Kolb v. Kolb

26 N.W.2d 484, 75 N.D. 181, 1947 N.D. LEXIS 57
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 22, 1947
DocketFile No 7007
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 26 N.W.2d 484 (Kolb v. Kolb) 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
Kolb v. Kolb, 26 N.W.2d 484, 75 N.D. 181, 1947 N.D. LEXIS 57 (N.D. 1947).

Opinion

Bue.ee, J.

The question in this case is whether an assignment of a contract for deed, executed and delivered by the plaintiff, *182 Dan. Kolb, to Ms father, the defendant Karl Kolb, was executed as an outright, assignment or' to secure the payment of a debt.

Following a “talk” with his father in the fall of 1941, Dan Kolb made a written offer to the Federal Land Bank to purchase a half section of land in Stutsman County, known as the Dolliver farm. At the time of making his offer, he paid down two hundred dollars which was furnished to him at his father’s instance from money belonging to the father. The terms of the offer required, in the event of its acceptance, the payment of an additional four hundred dollars as a condition for the issuance of a contract for deed. The offer was accepted and a proposed contract for deed was forwarded to Dan Kolb for execution. He signed the contract on November 15,1941 but did not at that time pay the required four hundred dollars. On December 8, 1941, the father borrowed three hundred dollars from a bank at Medina and paid the four hundred dollars, ostensibly at least, on behalf of his son, to the agent of the Federal Land Bank. Thereafter, on December 18, 1941, the son executed and delivered to his father the assignment which is at issue in this law suit. The assignment is unequivocal in its terms. It purports to transfer without qualification from son to father the contract for deed to the Dolliver farm. At the time of the execution of this assignment the executed contract for deed had not been delivered to the son. In fact, by coincidence, it was signed by the authorized officers of the Federal Land Bank on December 18, 1941. In February or March, 1942, Dan Kolb and his wife moved to the Dolliver farm. Although Dan was thirty-four years old at the time and had been married for three years, he had never lived anywhere but on the father’s farm. Both Dan and his wife had worked for the father. They received no wages, but had their board and room. They also farmed a small tract of land in the neighborhood. On March 11, 1942, the executed contract for deed was forwarded by the Federal Land Bank to Dan Kolb.

Dan Kolb farmed the land in 1942. The crop was small due to hail damage. The father helped with harvesting and threshing and the entire crop was taken and sold by Dan. On November *183 25, 1942, Dan paid the 1941 taxes upon one quarter section. On December 9, 1942, he made a payment of $194.79 upon the contract with the Federal Land Bank. On December 14, 1942, he paid the insurance premium upon a policy insuring the farm buildings against loss by fire or windstorm.

Dan also farmed the land in 1943. Again the father helped with the harvesting and threshing and again Dan took the crop. On November 22, 1943, he paid the 1942 taxes upon the entire tract and the balance due upon the 1941 taxes. On December 14,1943, he paid another year’s premium upon his fire and windstorm insurance.

In the meantime, however, the father presented Dan’s assignment of his contract for deed and the contract itself to the agents of the Federal Land Bank, together with his check for the entire balance due on the contract. These were forwarded to the Land Bank together with the letter of the agent dated November 22, 1943, requesting that a deed to the property be issued to the father, Karl Kolb. The deed was executed upon December 2, 1943, and recorded upon December 7, 1943.

In January 1944, the father consulted a lawyer for the purpose of taking legal steps, if necessary, to collect rent from his son, Dan. An action was commenced for that purpose but before it was tried Dan brought this action praying that his contract assignment to his father be declared to be executed as security for the repayment of money his father had loaned him to make the original payments upon such contract. The father stood upon his record title but the trial court found in favor of Dan and judgment was entered granting the relief prayed for. Defendant appealed from the judgment and the case is here for a trial de novo.

As to the facts related so far in this opinion there is no dispute, but here the agreement ends. Dan testified that his father told him at the “talk” in the fall of 1941 with respect to the Dolliver farm, “he would borrow me the money to buy it with” and “I said all right I will give you that money back next fall.” The father testified. “I told my wife we buy this place and my wife said, buy it in Dan’s name and I pay the payments and give *184 Mm one-fourth share, and he said yes, I do this so you get the place.” To explain the fact that the purchase was made in Nan’s name, he said, “Well you know I had a quarter with the Federal Land Bank, and he says I can’t buy this in my name, so I bought it in his name.” Just who -the “he” referred to in this testimony is, is not stated in the record. Presumably it was some unnamed agent of the Federal Land Bank. There is other testimony in the record to the effect that at that time the father was in default upon an indebtedness to the Federal Land Bank and under the bank’s rules he was ineligible to purchase land upon contract.

The father testified that shortly after the original agreement with Nan, he heard that Nan had made a statement that he was ■“going to fix the old man.” The evidence concerning this statement is rather involved. Nan’s sister, Martha, testified that her brother Ed, told her that Nan had made the statement and suggested that she tell her mother. She then told the mother and the mother told the father. Nan denied that he had made the statement and Ed denied that Nan had ever made such a statement to him or that he had ever told his sister that Nan had done so. No one testified as to what the expression “fix the old man” imported. It strikes us as unusual that Ed who was living at home at the time would choose such a circuitous route to convey a message to his father. On whichever side the truth lies, however, it is clear that at some indefinite time after the original agreement, the father and especially the mother urged Nan to make the assignment of the contract. Concerning this report and its effect the father testified: Q. “Nid you talk with Nan about that?” A. “Yes.” Q. “You told him you heard that?” A. “Yes.” Q. “What did that have to do with you paying the $400.00 after that?” A. “I said I will never give you more money.” . . . Q. “At that time this talk was being had there about Nan’s fixing the-old man, and you said you wouldn’t furnish any more money until he made an assignment?” A. “Yes.” Nan testified as follows: Q. “When did you have your talk about giving an assignment in the first place?” A. “He always wanted me to sign some papers for security, so he made some papers and *185 I don’t know what they made out.” On Sross-examination he testified. Q. “Dan, I will ask you, if before this payment was made and after you had received this blue paper (a copy of his offer to purchase) that I have here marked Defendant’s Exhibit A., if you didn’t tell your brother Ed that now that you had this contract you were going to fix the old man?” A. “No.” Q„ “And further that after they had demanded of you that you make this assignment — didn’t your mother talk to you about that?” A. “Mother said I was supposed to make security when something happened. That is all.”

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.W.2d 484, 75 N.D. 181, 1947 N.D. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kolb-v-kolb-nd-1947.