Klemmens v. First Nat. Bank

133 N.W. 1044, 22 N.D. 304, 1911 N.D. LEXIS 63
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 133 N.W. 1044 (Klemmens v. First Nat. Bank) 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
Klemmens v. First Nat. Bank, 133 N.W. 1044, 22 N.D. 304, 1911 N.D. LEXIS 63 (N.D. 1911).

Opinion

Fisk, J.

This is tbe statutory action to determine adverse claims to real property. Tbe complaint is in tbe usual form, alleging title in fee in plaintiff, and that defendants wrongfully assert claims thereto in tbe form of judgment liens tbereon. Tbe defendant bank alone appeared and answered. By its answer it expressly admits plaintiff’s ownership of tbe real property, but denies that it wrongfully, or at all, claims any lien or encumbrance upon tbe same. Such answer alleges that such real property consists of less than 160 acres, and is of tbe value of less than $5,000, and that tbe same is and at all times mentioned in.tbe complaint was tbe homestead of tbe plaintiff. Tbe answer also alleges that said defendant bolds an unsatisfied judgment against plaintiff, which is docketed in tbe office of tbe clerk of tbe district court of tbe county wherein such property is situate; but that such judgment is not now, nor has tbe same at any time been, a lien or encumbrance upon said property or any part thereof. Tbe lower court, on motion of plaintiff’s counsel, thereafter gave judgment on tbe pleadings quieting tbe title of such property in plaintiff, and forever enjoining defendant bank from asserting any lien tbereon under its judgment, from' which judgment tbis appeal is prosecuted by such defendant bank.

Tbe assignments of error present but two questions for our consideration : First, under tbe facts pleaded, will tbe statutory action lie; or, in other words, is plaintiff entitled to any relief ? If so, then second, is be entitled to all tbe relief granted by such judgment; or, in other words, is that portion of tbe judgment perpetually enjoining appellant from asserting a judgment lien on tbe premises proper ?

Our statute authorizing tbe maintenance of an action to determine adverse claims to real property is § 7519, Eev. Oodes 1905, which reads .as follows: “An action may be maintained by any person having an •estate or interest in or lien or encumbrance upon real property . . . against any person claiming an estate or interest in or lien or encum[306]*306brance upon tbe same, for tbe purpose of determining snob adverse estate, interest, lien, or encumbrance.” Section 7522 prescribes the form of the complaint in such actions; and the form thus prescribed, as well as § 7519, supra, expressly requires as a necessary ingredient to plaintiff’s cause of action a showing that defendant claims certain estates or interests in or liens upon the property adverse to plaintiff. We are therefore confronted with the question whether, in the light of said statute, the action will lie against one asserting no adverse claim against the plaintiff, but who holds a judgment of record against him, which, on the face of such record, unaided by extrinsic evidence, apparently creates a cloud on the title. Did the legislature, in enacting said statute, intend to confer a cause of action under such circumstances ?

The only authorities relied on by respondent’s counsel in support of their contention that such action will lie are Corey v. Schuster, 44 Neb. 269, 62 N. W. 470; Dalrymple v. Security Improv. Co. 11 N. D. 65, 88 N. W. 1033; and 32 Cyc. 1324. The North Dakota case is not in point. There the defendants, who were judgment creditors, expressly asserted that their judgments constituted liens upon the property in litigation; nor does the citation in Cyc. in any way support respondent’s contention. The well recognized principle there announced is merely that “an action in equity will lie to cancel an invalid judgment or decree which is an apparent cloud on the title to land.” The Nebraska court in Corey v. Schuster, supra, says: “It is sufficient, to authorize the interposition of a court of equity, that the existence of the apparent liens of the judgments upon the premises may be used injuriously or vexatiously to harass the owner of the homestead, and injure and depreciate, his title to the property.” It appears from the opinion, however, that the judgment creditors who were made defendants expressly asserted liens on the premises under their judgments, both upon the ground that plaintiffs had abandoned the premises as their homestead and that such premises were of a character not entitling them to claim the same as such homestead under the Nebraska statute. What was said by the court on the first proposition was therefore unnecessary to the decision of the case; but it is no doubt true, as stated by said court, that it is not an essential prerequisite to the maintenance of such an action that the judgment creditors should be threatening or about to cause executions to be-issued and levied upon the exempt homestead; and we think, in the light [307]*307of our statute, that it is not an essential prerequisite that the judgment creditor should be actually asserting a right of lien upon the premises under his judgment. The mere fact that the judgment record discloses an apparent lien upon the homestead, and thus creates an apparent cloud upon the title, is, we think, sufficient to give rise to a cause of action in plaintiff’s favor. While defendant bank has in no manner questioned plaintiff’s homestead rights, and has done nothing which it did not have a strict legal right to do, still the fact that the record of defendant’s judgment on its face casts an apparent cloud on plaintiff’s homestead interest is sufficient to give him a right under the statute to maintain the action.

We realize that, under this holding, each owner of a homestead and who is a judgment debtor has a cause of action against each of his judgment creditors, although they, in fact, are asserting no claim hostile to the rights of such homesteader; but this works no hardship on such a judgment creditor, for he need not appear in the action, and in such event no costs can be allowed against him. Section 7528, Rev. Codes.

California has a statute analogous to ours, authorizing actions to determine adverse claims, and the supreme court of that state has in numerous instances held in accordance with the views above expressed. Castro v. Barry, 79 Cal. 443, 21 Pac. 946; Bulwer Consol. Min. Co. v. Standard Consol. Min. Co. 83 Cal. 589, 23 Pac. 1102; Dranga v. Rowe, 127 Cal. 506, 59 Pac. 944. In Castro v. Barry the distinction between the statutory action to determine adverse claims and the old chancery proceedings to quiet title is clearly pointed out; among other things the court saying: “The distinction between the two kinds of action is clear. They are different not merely in form (for we have no forms of action in the common law sense), but in purpose. In the former case the proceeding is aimed at a particular instrument, or piece of evidence, which is dangerous to the plaintiff’s rights, and which may be ordered to be destroyed in whosesoever hands it may happen to be. While in the latter, the proceeding is for the purpose of stopping the mouth of a person who has asserted or is asserting a claim to the plaintiff’s property,whether such claim be founded upon evidence, or utterly baseless. It is not aimed at a particular piece of evidence, but at the pretensions of an individual. The statutory action to determine an adverse claim is an improvement upon the old bill of peace. The statute enlarges the class [308]*308of cases in which equitable relief could formerly be sought in the quieting of title. It is not necessary, as formerly, that the plaintiff should first establish his right by an action at law. He can immediately, upon knowledge of the assertion of such claim, require the nature and character of the adverse estate or interest to be produced, exposed, and judicially determined, and the question of title be thus forever quieted.’ Curtis v. Sutter, 15 Cal.

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Bluebook (online)
133 N.W. 1044, 22 N.D. 304, 1911 N.D. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klemmens-v-first-nat-bank-nd-1911.