Killops v. Stephens

29 N.W. 390, 66 Wis. 571, 1886 Wisc. LEXIS 72
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 12, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 29 N.W. 390 (Killops v. Stephens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Killops v. Stephens, 29 N.W. 390, 66 Wis. 571, 1886 Wisc. LEXIS 72 (Wis. 1886).

Opinion

UyoN, J.

The plaintiff held two mortgages against the defendant Stephens, other than that sought to be foreclosed by this action, both executed in 1869, and each given to secure a debt of $1,000, and interest. January 16, 1883, Stephens paid the plaintiff, on account of the three mortgage debts, $4,000. The plaintiff thereupon delivered up to Stephens the three mortgages, together with the notes they were respectively given to secure, and, by a proper entry in the record thereof, he then discharged the two $1,000 mortgages. The assignment by Cook to him of the mortgage in suit not having been recorded, the plaintiff sought to have Cook discharge that mortgage, but Cook was absent and such discharge was" not obtained. It does not appear that the plaintiff agreed to discharge the Cook mortgage, although, he was apparently willing to do so, or that there was any consideration for such an agreement. When the $4,000 payment was made, the plaintiff and Stephens executed their note for $1,000, which was discounted by a bank, and the proceeds paid to the plaintiff, who afterwards paid such note.

The mortgagor, Stephens, claims to have paid the plaintiff, on account of the three mortgage debts, between December 28, 1869, and April 3, 1882, about $5,450. No payment is claimed after the last-mentioned date, until the $4,000 was paid in January, 1883. These alleged payments are thirty-six in number, only about twenty of which are evidenced by the receipts of the plaintiff or vouchers, and none of them are indorsed upton any of such notes or mortgages. They vary in amount from small sums to $1,000. The plaintiff claims that the parties accounted together in April, 1876, concerning payments theretofore made by Stephens on the mortgage debts, and found that he had so paid $509.09. The defendant claims to have paid $1,071.59 before that date, and his account of such payments contains sixteen items, only three or four of which are covered [574]*574by vouchers. The items in defendant’s account accruing after April 8, 1876, not covered by receipts or vouchers, are charges for cash paid as follows: November 11,1876, $100; February 1, 1877, $100; September 11, 1879, $113; October, 1879, $1,000; total, $1,313. The plaintiff claims that in September, 1876, the defendant entered into an agreement in writing to pay the plaintiff ten per cent, interest on the two $1,000 mortgages, instead of seven per cent, therein stipulated, in consideration of an extension by the plaintiff of the time of payment of the mortgage debts.'

The controversy before the referee arose upon the following questions: (1) Did the parties state an account of payments made by Stephens prior to April 8,1876? (2) Are the items in the mortgagor’s account of pajnnents, not covered by receipts of the plaintiff or other vouchers, or any of them, sufficiently proved? and (3) Did the mortgagor agree to increase the rate of interest to ten per cent, on the debts secured by the two $1,000 mortgages?

Undoubtedly the referee should have stated an account between the parties, showing which of the disputed items in the defendant’s account of payments were allowed by him, and which, if any, he disallowed, and showing, also, what rate of interest he allowed on the $1,000 mortgages. Such account would necessarily show whether he found that an account of payments was stated by the parties, April 8, 1876, as claimed. He failed to do so, but only found generally that the mortgage debt had been fully paid. This finding is excepted to as being unsupported by and contrary to the evidence, but no exception was taken to the failure of the referee to state an account. Had such an exception been interposed, although no other errors were committed, it might be our duty to send the case back for such accounting.

In the present condition of the record we can only ascertain by inference from his report how the referee determined [575]*575the questions in controversy before him. A computation will show, we think, that he must have negatived the claim that a binding account of payments was stated by the parties, April 8, 1876, and have found that many, if not all, of the alleged payments, not covered by receipts or vouchers, were actually made as claimed by the defendant. It seems that on no other hypothesis could the referee have found that the mortgage debt had been paid. If he found that all the disputed payments were made, and that there had been no such accounting, it is probable that the payments would equal the mortgage debt, even though interest at the rate of ten per cent, be computed on the two $1,000 mortgages after September, 1876, the date when it is claimed the interest was increased.

In the view we have taken of the case after a most careful examination of the testimony, the first question above stated, which the referee must have determined against the plaintiff, is a controlling one. That question is, Did the parties, on April 8, 1876, state an account of payments made on the three mortgages to that date, and agree upon and settle the amount thereof? If they did so, inasmuch as there is no claim of mistake in the settlement, or any attempt to surcharge the account, they are bound by it, and only the agreed sum can be allowed the defendant. If only that sum is so allowed, it is quite apparent that, however the other controverted questions may be determined, there is some amount yet unpaid on the. debt secured by the mortgage in suit.

Alexander Cook, Esq., an attorney at law, to whom the mortgage in suit was first executed, and who had much to do with the business transactions between these parties, testified that the parties came to his office on April 8, 1876, and requested him to estimate the amount due on the three mortgages. They then talked over the matter of payments, and agreed that sums amounting in the aggregate to $509.09 [576]*576bad been paid on the mortgages. The witness figured on that basis, and ascertained the amount unpaid. At the same time he made a memorandum of his computation, which he preserved, and produced to the referee. It is as follows:

“Due from.'Stephens. §7,578 16
Deducting payments made... 598 52
Left..... $6,984 64”

Probably the amount so deducted includes interest on such payments. The plaintiff testified substantially as did Mr. Cook; and, further, that at the time of such settlement all 'the papers pertaining to the transaction were brought in, and certain receipts for taxes, held by the defendant as vouchers for some of the payments, were surrendered to the plaintiff.

This testimony of Mr. Cook and the plaintiff was not controverted. Neither the’ defendant nor any of his witnesses denied the accounting and the result thereof as thus testified to. The testimony of Mr. Cook and the plaintiff in that behalf must therefore be taken and held to be true, and the facts to which they testified proved. Those facts show a valid account stated, which binds the parties to the sum therein agreed upon as the aggregate amount of paj'--ments theretofore made. As already observed, we think the inference is irresistible that the referee held the defendant was not bound by the settlement and statement of the account of payments made by the parties in April, 1876, even if he did not hold that there was no such transaction between them. This was an error, the correction of which might, and probably would, as the testimony now stands, result in a judgment for the plaintiff.

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Related

Estate of Gilbert
166 N.W. 442 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1918)
Krueger v. Dodge
87 N.W. 965 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1901)
Killops v. Stephens
41 N.W. 970 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1889)

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.W. 390, 66 Wis. 571, 1886 Wisc. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/killops-v-stephens-wis-1886.