Ladegaard v. Connell

281 N.W. 656, 229 Wis. 36, 1938 Wisc. LEXIS 254
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 11, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 281 N.W. 656 (Ladegaard v. Connell) 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
Ladegaard v. Connell, 281 N.W. 656, 229 Wis. 36, 1938 Wisc. LEXIS 254 (Wis. 1938).

Opinion

Fritz, J.

In due time the defendants moved to dismiss the appeal herein for the reason that it had never been perfected by plaintiff’s filing a bond for costs as required by sec. 274.11 (2) and (3), Stats. 1935. Instead, he had filed.a mere undertaking in the execution of which he had not joined, but which was all that was required by sec. 274.15, Stats., prior to the enactment of ch. 541, Laws of 1935. That was a general revisor’s bill. Section 284 thereof [38]*38amended sub. (2) of sec. 274.11, Stats. 1933, so far as material here, by providing for the service of a bond for costs instead of an undertaking; and section 286 thereof amended and renumbered sec. 274.15, Stats. 1933, by in substance changing the word “undertaking” to the word “bond.” That was a material change. Although the differences between them are rather technical, a bond is not the same as an undertaking. The latter need not be signed by the principal, as must be done in the case of a bond. 9 C. J. p. 8, § 2; 65 C. J. p. 1212, § 3. Generally speaking, a bond must be executed under seal (9 C. J. p. 7, § 1; 9 C. J. p. 14, § 19) ; but that is not essential to the validity of an undertaking. 65 C. J. p. 1213, § 6. However, upon the hearing of the motion to dismiss, the plaintiff tendered and filed a supplemental bond executed by him and acceptable to the defendants. As it is apparent that the appeal was taken in due time and good faith, and that the filing of the undertaking instead of a bond in the first instance was through mistake, the filing of the supplemental bond is hereby permitted under sec. 274.32, Stats. Therefore the motion to dismiss the appeal is denied.

There is no serious conflict in the evidence in relation to the material issues determined by the court’s findings. That evidence well warrants and establishes the following facts, as found by the court. The first and principal contract upon which plaintiff relies is dated September 4, 1935. A supplemental contract is dated October 2, 1935. Both purport to have been made between Louis M. Proesel, acting for himself and as agent for the Society of the Divine Word (hereinafter called the “Society”), as purchasers, and Walter C. Barger, acting as agent for Andrew Ladegaard, the vendor; and the contracts are signed by Proesel and Barger accordingly. The principal contract, so far as here material, provided for the purchase of nine hundred eleven acres of land [39]*39for $60,000, of which the purchaser paid $6,000 “as earnest money, to be applied on such purchase when consummated,” and agreed to pay $54,000 “within five days after the title has been examined and found good, or accepted by him, . . . provided a good and sufficient general deed, conveying to said purchaser a good and merchantable title to* said premises (subject as aforesaid), shall then be ready for delivery.” The supplemental contract, after recitals as to the execution of the principal contract with Proesel and the Society as parties of the first part therein, the deposit of the $6,000 as earnest money, and the agreement to pay the balance of $56,000 after the title had been accepted and found good, further recited that—

“Whereas, the title of the said property has been so examined and found good and accepted by the party of the first part, and whereas the ten days, thereafter within which the said party of the first part was to pay the said balance of $56,000 has so expired.”

Then it was provided in that contract that, therefore, in consideration of extending for fourteen days the time for the payment of the $56,000, the parties of the first part agree that if that sum is not so paid the $6,000 then on deposit with S. D. Connell shall become the property of Lade-gaard, and Connell is authorized to pay that sum to him.

The title to the land, which was to be conveyed to* the purchasers under those contracts, was vested in Ladegaard for some time prior to and until January 7, 1935. But on that date an order was duly entered by the county court of Wau-kesha county confirming a foreclosure sale of the land to Mahlon D. Miller, the plaintiff and mortgagee in the foreclosure proceedings, in the due course of which the sale by the sheriff had been ordered and held and the property sold, and the sheriff’s deed therefor delivered to Miller as the purchaser. On August 2, 1935, at a hearing on Ladegaard’s [40]*40motion to vacate the order of February 27, 1935, confirming the sale, the county court stated in an opinion that if Barger and Ladegaard would pay $5,000 to the clerk of the court and would give a bond, approved by the court, agreeing to bid on a subsequent sale, if ordered, a sum that would guarantee to Miller all his principal, interest, costs and disbursements, and attorneys’ fees, that a resale would be ordered; and that the attorney for Ladegaard should prepare an order in accordance with the opinion of the court. However, no such order was ever prepared by Ladegaard’s attorney or signed by the court; Barger and Ladegaard never paid the $5,000 to the clerk of the court; and they never gave a bond as required by the court’s opinion of August'2, 1935, to entitle Ladegaard to have a resale ordered. Although it was provided in the contract of September 4, 1935, that the purchaser agreed to furnish a surety bond “as per the court’s orders as of August 2, 1935,” there was no provision or agreement at any time by Proesel or the Society to- pay or advance the $5,000 which the court in its opinion on August 2, 1935, required Ladegaard and Barger to pay to the clerk of the court in order to become entitled to' an order for a resale. Abstracts of title, delivered for examination to D. B. Malone, as attorney for the Society, disclosed that the title was in Mahlon D. Miller, and a written opinion on the title to that effect given by Jacobson & Malone (of which D. B. Malone was a member) on September 30, 1935, was tendered to Barger, as agent for Ladegaard. Malone informed him that title to the land was in Mahlon D. Miller; that there was no certainty of Barger’s and Ladegaard’s ever securing title thereto to carry out the provisions of the September 4, 1935, contract; and that nothing further would be done by the Society to carry out the contract until Barger ,and Ladegaard had some certain means of procuring title to the premises. No other abstract of title was ever furnished, and no general deed from Mahlon D. Miller, or anyone else, conveying [41]*41good merchantable title was ever presented to the defendants or Jacobson & Malone, as attorneys for the Society. Nevertheless, while matters were in that state Barger induced Proesel to sign the supplemental agreement of October 2, 1935, in which there was the false recital that the title of the property was found good and accepted by the purchasers. However, as the trial court rightly found, the signature of Proesel to that supplemental agreement was obtained under a mistake of fact in that he was misled into signing it by the assurance of Barger that title to the premises had been passed upon by Jacobson & Malone, as attorneys for the Society, and found good, whereas in fact Jacobson & Malone had expressly informed Barger that title to the premises was not acceptable. While matters were still in that state, the plaintiff on December 2, 1935, gave the Society notice that he formally terminated the contract and demanded the $6,000 theretofore deposited with S. D. Connell; and on January 13, 1936, the county court entered an order denying the motion of Barger and Ladegaard for a resale, and again confirming the sale of the mortgaged premises as ordered on January 7, 1935.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Maas v. W. R. Arthur & Co.
2 N.W.2d 238 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1942)
Wilhelm v. Hack
290 N.W. 642 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
281 N.W. 656, 229 Wis. 36, 1938 Wisc. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ladegaard-v-connell-wis-1938.