Knowles v. Tuttle

220 N.W. 623, 57 N.D. 138, 1928 N.D. LEXIS 107
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 3, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 220 N.W. 623 (Knowles v. Tuttle) 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
Knowles v. Tuttle, 220 N.W. 623, 57 N.D. 138, 1928 N.D. LEXIS 107 (N.D. 1928).

Opinion

*139 Burr, J.

This is an action to foreclose a mortgage on real estate. Within the State personal service of the summons and complaint was had upon the defendants Adelbert Older and Araminta Older and of the summons on Ernest McHaffie. The record shows admission of service by Anna D. Knowles and service of the summons and complaint upon the defendant Dwight Tuttle in the state of Wisconsin on the 21st day of October, 1927. None of the defendants McHaffie, Anna D. Knowles, and Tuttle appear in the case.

The plaintiff alleges that on the 28th day of November, 1923, the defendant Dwight Tuttle gave his promissory note to the defendant Ernest McHaffie for $10,000 and in said note promised to pay the said sum in “installments of $50 each, payable monthly after date” with interest “at the rate of 6 per cent per annum until paid. Interest payable semi-annually;” that to secure the payment of said note Tuttle executed to McHaffie a mortgage upon the following real estate situated in the county of Nelson, state of North Dakota, to wit:

“All that portion of lots numbered twenty-three (23), twenty-four (24), twenty-five (25), twenty-six (26) and twenty-seven .(27) in block numbered seventeen (17), of the townsite of Michigan City, lying south of a line beginning at a point fifty-one (51) feet south of northeast corner of said lot numbered twenty-seven (27), and running thence west across the aforesaid lots to a point thirty and eight hundred seventy-five thousands (30.875) feet south of the northwest corner of said lot twenty-three (23), block seventeen (17),” known as hotel property.

He then alleges the usual agreement as to right of foreclosure on default of any payment; and the recording of the mortgage; that on the first day of December, 1923, the said mortgage was assigned to the plaintiff for value received and the assignment recorded in the office of the register of deeds. The complaint contains the usual allegations in regard to no actions or proceedings having been taken otherwise to recover the debt, the issuance of power of attorney, notice of *140 intent to foreclose, the service of the notice and that all of the defendants claim right and interest in the land. The plaintiff then asks for foreclosure of the mortgage, for personal judgment against the defendants Tuttle and McHaffie for the amount due and that whatever right or interest each defendant has be declared subject to this mortgage.

The defendants Adelbert Older and Araminta Older answer entering a general denial as to the execution of the note and mortgage “and leave the plaintiff to his proof' in that regard.” They admit receipt of notice of intention to foreclose, and that they claim an interest in the land. Nor a counter claim the answering defendants allege: that the “plaintiff herein caused the record title to said real property referred to in the complaint to be placed in the name of his wife, Anna D. Knowles as a part of a plan to cheat and defraud these defendants, hereinafter alleged, and as a part of the same plan induced the defendants to sign a certain contract for deed to his said wife and in this connection these defendants allege that in the month of April, 1924, these defendants were the owners and in possession of real property in Ramsey county, Minnesota, of the value of $11,500 over and above all encumbrances, that the plaintiff herein "Warren P. Knowles, by his associates, confederates and agents induced the defendants to trade their said property in Ramsey county, Minnesota, for the real property described in the complaint, then and there falsely representing to the defendants that said North Dakota property was of the value of $15,000 over and above a mortgage thereon of $10,000; that said North Dakota property had a hotel building thereon and the plaintiff, his associates, confederates and agents then and there represented to the defendants that the said hotel was in A-l condition and state of repair and fully equipped for operation as a hotel, whereas they well knew and these defendants did not know that the said building and property was worth not in excess of $8,000 and was in bad condition and lacking in equipment; that said false representations were made for the purpose of having the defendants rely thereon and thereby and by means thereof obtain the defendants’ property as a payment on said North Dakota property at a valuation of $25,000, for said North Dakota property, and that the defendants did in good faith rely thereon and transfer their said property and signed a certain contract set out in the complaint in a certain action pending in this court wherein Anna D. *141 Knowles the wife of this plaintiff is plaintiff and the answering dfe' fendants are defendants and that the defendants signed said contract . in reliance upon said representations and believing the same to be true, whereas the same were in all things false and made for the purpose and with the intent of deceiving and defrauding these defendants and the defendants were then and there deceived and defrauded thereby.” Defendants further allege the hotel property was not worth to exceed $8,000 and that the value of their property was “not less than $11,500 clear of all encumbrances,” and that therefore the plaintiff and his wife “received from these defendants property in the sum of not less than $3,500 over and above the full value of the North Dakota property and in addition thereto $2,563.45 in rents from said North Dakota property.” The defendants ask that the plaintiff’s action be dismissed and they have judgment against the plaintiff in the sum of $3,500 “plus the further sum represented by rents that plaintiff has taken.

The plaintiff replies denying the allegations of the answer. He alleges that the defendants Older have made certain payments on the mortgage but that the same cannot be ascertained until there be an accounting for the reason that he had expended $1,000 more or less “on account of insurance, taxes and judgment lien, and the payments so made by said plaintiff will in a large measure offset the payments made by said defendants.”

The trial court found in favor of the plaintiff and ordered judgment against the defendant Dwight Tuttle and Ernest McHaffie in the sum of $9,154.64 Avith interest at 6 per cent per annum payable semiannually from November 1, 1926, with statutory attorneys’ fees and costs, adjudging that this sum so found be declared to be a lien upon the property described SArperior to the claim of any of the defendants herein, and judgment was accordingly entered. The defendants Older appeal demanding a trial de novo.

There are six specifications of error all dealing with the claim that, a deed to the premises described, taken in the name of Anna D. Knowles, is of such a nature and character as to be in effect a deed to Warren. P. Knowles, the plaintiff, and by reason of the fact that this deed was taken after the assignment of the mortgage to Warren P. Knowles this, is a merger of interests, and therefore no mortgage to foreclose.

In passing we may say that appellants in their supplemental brief *142 raise an issue, not included in the specification of error.

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Related

Knowles v. Older
220 N.W. 625 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1928)

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Bluebook (online)
220 N.W. 623, 57 N.D. 138, 1928 N.D. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knowles-v-tuttle-nd-1928.