Hecht v. Anthony

283 N.W. 753, 204 Minn. 432, 1939 Minn. LEXIS 583
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 10, 1939
DocketNo. 31,742.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 283 N.W. 753 (Hecht v. Anthony) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hecht v. Anthony, 283 N.W. 753, 204 Minn. 432, 1939 Minn. LEXIS 583 (Mich. 1939).

Opinion

Holt, Justice.

Plaintiff is married to a sister of defendant Thomas Anthony. The premises here involved is a 160-acre farm in Martin county, which prior to 1928 had been mortgaged to Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, by the owners, defendant Thomas Anthony, his mother, brother, and sisters, including plaintiff and his wife. It was the homestead of the Anthony family and had so been for a long time. For default the mortgage was foreclosed August 13, 1928, and bid in by the mortgagee for $7,709.53. The sheriff’s certificate of sale was assigned to plaintiff and duly recorded a few days before the time for redemption expired. This was evidently done because none of the Anthonys were able to redeem and plaintiff desired to save the equity in the farm for his relatives. No redemption was made. Plaintiff acquired a good title, but defendant Thomas Anthony’s possession was not disturbed, and in June, 1930, he married defendant Ruth L. Anthony, and they have ever since made their home upon this farm. The court’s findings thus tersely state the facts of importance (eliminating the transactions plaintiff had w„ith the president of the Truman Bank and the use of the title of the farm to secure the funds he obtained to purchase the sheriff’s certificate):

“9. That in June, 1933, the plaintiff sold and conveyed said land to the defendants, and at their request inserted the name of the defendant Ruth L. Anthony only in said Stockman deed, delivered said deed to the said Ruth L. Anthony, thereby accomplishing the conveyance to her and passing all title to her in and to said land.
“10. That the consideration for said conveyance, and the purchase price of said land, was the amount plaintiff had paid, or obligated himself to pay, in purchasing said foreclosure certificate, *434 and the amounts paid by him for delinquent interests and taxes. That defendants agreed to pay said purchase price as follows: By obtaining a loan from the Federal Land Bank of St. Paul, Minnesota, and the Land Bank Commissioner, for the largest amounts possible, by applying the proceeds thereof to the payment of the Stockman mortgage, the balance due said bank, and the excess, if any, to plaintiff in liquidation of the balance due him on said purchase price.
“11. That it was agreed between plaintiff and defendants that,- if the amount paid plaintiff, as aforesaid, was insufficient to pay him in full the amounts due him, as aforesaid, defendants would execute and deliver to plaintiff a mortgage on said land, subject only to the mortgage to the Federal Land Bank of St. Paul, Minnesota, and the mortgage to the Land Bank Commissioner, to secure the remainder' of said indebtedness, said mortgage to plaintiff to be due in five years, draw interest at the rate of six per cent per annum, said interest payable annually.”

There is no dispute that defendants obtained a mortgage from the Land Bank for $6,000 and one from the commissioner of $3,000, and that after applying the proceeds on the purchase price — that is, the indebtedness to plaintiff, at least $1,822.08 was still due him. Defendants refused to give the mortgage after obtaining the deed. This action followed for specific performance. The court ordered judgment against defendants for $1,822.08 and interest thereon at six per cent per annum from July 1, 1933, such judgment to be a special lien upon said farm subject only to said mortgages to the Federal Land Bank and its commissioner, the judgment not to be enforced prior to July 1, 1938. Defendants moved for amended findings or a new trial, and appeal from the order denying their motion.

The assignments of error challenge especially the agreement to execute the mortgage to plaintiff to secure the balance of the purchase price. We think this is the only material fact as to which the testimony is in disagreement. Counsel for defendants make some technical objections to the Complaint but do not press them, *435 therefore they need not be considered. Nor do they seriously contend that the court’s finding that defendants agreed to execute the mortgage to plaintiff for the balance of the purchase price, to-wit: $1,822.08, can be disturbed. It is not reasonable to believe that plaintiff made a gift to defendants of the large sum he had paid out to secure title to the farm after it was lost to defendants by the mortgage foreclosure and their inability to redeem.

The real contention of counsel is that the court upon the facts found could neither decree specific performance nor impress a vendor’s lien on the premises. It is true that an agreement to give a real estate mortgage is within the statute of frauds. Hatlestad v. Mutual Trust L. Ins. Co. 197 Minn. 640, 268 N. W. 665; 2 Mason Minn. St. 1927, §§ 8456 and 8460. However, § 8459 excepts an estate or interest created by operation of law. Equity may specifically enforce an oral contract void under the statute of frauds where there has been full performance by the party seeking the relief and it would work a fraud to deny the same. Upon facts similar to those here found, specific performance was decreed in Hughes v. Mullaney, 92 Minn. 485, 100 N. W. 217. See also Foster Lbr. Co. v. Harlan County Bank, 71 Kan. 158, 80 P. 49, 114 A. S. R. 470, 6 Ann. Cas. 44; Sprague v. Cochran, 144 N. Y. 104, 38 N. E. 1000; Baker v. Baker, 2 S. D. 261, 49 N. W. 1064, 39 A. S. R. 776. In the Sprague case the court said [144 N. Y. 113]:

“It is not necessary that such transactions or agreements as to lands should be in writing in order to take them out of the operation of the Statute of Frauds for two reasons, first, because they are completely executed by at least one of the parties and are no longer executory, and, secondly, because the statute by its own terms does not affect the power which courts of equity have always exercised to compel specific performance of such agreements.”

In the Hatlestad case, 197 Minn. 640, 646, 268 N. W. 665, 668, it is stated that “the vendor’s lien of the common law is 'created by the law and not by the parties.’ Hence it is considered not within the statute of frauds.”

*436 Defendants contend that since Hughes v. Mullaney, 92 Minn. 485, 100 N. W. 217, was decided, the homestead statute was changed by the Revision of 1905 to further protect the owners thereof. 2 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 8336, exempts homesteads from all liens (with exceptions not here material) “not lawfully charged thereon in writing.” Renville State Bank v. Lentz, 171 Minn. 431, 214 N. W. 467; Kingery v. Kingery, 185 Minn. 467, 241 N. W. 583, are relied on for the proposition that neither an equitable lien nor a vendor’s lien may be decreed on a homestead. The facts here are different from the facts in either of the cases just cited. In the case at bar the farm was not the statutory homestead of defendants when the agreement was made. They were in possession without any legal or equitable right. They neither pleaded nor proved any right to possess it as a home. They were occupying by sufferance. The plaintiff’s right to the vendor’s lien was simultaneous with the conveyance and part of that transaction. Defendants’ statutory homestead attached upon the execution of the agreement pursuant to which the deed to Ruth L. Anthony was delivered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
283 N.W. 753, 204 Minn. 432, 1939 Minn. LEXIS 583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hecht-v-anthony-minn-1939.