Herold v. Estate of Hill

169 N.W. 592, 41 N.D. 30, 1918 N.D. LEXIS 129
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 21, 1918
Docket169 N.W. 592.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 169 N.W. 592 (Herold v. Estate of Hill) 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
Herold v. Estate of Hill, 169 N.W. 592, 41 N.D. 30, 1918 N.D. LEXIS 129 (N.D. 1918).

Opinions

Grace, J.

Appeal from the judgment of the district court of Cass county, Charles A. Pollock, Judge.

This is an action for an accounting, brought by the plaintiff against the defendant John A. Hill, as administrator of the estate of George Harrison Hill, deceased.

It appears from the pleadings that plaintiff held a certain crop contract for the purchase of land from one Peter McLachlin, then owner of said land, which land was described-as the east one half of section 27, township 143, range 53, Cass county,"North Dakota. It also appeal’s that during the year 1906, plaintiff and said George Harrison Hill entered into an agreement wherein Hill agreed to take over said premises from McLachlin, and to take over and pay the McLachlin contract, and issue to the plaintiff a new contract for deed covering the premises. It also appears that at the time of taking over such contract to such land by Hill to McLachlin, and the issuance of the new contract by Hill to plaintiff, the plaintiff was indebted to Hill on account of other indebtedness, exclusive of the contract, in the sum of $2,720.24; $647.76 of this other indebtedness was added to the contract price of such land as between .Hill and the plaintiff, and of course reduced the other indebtedness .to that extent. The complaint alleges that such other indebtedness was from time to time reduced by pay[32]*32ments until December 18th, 1910, when a new note was given for the unpaid balance in the sum of $1,520.40, which note the plaintiff alleges has been-paid. Plaintiff further alleges that, during the years 1910, 1911, and 1912, he. farmed certain school lands for said Hill, being part of section 36, township 143, range 53. Plaintiff claims, in his complaint, that it was agreed between Hill and the plaintiff that the plaintiff 'should receive credit upon the contract and note, of indebtedness existing and owing from plaintiff to Hill, for the reasonable value of plaintiff’s services in farming and caring for said land and the crops thereof, and that by reason thereof, the plaintiff is entitled to credits to the extent of $2,200. Plaintiff also makes claim for certain threshing performed for Hill and one Linderman during the years 1911 and 1912, on a portion of the school land which Linderman had rented from Hill. In addition to this, plaintiff also produced at the trial a large number of checks which were made payable to Hill and which were cashed and the money received by Hill. There were also some receipts, executed by Hill to the plaintiff, for. other money, and there are other various claims by the plaintiff against Hill, all of which are referred to in the complaint, the pleadings, or the testimony, and to which we need not more specifically refer, but which aggregate $9,000.

The answer admits the making of the contract from Hill to the plaintiff, and sets forth that the consideration of such contract was $6,720, made up of the amount owing McLachlin plus $647.76 of the other indebtedness owing from .plaintiff to Hill. In addition to this, the answer claims, by reason of the other indebtedness, that plaintiff was owing Hill the further sum of $2,203.84. Defendant, by way of further defense, alleges that Hill loaned money to the plaintiff, advanced money for him and on'his account, furnished him merchandise, and that from time to time settlements were had and made between said plaintiff and Hill, in which settlements plaintiff was charged with such loans and advances of money and merchandise, and credited with all payments made by him to said Hill, and the defendant claims a balance due upon such contract and all other alleged indebtedness from plaintiff to Hill in a very large amount, and the trial eourt awarded the defendant judgment in the sum of about $9,683.97.

It will be seen, therefore, that the parties are a great distance apart as to the actual condition of the account between them. It is perfectly [33]*33plain that there is gross error somewhere. It is perfectly plain, also, that the estate of George Harrison Hill -must account to the plaintiff for all money which it is shown Hill received, and must show the application of such money either upon the land contract or upon other indebtedness due from plaintiff to Hill. • The estate of George Harrison Hill must also show where any other credits which the plaintiff was entitled to were credited, that is, upon what indebtedness were such credits, if any, applied. Wé will refer to these matters further when we discuss some of the credits other than payments of money to which plaintiff claims to be entitled. The defendant must account for all the payments of whatever kind or character made by the plaintiff to George Harrison Hill, and all the credits' to which plaintiff may show himself entitled, and if the defendant fails to account for any such payments whether by check, money, or other credits, it would seem that the plaintiff, as a matter of law, would be entitled to recover judgment for all such credits and payments for which he has not been credited, and failure of the defendant to account to the plaintiff for all such credits, moneys, and checks paid to George Harrison Hill, cannot be excused on the ground that the accounts "were not kept in as good order from the standpoint of bookkeeping as they might have been, nor by the further fact that the transactions between the parties were many. It seems that a fairly good record of a great deal of the business between the parties was kept.

The first matter which is contended by the plaintiff to be an error is the amount of the McLachlin contract at the time it was taken over by Hill. At that time, the contract -that had existed between Mc-Lachlin and Herold was figured up and when $647.76 of plaintiff’s other indebtedness was added to the balance estimated to be due upon the contract between McLachlin and Herold, the amount was $6,720, which was the amount inserted in the new contract between Herold and Hill as the balance due upon the contract for the land in question. The plaintiff insists that the total of the balance of such contract between McLachlin and Herold, as figured by Wilson, is too great by $200. The difference between plaintiff’s figures and those upon which the defendant acted probably arises from the employment of a diffei*-ent method in computing interest. It may be possible that the method adopted by the defendant was not the most accurate method, but it [34]*34must also be conceded be must have settled and paid McLachlin upon the basis of the amount found to be due McLachlin by the method of calculation used by defendant. If this assumption be true, Hill gained nothing even if the most proper method of computing interest were not used. Herold and Hill entered into the written contract wherein Herold agreed to pay the balance due upon the new contract which had been ascertained, to which had been added a certain portion of plaintiff’s indebtedness to which we" have above referred. There appearing to be no fraud in the matter of ascertaining the balance due upon the McLachlin contract, nor any undue advantage appearing intentionally to have been taken and Herold, having made no complaint at the time the amount thereof was ascertained, nor at any time so far as we have been able to determine until the bringing of this action, and a long period of time having elapsed since the making of the new contract, Herold must be held to be bound by the amount inserted in the new contract.

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Bluebook (online)
169 N.W. 592, 41 N.D. 30, 1918 N.D. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herold-v-estate-of-hill-nd-1918.