Lipsey v. Crosser

257 N.W. 125, 63 S.D. 185, 1934 S.D. LEXIS 127
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1934
DocketFile No. 7567.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 257 N.W. 125 (Lipsey v. Crosser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lipsey v. Crosser, 257 N.W. 125, 63 S.D. 185, 1934 S.D. LEXIS 127 (S.D. 1934).

Opinion

*186 CAMPBELL, J.

This action was instituted by plaintiff Lipsey, owner of certain real estate, and the Co-operative 'Company, holder of a second mortgage thereon, against defendant Crosser, assignee of a first mortgage on the premises, to vacate Crosser’s foreclosure of the first mortgage. Relevant facts may be gleaned from the record substantially as follows:

In 1926 one Christensen, who owned two adjoining town lots in Brookings, mortgaged the same to Horace Fishback to secure $150 due May 3, 1929, with interest at 8 per cent until maturity and 10 per cent thereafter. On August 25, 1926, Fishback assigned said note and mortgage to one Kellogg residing in Tacoma, Wash., for whom Fishback (and his son Van Fishback) acted1 locally as financial agents. In September, 1926, Christensen conveyed the premises to plaintiff Lipsey; the contract for the transfer being made in the bank, of which bank Fishback was president. At that time Lipsey was able to pay the $150 mortgage and desired to do so, but was advised by Van Fishback that payment would not be accepted prior to maturity. Subsequently the first year’s interest on the $150 mortgage was paid. No one thereafter made any demands upon Lipsey for the payment of this mortgage, either as to principal or interest, or gave him any notice of the maturity thereof. He had purchased subject to the mortgage, however, and was at all times chargeable with constructive notice of its contents. Immediately after purchasing the lots, Lipsey .proceeded to erect thereon a tile building, approximately forty feet square, denominated in the record as a “pop factory.” Lipsey claims that the original construction cost of the building was $3,831.67, exclusive of his own labor and the cost of the lots, and he subsequently made some improvements thereon. Some of the building materials were purchased by Lipsey from his coplaintiff Fanners’ Co-operative Company, and in the spring of 1927 Lipsey mortgaged the premises to the Co-operative Company for $1,189.15, being the unpaid balance due them on their materials bill. This lien of the Co-operative Company was in the form of two mortgages, one for $589.15, and one for $600, which were promptly recorded. In the spring of 1930 Lipsey leased the premises to a tenant at the rate of $35 per month, which rental was to be paid, and in fact was 'paid, to the Co-operative Company. It was agreed ■between Lipsey and the Co-operative Company that such rentals *187 would be applied to take care of the taxes against the premises (which were delinquent since 1926 and amounted at that time, with accrued interest, to about $240) and the principal and interest of the $150 first mortgage and thereafter to their own lien. The Cooperative Company collected the rentals from month to month but made no payments on the taxes or first mortgage, applying the money to their own lien, which was thereby reduced to approximately $600. Of the failure of the Co-operative Company to pay the taxes or take care of the prior mortgage, Lipsey was not advised save only as he might be chargeable with constructive notice that such items continued undischarged of record. So far as concerns Lipsey, the 'Co-operative Company, and the tenant in possession, the situation thus continued until October, 1931.

We turn now to the facts concerning defendant Crosser’s connection with the matter. Crosser was a young man, married, employed as a clerk in a furniture store at a salary of $140 per month. He was a boyhood friend, schoolmate, and intimate companion of Mr. Herbert Cheever, one of his attorneys herein, who personally acted for him in connection with all the transactions hereinafter stated. The Co-operative 'Company had their office and place of business in Brookings, and had from time to time been clients of Mr. 'Cheever or his firm, though there was no general retainer. This relation of attorney and client appears to have terminated about April, 1930, excepting for its continuance as to one or two small pending matters which had no relation to Lipsey or his affairs. Mr. Cheever knew that the Lipsey premises were rented for $35 per month; that the 'Co-operative Company had a lien thereon and was receiving the rentals. Mr. Cheever learned of the existence of the first mortgage in July, 1930. He states that he did not acquire this information as a result of any relation of attorney and client between himself and the Co-operative Company, but through his investigation of Lipsey’s affairs in endeavoring to collect other items from Lipsey, who appears to have been quite heavily indebted to various persons. Mr. Cheever informed his friend Crosser of the existence of the first mortgage, -the condition thereof, and the amount due thereon, and also of the tax and other subsequent liens against the premises. Crosser, who had never previously owned mortgages or loaned money on real estate, decided to buy this mortgage as an investment. He says, “My sole *188 purpose at the time I bought it was to collect the interest and principal.” The assignment of mortgage from Kellogg to Crosser was dated and acknowledged in the state of Washington on August 13, 1930. It was delivered by Kellogg’s agent Fishback to Mr. Cheever, attorney for Crosser, on September 8, 1930, and was paid for on that day by a check in the amount of $200 signed by Mr. 'Cheever’s firm as trustees, payable to Mr. Fishback’s bank. Of this amount $179.50 went to Kellogg, and the balance of $20.50 was retained by Fishback as his commission for handling the matter. Crosser says that he paid the $200 to Herbert Cheever in cash. He states that he does not know where he obtained this particular sum, and does not know whether he made the payment in Mr. Cheever’s office or in the store where he worked. He states that the assignment in fact was never delivered to him, but was left with Mr. Cheever at all times, and that he had instructed Mr. Cheever to foreclose the mortgage before he received the assignment. Neither Mr. Cheever nor Crosser ever advised either Lipsey or the Co-operative Company of Crosser’s ownership of this note and mortgage or made any effort whatsoever to collect from either of them, though Mr. Cheever says that he had a large number of claims against Lipsey and always went to see 'him or wrote him regarding them. He says, however, that this particular note and mortgage was placed with him for foreclosure and not for collection.

The assignment, of mortgage from Kellogg to Crosser was recorded on the day of its delivery, September 8, 1930, and foreclosure thereof was immediately undertaken, the notice of sale bearing date September 9, 1930, the first publication thereof being on September 12, 1930, and the sale being set for October 11, 1930, at 10 o’clock a. m. It was the usual custom of attorneys practicing in Brookings county to conduct their foreclosure sales at 2 o’clock p.m. The sheriff of the county testified that during his incumbency in office Mr.Cheever’s firm had conducted seventy or eighty foreclosure sales, most of which were set for 2 o’clock p.m. and that he could not recall any instance, save the Crosser sale, where any other hour was fixed, though he would not want to state definitely that such an instance never 'had occurred. The notice of sale was not published in either of the two legal newspapers at Brookings, the county seat, and the situs of‘ the property, but was published *189 in the Elkton Record. Elkton is a town of about 850 population in the extreme southeast corner of Brookings county.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
257 N.W. 125, 63 S.D. 185, 1934 S.D. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lipsey-v-crosser-sd-1934.