Jordan v. Donovan

172 N.W. 838, 42 N.D. 641, 1919 N.D. LEXIS 150
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 9, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 172 N.W. 838 (Jordan v. Donovan) 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
Jordan v. Donovan, 172 N.W. 838, 42 N.D. 641, 1919 N.D. LEXIS 150 (N.D. 1919).

Opinions

Grace, J.

Appeal from the district court of Cavalier county, C. W. Buttz, of the second judicial district, .acting for and at the written request of W. J. Kneeshaw, Judge of the second judicial district.

This action is one which involves the right of the plaintiff to redeem from the foreclosure of a certain mortgage against land claimed to be owned by the plaintiff.

The material facts are as follows:

In 1894, Jordan by contract purchased from Baker, Moran, and P. €. Donovan, the following land in the county of Cavalier and state of North Dakota: The southeast quarter of Sec. 17, T. 161, H. 58, for the sum of $450, $100 of which he paid. At this time the plaintiff owed the- defendant $411 and to secure the payment thereof assigned to the defendant his purchase contract for the land. The vendors’ title to the land sold to Jordan was received by them under and by virtue of a certain tax deed, which was issued to them by the auditor of Cavalier county, North Dakota. The balance of. the original purchase price, $350, was paid to Baker, Moran, and P. C. Donovan by E. I. Donovan, to whom the plaintiff had assigned his contract. In February, 1900, it was found there was still due from Jordan to Donovan $750. For this Jordan gave his note at 12 per cent interest. On February 24, 1900, a contract for deed in writing was executed by Donovan to Jordan wherein Donovan agreed .upon the payment of $750 in the manner and at the time specified in the contract to convey to Jordan by quitclaim deed the premises in question. This is the contract which Donovan foreclosed and which was determined by the district court to be a mortgage.

At the time E. I. Donovan paid Baker, Moran, and P. O. Donovan the balance owing on the contract between them and Jordan, he received [645]*645a quitclaim deed from each of them of their interest in the premises. The defendant secured four additional tax deeds to the premises, the last one having been procured in January, 1900. The title secured by the defendant by the quitclaim deeds and by the additional tax deeds was held by the defendant in trust for Jordan and as security for the amounts which defendant had paid to Baker, Moran, and P. O. Donovan, the amount which Jordan originally owed the defendant, and as security for the amount paid at the tax sales, which was the consideration of the four additional tax deeds.

E. I. Donovan foreclosed by action the contract of Eebruary, 1900, on the land above referred to. A judgment was rendered in that action and the contract held to be a mortgage. The total amount found to be due Donovan upon the certain $750 note which was' given by Jordan to Donovan, and upon the contract, including the money paid as consideration for the various tax deeds to said land, the money paid Bakei’, Moran, and P. C. Donovan, etc., was $1,970.15; the court ordered the sale of the premises to satisfy such judgment and costs. The sale was had and the premises sold at sheriff’s sale to E. I. Donovan on March 2, 1915, for $2,153.91, and sheriff’s certificate of sale was issued to Donovan. No appeal was ever taken in that action.

There was a fifth tax deed to the premises procured by the Linden Investment Company, of which E. I. Donovan was president and owner of the majority of stock therein. A tax sale certificate had been issued to W. C. Poster, who on the 9th day of December, 1913, purchased at tax sale the land in question for $31.04. He thereafter paid subsequent taxes up to and including the year* 1915. In December, 1916, Donovan procured the assignment of the certificate of tax sale held by Poster to the Linden Investment Company. Donovan, on behalf of the Linden Investment Company, presented the tax certificate and assignment to the county auditor for the purpose of procuring a tax deed of the land to the Linden Investment Company. The tax deed was issued to the Linden Investment Company on April 17, 1917.

At the time Donovan presented the tax sale certificate and the assignment thereof to the county auditor, the auditor issued notice of expiration of time for redemption to L. S. Champine and Cornelius Jordan, wherein he stated the time of the expiration of redemption to be March 30, 1918. That notice was served upon Cornelius Jordan, L. [646]*646S. Champine, and E. J. Donovan. E. J. Donovan never had any interest in the land. On the 16th day of January, 1917, the county auditor issued a new notice of expiration of the time of redemption to L. S. Champine, Cornelius Jordan, and E. J. Donovan, wherein it was stated the period of redemption expii*ed April 16, 1917. The land at the time of these attempted notices was in the name of E. I. Donovan. He was not served with either of the notices. The first notice was never published; the last one was. The last notice was not personally served upon anyone, nor was it served by mail.

Prior to March 6, 1917, the premises were assessed in the name of L. S. Champine, and since that date in the name of E. I. Donovan. No legal notice of the time of the expiration of redemption was given.

The Linden Investment Company, by quitclaim deed, transferred all its right, title, and interest in the premises to Donovan. The Linden Investment Company had notice of the rights of plaintiff in and to the premises, and that Donovan’s relation to Jordan with reference to the premises was one of trust. In securing the assignment of the tax certificate from Foster to the Linden Investment Company, and for the payment of subsequent taxes, there was paid out $179.73 by Donovan.

During the time for redemption from the sale of the land under the judgment in the foreclosure action, Donovan brought a suit against Jordan.for the sum of $1,000, which he claimed to have expended in defending the title to Jordan’s land against attacks made thereon by one Champine, who was endeavoring to set aside the tax deeds to said land above referred to.- That action was brought in the name of George H. Monroe et'al., but for the benefit of Champine.

It is not necessary to go to any great length in discussing that case, as it is sufficient to say that Monroe and Champine were defeated in that suit; that case is reported in 31 N. D. p. 228, 153 N. W. 461. It is claimed by Donovan that he paid out the $1,000 in defending that suit. The record in this case, however, shows that Donovan was defending a companion case of similar character involving land in which Jordan had no interest.

In his cross-examination Donovan testified as follows:

Q. Jordan had no interest in that other land at all? A. No. None whatever.
[647]*647Q. And these attorneys that you have spoken of whom you hired defended that action also ? A. Yes, sir.
Q. So you would have hired those attorneys to defend those cases irrespective of the Jordan case? A. I would.

By the Judge:

Q. You mean those actions that Jordan wasn’t interested in? A. Yes, sir.
Q. The actions were tried practically together? A. At the same time.
Q. The action which you refer to here is the action of James Mac Dowell et al. vs. Yourself et al. ? A. Yes.
Q. Now as a matter of fact, Donovan, you wanted the payment of this $1,000 as a condition precedent to your giving title to Jordan, didn’t you ? A. I didn’t think it had anything to do with the redeeming of the land.
Q.

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Bluebook (online)
172 N.W. 838, 42 N.D. 641, 1919 N.D. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jordan-v-donovan-nd-1919.