Johnson v. Wagner

174 N.W. 73, 42 N.D. 542, 1919 N.D. LEXIS 182
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 21, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 174 N.W. 73 (Johnson v. Wagner) 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
Johnson v. Wagner, 174 N.W. 73, 42 N.D. 542, 1919 N.D. LEXIS 182 (N.D. 1919).

Opinion

Bikdzell,- J.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered in the district court of Cass county in an action brought to recover personal property. The judgment awarded to the plaintiff the immediate possession of the- property and costs and disbursements amounting to $193.27, with interest on the same. The defendant and appellant, Wagner, was a farmer who had lived in the vicinity of Gardner, North Dakota, for a number of years. He was the owner of a quarter section ■of land and personal property used in connection with his farming operations. Ilis land was heavily mortgaged and a sheriff’s certificate of foreclosure sale was outstanding in the fall of 1916. The indebtedness against the land aggregated about $6,700. In October, 1916, Wagner negotiated with Johnson, the plaintiff and respondent, for the sale or trade of his equity in the land and his personal property, the land being valued by Wagner at $7,600 and his equity therein at approximately $900. A deal was made which was evidenced by four instruments, as follows: 1. An agreement binding Wagner to convey the ■quarter section to T. D. Johnson, a brother of the plaintiff, in consideration of $50 per acre, to be paid by T. D. Johnson by discharging the encumbrances and paying the plaintiff $100 down, $100 in five ■days, $100 in ten days, the transfer to be made within thirty days. '2. A bill of sale executed for the expressed consideration of $1, whereby Wagner transferred to A. C. Johnson title to the personal property sought to be recovered in this action. 3. An agreement between A. C. Johnson and Wagner, whereby, in consideration of the bill of sale, Johnson agreed to quitclaim to Wagner a tract of land in Otter Tail ■county, Minnesota, consisting of 81.69 acres. 4. A quitclaim deed of the. same land, executed by A. C. Johnson and wife. The parties ■entered upon the performance of the agreement, Johnson making certain payments which were retained by Wagner, but, upon demand being made for the delivery to the plaintiff of the personal property, Wagner refused. Thereupon this action was begun and claim and delivery proceedings were had, by virtue of which the plaintiff obtained ^possession of the property. The complaint in the action simply de[546]*546scribes tbe personal property, alleges the plaintiff’s ownership and right of possession, and places tbe value at $1,800. For a counterclaim the defendant, however, alleges the negotiations between himself and the plaintiff leading up to the sale or trade, and claims damages on account of misrepresentations made relating to the value of the Minnesota land. The alleged misrepresentations refer specifically to the amount of encumbrance • against the land, the date of its maturity, the rental value, and to an agreement by the defendant to resell the land for the plaintiff within thirty days at $30 per acre without commission. There are also allegations to the effect that by crowding and coercing him the plaintiff induced the defendant to execute the papers in connection with the deal without being enabled to procure the advice and assistance of one A. E. Ingebretson, upon whom the defendant relied for advice, and that as so executed they did not safeguard the rights of the defendant according to the previous agreement to pay the plaintiff for his equity in the land in cash as soon as the contract would be reduced to writing between the parties. But defendant alleges his willingness to carry out the transfers in accordance with the agreement as alleged in the counterclaim and his determination to affirm the contract and bargain and to claim damages for the plaintiff’s misrepresentations and fraud in reference to the character and value of the Minnesota land. The damages so claimed amount to $1,390.70. In his prayer for relief, the defendant seeks judgment for specific performance of the contract as alleged by him and the damages occasioned by the deceit in the sum of $1,390.70.

Upon the trial, at the end of the defendant’s case, the plaintiff’s attorney made three motions, as follows: For a directed verdict for the relief prayed for, ¿.e., the possession of the personal property; for the entry of an order denying specific performance of the contract; and for a directed, verdict in favor of the- plaintiff on the issue of damages presented by the counterclaim. At the close of the case, the motions were renewed. The first and second motions were then granted, and the third denied. The question of damages was submitted to the jury under special interrogatories, requiring a special verdict, and the record shows that the directed verdict on the issue of possession was delayed, at defendant’s request, pending the determination by the jury of the questions submitted for the special verdict. The jury failed to [547]*547arrive at the special verdict and to dispose of the question of damages, and it was discharged.

. Upon this appeal no question is raised concerning the denial by the court of specific performance as prayed for by the defendants, and it seems to be conceded that specific performance had become “impossible. The specifications of error attack the ruling of the court in directing a verdict for the immediate possession and entering judgment on the verdict including a judgment for costs and disbursements. It is also claimed that it was error for the court to refuse to submit to the jury the question of the value of the personal property involved.

It is first contended that no Adalid claim to possession could be based upon the bill of sale, for the reason that it Avas vitiated by the same fraud that gives rise to the claim for damages. In view of the fact that the defendant has, by his counterclaim, affirmed the contract and elected to recover damages for the alleged fraud, this contention is clearly without merit. Whether the real contract be as expressed in the different papers executed by the parties, or whether it be as alleged by the defendant in his counterclaim, is immaterial so far as this question is concerned, for the defendant has seen fit to affirm it and claim damages. He cannot affirm the contract in part nor recover his damages piecemeal, and his affirmance makes the bill of sale effective to transfer title and right of possession.

The contention that the court erred in refusing to submit the question of the value of the personal property to the jury is likewise without merit; for, under the issues framed, the value of the personal! property is immaterial. The only element of damag'd claimed by the defendant relates to the Minnesota land, and in his counterclaim hemanifested his willingness for the plaintiff to have the personal property; provided, only, he Avould make good the difference between the worth of the Minnesota lands as represented, encumbrances considered, and its Avorth as it actually is. He would be entitled to these damages, if proved, regardless of the value of the personal property included in the bill of sale. It might be observed also in this connection that § 7635, Compiled Laws of 1913, which governs the determination of the issues in an action for the recovery of specific personal property, makes it wholly unnecessary for the jury to find the value of the propr [548]*548erty where it is in possession of the plaintiff, who is found to be entitled to the possession. Subdivision 2.

The main contention of the appellant is that, inasmuch as § 7679, Compiled Laws of 1913, contemplates the entry of but one judgment between the same parties where a counterclaim is interposed, the court was without authority to direct a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for possession and to enter a judgment therein while other issues in the same action remained undetermined.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
174 N.W. 73, 42 N.D. 542, 1919 N.D. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-wagner-nd-1919.