Latton v. McCarty

125 N.W. 430, 142 Wis. 190, 1910 Wisc. LEXIS 191
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 125 N.W. 430 (Latton v. McCarty) 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
Latton v. McCarty, 125 N.W. 430, 142 Wis. 190, 1910 Wisc. LEXIS 191 (Wis. 1910).

Opinion

SiebecKER, J.

Tbe evidence as to many of the facts stated above is undisputed. Tbe findings of the court do not cover many of these undisputed facts. Tbe main controverted and material issues of fact were whether or not tbe mortgage on tbe premises, securing payment of tbe $250 note, was discharged; whether or not a portion of tbe purchase money remained unpaid; and whether or not tbe defendant Maggie Perry bad notice tbat a part of tbe purchase money which was due from McCarty remained unpaid at tbe time she purchased a part of tbe premises. These issues were [194]*194embraced in tbe court’s findings. It found tbat $200 of tbe purchase money remained unpaid at tbe time tbe plaintiff made, executed, and delivered a deed of tbe premises to tbe defendant John McCarty, tbat Maggie Perry bad notice thereof before tbe conveyance of a part of the property to her on June 18, 1903, and tbat by parol agreement of plaintiff and McCarty tbe mortgage was to be continued as a security for tbe payment of this balance of tbe purchase money. Though tbe finding states this amount to be due upon the note and mortgage which were given by Wagoner and bis wife before plaintiff became tbe owner of tbe premises, it also appears tbat tbe defendant John McCarty bad purchased tbe premises under a land contract, and agreed at tbe time of the conveyance to him to pay, as part of tbe consideration for the purchase of tbe premises, tbe amount due on tbe note and mortgage. Tbe court found tbat at tbe time plaintiff by warranty deed conveyed title to the premises to McCarty (March 19, 1902), it was orally agreed tbat tbe mortgage should remain in force and unsatisfied. Tbe court held tbat such an agreement was effectual to continue this mortgage as a subsisting obligation and awarded judgment of foreclosure and for a sale of tbe premises. Tbe appellant assails this judgment upon tbe ground tbat this parol agreement of tbe parties to continue tbe mortgage given plaintiff prior to tbe delivery of bis warranty deed of tbe premises to McCarty on March 19, 1902, is wholly void and ineffectual. Tbe contention is that the warranty deed from plaintiff to McCarty operated as a satisfaction and discharge of tbe mortgage, and tbat tbe oral agreement to keep tbe mortgage alive contradicts tbe effective parts of the deed, whereby plaintiff conveyed all his right, title, and interest in tbe premises and warranted tbat they were free and clear from all incumbrances whatsoever. Tbe deed contains nothing excepting this mortgage from its terms. Tbe court finds, and tbe evidence supports the conclusion, that the parties attempted to except the mort[195]*195gage from tbe operation of tbe deed by tbe parol agreement. This shows that tbe parties assumed that tbe mortgage was not excepted by tbe terms of tbe deed. Tbe deed grants, sells, remises, releases, and conveys tbe premises, together with tbe hereditaments and appurtenances thereunto belonging, and “all tbe estate, right, title, interest, claim, or demand whatsoever” of tbe plaintiff, either in law or equity, in possession or expectancy. Surely these words in their natural import and meaning embrace plaintiff’s rights under tbe mortgage, and hence those rights were thereby conveyed to the grantee, McCarty. It is a general rule that such a conveyance by a mortgagee to a mortgagor or the owner of the equity of redemption operates to satisfy and discharge the mortgage. Mason v. Beach, 55 Wis. 607, 13 N. W. 884; Waters v. Waters, 20 Iowa, 363; Woodbury v. Aikin, 13 Ill. 639; Barr v. Foster, 25 Colo. 28, 52 Pac. 1101; Mutual B. & L. Asso. v. Wyeth, 105 Ala. 639, 17 South. 45.

In Mason v. Beach, supra, this court, after discussing the nature of a mortgage claim or interest in the premises mortgaged, declares:

“Whatéver interest in the land the mortgagee obtains, less than the fee, under these decisions, and whatever it may properly be denominated, it is certainly an. interest, and a substantial interest, which may pass by a conveyance. By our statute (sec. 2203, R. S.) 'conveyances of land, and of any estate or interest therein, may be made by deed,’ etc. It follows, therefore, that, according to the old or the modern theory of mortgages, a quitclaim deed by the mortgagee will operate as a discharge of the mortgage.”

We thus have a situation wherein plaintiff’s conveyance of the premises by warranty deed operated to satisfy • and discharge the mortgage theretofore given him thereon, but which the court, in effect, held was excepted from the deed by the parol agreement of the parties. This was, in effect, a holding that the parties could by parol evidence contradict their written agreements embraced in the deed, whereby the plaint[196]*196iff conveyed all bis estate, right, title, interest, claim, or demand, in law or in equity, in these premises to McCarty. It is well established that in the absence of fraud or mistake the written agreements of parties cannot be so contradicted or modified by parol. Upon this consideration it must be held that the court erred in ruling that this mortgage was a subsisting valid conveyance and in awarding judgment for its foreclosure and a sale of the premises.

The discharge of this mortgage, securing payment of an unpaid balance of the purchase money, does not per se establish payment thereof, and it was competent to show that it remained unpaid. We .consider the evidence on this subject as ample to sustain the finding that $200 of the purchase money remained unpaid at the time plaintiff conveyed the premises by warranty deed to McCarty and when the action went to judgment. Under these facts plaintiff clearly had a right to a vendor’s lien on the premises for this balance, with interest thereon. While the complaint, in form, is one for foreclosure of the mortgage and a sale of the premises, and was no doubt intended to embrace no other cause of action, nevertheless it alleges all the facts necessary to the right to a vendor’s lien and a foreclosure thereof. It is manifest that the question of whether or not a part of the purchase money was still due plaintiff from the vendee, McCarty, was as fully litigated by the parties by the issues tried as it could have been in an action to enforce a right to a vendor’s lien. All the other facts pertinent to the right to such a lien by the plaintiff are well-nigh undisputed and hence the record is complete for enforcing plaintiff’s right to such a lien. “Belief by way of declaring and enforcing a vendor’s lien is of the same general character as relief upon a bill to foreclose a mortgage to secure purchase money” (Mutual B. & L. Asso. v. Wyeth, supra), and should therefore be awarded, under the facts shown, if the complaint and the relief demanded will permit it As indicated, the facts alleged sustain this [197]*197right, and tbe demand for general relief, in addition to tbe specific relief for a foreclosure and sale, are sufficient in equity to embrace tbe right to relief by an enforcement of tbe purchase-money lien.

But plaintiff is not confined to tbe general equitable jurisdiction for authority to obtain such relief. Sec. 2886, Stats. (1898), contemplates that, where issue has been joined and tbe action tried, “the court may grant . . .

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Bluebook (online)
125 N.W. 430, 142 Wis. 190, 1910 Wisc. LEXIS 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/latton-v-mccarty-wis-1910.