Langenes v. Bullinger

328 N.W.2d 241, 1982 N.D. LEXIS 372
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1982
DocketCiv. 10193
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 328 N.W.2d 241 (Langenes v. Bullinger) 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
Langenes v. Bullinger, 328 N.W.2d 241, 1982 N.D. LEXIS 372 (N.D. 1982).

Opinion

SAND, Justice.

The defendants, Michael Bullinger and Peggy Bullinger (Bullingers), appealed from a district court judgment dated 22 March 1982 in favor of the plaintiffs, David W. Langenes and Frances Langenes (Lan-geneses) in the total amount of $21,591.44, plus court costs and interest, with the condition that if the Bullingers did not pay the money on or before 31 March 1982 the Langeneses could elect one of several remedies outlined in the judgment.

On 27 June 1979 the Langeneses and the Bullingers executed a contract for deed in which the Langeneses agreed to sell and the Bullingers agreed to purchase a four-plex apartment building in Fargo, North Dakota. The agreed purchase price was $88,-900.00 to be paid in the following manner: $10,000.00 down payment, $10,000.00 due on 1 July 1980 which was to be applied to interest at the rate of 9½% per annum with any excess applied to the principal balance, and $667.46 in monthly payments beginning on 1 August 1980 and extending to 1 July 1984, when the entire unpaid balance became due.

The $10,000.00 down payment was made at the time of closing and an additional interest payment of $3,750.00 was made on 31 December 1979. The Bullingers did not pay the balance of the $10,000.00 due on 1 July 1980 or any of the agreed-upon monthly payments of $667.46. The Bullingers received and retained the rents in excess of $22,000.00 from the four-plex apartment building from 1 July 1979 through April 1982. 1

As a result, the Langeneses commenced an action in September 1980 against the Bullingers for the balance due on the contract for deed plus interest, and in the event the Bullingers did not pay the balance due, then the Langeneses sought a judgment terminating the contract for deed and the possession of the Bullingers. Alter *243 natively, the Langeneses sought to obtain possession of the property and reserved their right to obtain a deficiency judgment against the Bullingers. 2 The Langeneses also sought to receive all income and rents from the property.

The Bullingers answered and admitted the nonpayment of installments under the contract for deed but denied they were in default. The Bullingers also counterclaimed to rescind the contract for deed because of fraud and misrepresentation.

A bench trial was held on 23 November 1981 and on 23 February 1982 the court entered findings of fact, conclusions of law and order for judgment which were supplemented on 19 March 1982. The trial court found no fraud or misrepresentation upon which the contract for deed could be rescinded by the Bullingers. The district court made the following conclusions of law which the Bullingers objected to:

“7. Pursuant to 32-19-06, NDCC, this Court can only render judgment for the amount found to be due at the time of the rendition of said judgment plus the costs of the action. This Court has the power to cancel the Contract for Deed upon failure to pay the delinquent amounts and the Court has the power to establish the period of such redemption. See 32 N.Dak. Law Review 5 (1956), Cancellation of Land Contracts by James E. Leahy.
“9. Plaintiffs, David W. Langenes and Frances Langenes shall have judgment against defendants, Michael Bullinger and Peggy Bullinger, for the total of the following amounts:
a. $18,889.92, which is the amount of delinquent payments of principal through November 1,1981, and interest through March 1,1982. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 16).
b. $667.46 for the December 1,1981, payment, plus interest thereon at the rate of $5.28 per month for December, 1981; January and February of 1982, for a total of $15.84.
c. $667.46 for the January 1, 1982, payment, plus interest thereon for two months, totalling $10.56.
d. $667.46 for the February 1, 1982, payment, plus interest thereon for one month of $5.28.
e. $667.46 for the March 1, 1982, payment.
“That such total is $21,591.44, which covers interest and principal as of March 1, 1982, and shall bear interest from and after that date.
“As an explanation of the nature of the judgment, it is the intention of this Court that the sum of $21,591.44 is a money judgment. If the Defendants pay said amount before March 31, 1982, the judgment in that amount is satisfied and the Contract for Deed is still effective. If there is a cancellation of the land contract as provided herein, the money judgment is not extinguished.
“10. That if the Defendants do not pay to the Plaintiffs said sum of money on or before March 31, 1982, the Plaintiffs may elect in their sole discretion any one of the following remedies in addition to the above money judgment:
*244 a. the said Contract for Deed shall be in all ways cancelled and the Plaintiffs shall be sole owners of the property free and clear of all claims of Defendants and shall have immediate possession as of April 1,1982 plus all rents and profits therefor effective April 1, 1982, or
b. the Contract for Deed may be foreclosed pursuant to 32-19-06 NDCC with a public sale, redemption as provided in said statute and with rights of deficiency judgment only as provided by said statute.” [Emphasis added.] 3

Judgment was entered on 22 March 1982 and the Bullingers appealed.

The primary issue raised by the Bulling-ers concerns the remedies available to a vendor under a contract for deed upon default by the vendee.

The Bullingers contended that the trial court erred in entering a personal money judgment in the same action in which it cancelled the contract for deed. The Bul-lingers contended that the relief granted by the trial court went beyond that prayed for in the complaint and contravened the well-established principles of law enunciated by this Court, citing Vail v. Evesmith, 62 N.D. 99, 241 N.W. 719 (1932), that a person may not at the same time obtain both a money judgment for the unpaid purchase price and cancel the contract.

The Langeneses contended that the award of a money judgment equal to the unpaid installments plus interest due under the contract for deed was within the equitable powers of the court because “The Defendants [Bullingers] should not be allowed to pay a small amount of down payment and keep the rents and profits for approximately three years at a considerable profit to the Defendants at the expense of the Plaintiffs.” 4

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Bluebook (online)
328 N.W.2d 241, 1982 N.D. LEXIS 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langenes-v-bullinger-nd-1982.