) 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
Hart v. Casterton, 218 N.W. 644, 56 N.D. 581, 1928 N.D. LEXIS 177 (N.D. 1928).

Opinion

*584 Nuessle, Ch. J.

This is an action to quiet title brought by the plaintiff J ames Hart, as trustee of the estate of B. J. McKay, a bankrupt.

Briefly stated the facts as disclosed by the record are as follows: E. J. Curtin and B. J. McKay were residents of Decorah, Iowa. They were the president and cashier respectively of the Citizens Savings Bank of that place. They were also stockholders in the First National Bank of Beach, North Daktota, of which Curtin was the vice-president. In 1914 the First National Bank of Beach assigned a mortgage covering the premises involved in this action to Curtin. In 1915 .Curtin foreclosed the mortgage. In fact this mortgage though assigned to Curtin was the property of the Citizens Savings Bank. On foreclosure sale the *585 property was bid in in the name of McKay. There was no redemption and sheriffs deed was issued to McKay in May, 1916. This deed was at once put of record. McKay paid no money and the property was not his. He took the title for the Savings Bank. In 1916 and again in 1919 McKay executed and delivered deeds for the property to the bank but these were never recorded. In December 1918, McKay executed a mortgage for $11,000 covering the premises here involved to Ourtin. Ourtin paid nothing for the mortgage, which was executed to him in order that he might negotiate it. The defendant, O. O. Casterton, is one of four executors of the estate of his father, Ogden Casterton, deceased. The other executors are his brother, his brother-in-law and Curtin. On December 14th, 1918, the Casterton estate held a certain mortgage securing approximately $11,000. This was past due. It had been bought from the Savings Bank. It was thought advantageous to the estate to exchange this mortgage for the note and mortgage executed by McKay to Curtin. An exchange was accordingly made. The mortgage and assignment, however, were not recorded. They were left in the safe-deposit box of the executors in the Savings Bank. This box was accessible to all of the executors. The property in North Dakota was rented from year to year through the agency of the First National Bank of Beach or its officers. The leases were oral. It was commonly known in the vicinity of Beach that the property stood in the name of McKay. In 1923 the First National Bank of Beach was desirous of becoming a depositary for the county funds of Golden Valley county. In that behalf the bank submitted to the commissioners of Golden Valley county a depositary bond in the sum of $50,000, on which Curtin and McKay were sureties. About the same time the bank likewise seeking to become a depositary for the Lone Tree school district, submitted a bond to the district on which also Curtin and McKay were sureties. Both Ourtin and McKay in justifying on these bonds swore that they were freeholders of Golden Valley county.- Attached to the bonds were statements purporting to show the real property which McKay owned in Golden Valley county. There is no positive evidence that they were attached with the knowledge or consent of McKay. These statements listed the property involved in this action. No other land in Golden Valley county stood in McKay’s name on the records. Prior to this time the county commissioners of Golden Valley county had adopted a resolution to the effect that no *586 depositary bonds would be accepted where the sureties were nonresidents unless it appeared that such sureties were freeholders of the county and owned property therein worth the penalty of the bond. When the bond in question was submitted to the county board, the-county commissioners examined the record and it appearing therefrom that the property listed in the statement attached belonged to McKay and was free of encumbrance, the bond was accepted and the First National Bank of Beach was designated as a depositary. Likewise one of the officers of the school district examined the county records, and finding the real property listed, in the name of McKay and without encumbrance, the bank was designated as a depositary for the school district. Pursuant to these designations both the county and the school district deposited funds in the First- National Bank of Beach. On January 17th, 1924, the Citizens Savings Bank of Decorah and the First National Bank of Beach were closed as insolvent and taken in charge by the banking authorities. When the First National Bank was closed both Golden Valley county and Lone Tree school district had deposits therein. At the time of the trial of this action the amount remaining unpaid of the county’s deposit, after crediting dividends paid by the receiver, was about $25,000, and of the school district’s deposit more than $500. The assets of the bank are insufficient- to discharge its obligations and the depositors will suffer substantial loss. Iiow great is not yet determined. On February llt-h, 1924, the defendant C. O. .Casterton caused the McKay note and mortgage and the assignment thereof to him to be recorded in the office of the register of deeds of Golden Valley county. In December, 1925, Casterton paid the taxes on the land for the years 1923 and 1924 and in 1926 foreclosed the mortgage. He bid in the property on sale for the amount due on the mortgage including interest, taxes and costs. No redemption was made from this sale and Casterton was the owner of the certificate at the time of the trial. On June 10th, 1924, an involuntary petition in bankruptcy was filed against McKay, he was adjudged a bankrupt, and the plaintiff Hart was appointed trustee of the estate. McKay was in fact hopelessly insolvent on February 11th, 1924. When he was adjudged a bankrupt his indebtedness exceeded $100,000, not taking into account his liability on the depositary bonds. His assets, exclusive of the land here involved, did not exceed $6,000. The land is worth *587 about $12,000. Golden Valley county and Lone Tree school district proved their claims against the estate, and the same were allowed. The plaintiff Hart brought the instant action to quiet title claiming that the mortgage from McKay to Curtin and which had been assigned to Casterton was fraudulent and void as against the other creditors of McKay.

On the trial in the district court' — and the same contentions are now made by both parties in this court — the plaintiff contended that the mortgage given by McKay to Curtin and the assignment thereof by the latter to the defendant Casterton were in fact fraudulent and on that account void; that by reason of the failure of Casterton to file the mortgage and assignment for record, and by his conduct in the premises generally with respect thereto, he is now estopped to claim under the mortgage as against McKay’s creditors or anyone representing them; that, in any event, the transaction created a preference; that though the mortgage was executed and assigned in 1918 it did not become effective as against creditors until placed of record in February, 1924; that this was within four months prior to the filing of the petition in bankruptcy and, therefore, the transfer was preferential and void.

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Related

Armstrong v. Hustad (In Re Flaten)
50 B.R. 186 (D. North Dakota, 1985)
Hart v. Casterton
227 N.W. 183 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1929)
Hart v. Ronan
226 N.W. 620 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1929)
Hart v. Weiser
224 N.W. 308 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
218 N.W. 644, 56 N.D. 581, 1928 N.D. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hart-v-casterton-nd-1928.