Krant v. Moe

215 N.W. 940, 172 Minn. 578, 1927 Minn. LEXIS 1336
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 10, 1927
DocketNo. 26,444.
StatusPublished

This text of 215 N.W. 940 (Krant v. Moe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Krant v. Moe, 215 N.W. 940, 172 Minn. 578, 1927 Minn. LEXIS 1336 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

Olsen, C.

Action by plaintiff to have a real estate mortgage, owned by him, decreed to be a first lien upon a tract of land in Hennepin county; *579 to have said mortgage adjudged to be prior and superior to the mortgage of defendant Modern Life Insurance Company; and to have the foreclosure of plaintiff’s mortgage confirmed.

The district court found against plaintiff to the extent that it held the mortgage owned by Modern Life Insurance Company a prior lien upon the land and superior to plaintiff’s mortgage. It gave plaintiff a lien upon the land under his mortgage and confirmed the foreclosure thereof, but subject to the mortgage of the insurance company. Plaintiff made an alternative motion for amendments to the findings of fact and conclusions of law so as to find and hold that plaintiff had the prior and superior lien or, if that be denied, then for a new trial of the action. Plaintiff appeals from the order denying his motion for a new trial. Defendant Modern Life Insurance Company alone appears here to contest the appeal.

A brief statement of facts is as follows: Defendant Levy L. Norblom obtained title to the land in August, 1922, by warranty deed, subject to a mortgage for $8,500 to one Tombers. This mortgage was foreclosed by sale of the land March 9, 1923, and the land bid in by Tombers. A sheriff’s certificate was issued to him and recorded on that date. Norblom did not redeem, and the time for redemption by the owner expired March 10, 1924 (March 9 being Sunday). On March 8, 1924, defendant Carl W. Moe obtained, entered and docketed a judgment in the district court of Hennepin county against Norblom for some $500, and on March 15, 1924, redeemed from the mortgage sale as a judgment creditor by the payment of $4,463.74. The redemption is conceded to have vested the legal title to the land in Carl W. Moe. On the same day, March 15, 1924, Levy L. Norblom gave to the plaintiff a mortgage upon the land for $2,000 to secure a loan of that amount, which mortgage was recorded March 17, 1924, and is the mortgage on which this action is based. On the same day, March 15, 1924, Norblom gave a deed of the land to one Hubbard, a banker, and Carl W. Moe and his wife also gave a deed of the land to Hubbard. On December 5, 1924, Hubbard conveyed the land to defendant Emma T. Moe, wife *580 of Carl W. Moe. On the same day Emma T. Moe and Carl W. Moe mortgaged the land for $3,000 to American State Bank of Minneapolis, the bank with which Hubbard was connected. On January 5,1926, Emma T. Moe and her husband gave a mortgage on the land to the defendant Modern Life Insurance Company for $4,000 to secure a loan of that amount from said company, which is the mortgage now held by that company. All these instruments were properly recorded.

Emma T. Moe is a sister of Levy L. Norblom. The $4,000 borrowed from the insurance company was used to pay off the mortgage to the American State Bank, to the extent of that mortgage.

Plaintiff’s mortgage appears to have been foreclosed by a sale of the premises on December 8, 1926, and the premises bid in by plaintiff at such sale.

At the time Norblom gave this mortgage to plaintiff, he (Norblom) had no legal title to the land and he has never since had or obtained any legal title thereto.

Plaintiff seeks to have his mortgage decreed a prior lien on the land on equitable grounds, or on the theory of a resulting trust and notice thereof to the insurance company. In substance plaintiff contends that at the time Norblom obtained title to the land in 1922 the consideration for the land was furnished jointly by himself and Carl W. Moe, and the title taken in the name of Norblom under a verbal agreement or understanding between them that he took title for the benefit of himself and Carl W. Moe, each to have a one-half interest; that at the time Carl W. Moe redeemed from the Tombers mortgage sale Norblom furnished $2,000 obtained from plaintiff as part of the redemption money, and that Moe redeemed the land for the benefit of himself and Norblom under the same verbal arrangement and understanding; and that Emma T. Moe, the present title holder, was a party to and had knowledge of and acquiesced in said arrangement. Plaintiff further contends that the defendant insurance company, at the time it made the loan and obtained the mortgage held by it, had notice and knowledge, actual and constructive, of the interest of Norblom in the land, of *581 plaintiff’s mortgage thereon, of the equities and trust created and the relations and arrangements between the defendants as to said land, and therefore took its mortgage subject to plaintiff’s mortgage and rights in the premises.

At the close of plaintiff’s evidence, the defendants Norblom and Carl W. and Emma T. Moe consented that judgment might be rendered against them, establishing plaintiff’s mortgage as a lien upon the land and confirming the foreclosure sale made thereunder.

The assignments of error are that the court erred in holding the mortgage of the insurance company a prior lien; in holding that it was not incumbent upon that company “to take cognizance” of plaintiff’s mortgage; in refusing to grant plaintiff’s motion to amend the findings of fact and conclusions of law; in refusing to amend the conclusions of law by substituting in place thereof conclusions decreeing the plaintiff’s mortgage to be a superior and prior lien and encumbrance to the mortgage of the insurance company and to be a first lien; in denying plaintiff’s motion for a new trial on the grounds that the decision is not justified by the evidence and is contrary to law; and in sustaining the objection to the evidence offered to be given by the witness H. C. Eoberg.

These assignments may be conveniently grouped as follows:

(a) Error in holding the mortgage of the insurance company to be the prior lien and in refusing to amend its findings of fact and conclusions of law so as to find and conclude that plaintiff’s mortgage was the prior lien; (b) error in refusing a new trial on the grounds stated; (c) error in excluding the offered testimony of H. C. Eoberg.

At the outset we are met with this difficulty in the record: When plaintiff offered his testimony to establish his equitable rights or resulting trust, defendant interposed objection on the ground that it was not binding upon the insurance company and inadmissible as to it. The court, in some instances, sustained the objection as to the insurance company but admitted the evidence as against other defendants; and in other instances received the evidence as against the Moes and Norblom but subject to the objection of the *582 insurance company, indicating that the same ruling would be made. No further rulings appear, except that at the close of plaintiff’s evidence the following appears:

“Mr. Converse: If the Court please, in order that there may be no misunderstanding as to the defense, I understand that none of the testimony that the plaintiff has offered or that has been adduced so far has been received as against the defendant Modern Life Insurance Company, except the abstract and the facts appearing of record.
“Mr. Bryngelson: And the judgment roll, that was received.
“Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
215 N.W. 940, 172 Minn. 578, 1927 Minn. LEXIS 1336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krant-v-moe-minn-1927.