Hedlin v. Lee

131 N.W. 390, 21 N.D. 495, 1911 N.D. LEXIS 119
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 131 N.W. 390 (Hedlin v. Lee) 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
Hedlin v. Lee, 131 N.W. 390, 21 N.D. 495, 1911 N.D. LEXIS 119 (N.D. 1911).

Opinion

Fisk, J.

The facts necessary to a correct understanding of the questions involved on this appeal are as follows:

In January, 1903, one Peter Rosenlund made final proof for the land in dispute, and thereafter patent was issued to him by the United .States government. On January 17, 1903, Rosenlund executed to defendant, Nathan M. Barnes, two mortgages covering such land, one to ¡secure the payment of the sum of $500 due in five years with interest ¡at 8 per cent, and one to secure the payment of $25 payable in equal .annual instalments of $5 each, representing the additional interest of 1 per cent on such loan. The validity of these mortgages is not questioned, and they were duly satisfied of record prior to the commencement of this action.

Defendant George H. Gjertsen, acted as attorney or agent for Rosenlund in making such final proof and in procuring such loan. On January 26, 1903, plaintiff, Hedlin, purchased the land in controversy from Rosenlund for the stipulated consideration of $1,600 payable as follows: $150 cash, $475 November 1, 1903, $475 November 1, 1904, [497]*497and the assumption by plaintiff of the Barnes mortgage aforesaid. Such purchase price was paid, and the land deeded to Hedlin by Rosenlund in October, 1904. Prior to entering into the written contract for .such purchase, Hedlin acquired knowledge of the $25 mortgage, and the vendor, Rosenlund, thereupon agreed to pay the same, and finally, it was agreed that Hedlin should also assume such mortgage and deduct the amount thereof from the cash payment to be made by him.

These parties thereafter employed defendant Gjertsen to draw the •contract of sale, and either immediately prior or subsequent to the execution of such contract, Gjertsen demanded of Hedlin the settlement of .a further claim of $25, which he asserted was due Barnes Brothers for .¡additional interest on the mortgage given by Rosenlund, and he offered to take a third mortgage for such amount, or in lieu thereof $20 in cash, stating that if not settled the mortgagees would foreclose. Hedlin did not at that time agree to pay this claim, but, on or about April 1, 1903, Gjertsen induced him to execute a mortgage for $25 to Barnes, which' mortgage he forwarded to Barnes Brothers, who subsequently assigned rthe same to Mrs. Gjertsen, and such assignment was recorded in Jan-nary, 1904. Subsequently Gjertsen, acting for his wife, the assignee thereof, foreclosed such mortgage by advertisement, causing the notice of sale to be published at Minot, and plaintiff did not learn of the foreclosure proceedings until after a sheriff’s deed had issued. Immediately upon learning such facts, plaintiff instituted this action to •cancel such mortgage and the sheriff’s deed, and to quiet title, and such .sheriff’s deed is the basis of the adverse claims of the defendants herein. The power of attorney authorizing the foreclosure was executed on December 2, 1904, and the first publication of notice of sale was made •on December 8, 1904. The sheriff’s deed was issued to Mrs. Gjertsen ■soon after the expiration of the year of redemption, and very soon thereafter she deeded the land to her father, defendant Charles A. Lind, who soon thereafter executed and delivered to defendant Henry A. Barnes mortgages under which Barnes Brothers now claim a lien on the land.

It is appellant’s contention (1) that there was no consideration for the $25 note and mortgage; (2) that there was a valid and legal tender made by plaintiff to Gjertsen prior to the commencement of the foreclosure proceedings, of the amount apparently due thereon, which tender' operated in law to devest the lien of such mortgage; (3) that the notice' [498]*498of sale, as published, is vitally defective in not stating that the assignment of the mortgage to Mrs. Gjertsen had been recorded; (4) that in taking the mortgages from defendant Lind, defendant Henry A. Barnes had full knowledge of the facts, and is not an innocent encumbrancer; and (5) that the foreclosure sale was for a sum in excess of the amount due, and that the notice of sale is void, because the amount therein claimed to be due was in excess of the amount apparently due.

The conclusion reached by us renders it unnecessary to notice all of appellant’s contentions. We are agreed that the judgment must be-reversed, and will, as briefly as possible, state our reasons for such conclusion.

Whether there was any consideration for the $25 note and mortgage; which was foreclosed, or whether plaintiff’s alleged tender was technically sufficient, is not very material, as a determination of these questions adversely to appellant’s contention would in no manner be controlling as to the principal question in litigation. We shall decide the case on the assumption, which- we think is correct, that the trial court, correctly decided both of these questions.

The testimony fairly discloses that sometime in the fall of 1904,, and prior to the commencement of the foreclosure proceedings, plaintiff called upon Gjertsen for the express purpose of paying the instalmentsdue on such mortgage indebtedness, and requested of him information as to the amount due; that Gjertsen, representing his wife, refused to furnish such information, and declined to accept any sum unless certain alleged costs of foreclosure were also paid. At that time the first instalment of $5 due December 1, 1903, with interest at 1 per cent, was unpaid, and on December 1, 1904, the second instalment became due,, so that the utmost amount due on the latter date was $10.35. Plaintiff made known to Gjertsen his desire and ability to pay whatever was. then due. It is true he did not actually produce the currency and tender it, for the reason, as stated by him, that he did not know the exact sum then due, but we think Gjertsen’s attitude at that time was such as to clearly operate as a waiver of a formal tender, and defendants ought not; to be heard to urge the contrary. There could not legally have been at that date any accrued costs of foreclosure, as the power of attorney from Mrs. Gjertsen to her husband, authorizing such foreclosure, was-not executed until later. Counsel for respondent in their printed brief state that the foreclosure was commenced on December 8th. They urge [499]*499and rely upon the fact that plaintiff did not technically comply with the Code provisions regarding a tender. Conceding this, the fact remains that plaintiff, in good faith, called on Gjertsen, and made known to him his willingness and desire to make his defaults good by paying whatever sum was due and owing at that time, and Gjertsen was fully apprised of the fact that it was wholly unnecessary to resort to the security for the collection of this paltr-y sum. The fact that plaintiff failed to keep the tender good by a technical deposit in a bank, in strict conformity to the statute, does not in the least militate against the important fact of Gjertsen’s knowledge of plaintiff’s good-faith attempt to satisfy such indebtedness. This is important as having a direct bearing on what we deem a controlling fact in the case, although not raised or discussed by counsel and apparently for this reason overlooked by the learned trial court, viz: The good faith of the Gjertsens in exercising the power of sale.

It is well settled that a power of sale in a trust deed or mortgage can be exercised by the donee of such power only in the utmost good faith, and that, in the absence of such good faith, the foreclosure is a nullity. 28 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 2d ed. 765, and cases cited; see also Briggs v. Briggs, 135 Mass. 306; Clark v. Simmons, 150 Mass. 357, 23 N. E. 108.

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Bluebook (online)
131 N.W. 390, 21 N.D. 495, 1911 N.D. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hedlin-v-lee-nd-1911.