Little v. Braun

92 N.W. 800, 11 N.D. 410
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 92 N.W. 800 (Little v. Braun) 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
Little v. Braun, 92 N.W. 800, 11 N.D. 410 (N.D. 1903).

Opinion

Wallin, C. J.

In this action the plaintiff is seeking to have a deed of conveyance, which is absolute in form, adjudged to be a mortgage. It is conceded that on April 18, 1898, the plaintiff was the owner of a quarter section of land in Richland county; that on said date the plaintiff (joining therein with J. H. Little, her husband) executed a deed of conveyance of said land, in which the defendant was named as grantee, and which deed was in the usual form of a deed of warranty, and purported to convey the land to the defendant in fee simple. Said deed was on said date delivered to one M. A. Wipperman by the plaintiff, with the intent that the same should be delivered to the defendant, and the same was delivered to defendant, and subsequently, and on the 21st day of April, 1898,' the deed was filed for record, and was thereafter duly recorded. The complaint alleges, in effect, that the parties to the deed intended that the same should operate as a mortgage, and that it was given and received as security for a loan of $302, which loan, it is alleged, was made by the defendant to the plaintiff, and that such loan was the sole consideration for the deed. Plaintiff further alleges that at the time of the delivery of the deed it was expressly agreed between the parties to the deed that the defendant would reconvey the premises to the plaintiff upon payment of said sum of $302. The complaint also states that prior to the commencement of this action the plaintiff offered to pay the defendant the “amount of said loan,” and that defendant refused to accept the same and claimed to be the owner of the land. Plaintiff, as relief, demands that the defendant be compelled to accept the amount due on the loan, and to reconvey the land to the plaintiff. The defendant, by his answer to the complaint, in effect denies that the deed was intended to be a mortgage, and denies making the alleged loan, and alleges that the defendant purchased the land of the plaintiff for a consideration of $350, and that said defendant acquired an absolute title to said land by the deed, subject only to a first mortgage of $530 to the state of North Dakota.

[412]*412It is conceded that a prior mortgage on the land had been foreclosed, and the land sold at foreclosure sale, prior to the execution of the deed in question, and at the date of the execution and delivery of the deed only a few days remained within which the land could be redeemed from the foreclosure sale. It is further conceded that a large part of the land was under cultivation, and that the plaintiff and her husband had, in the fall of 1897, at considerable expense, plowed the cultivated land, and that when the deed was made the land was in condition to be seeded, and that it was in fact soon after seeded by the plaintiff, and the plaintiff, in the year 1898, raised a valuable crop of wheat on said land. The undisputed evidence shows that the plaintiff’s husband was much involved in debt, and that neither plaintiff nor her husband had any means or resources outside of the land in question,.which could be made available in redeeming the land from said foreclosure sale. It appears that it required something over $900 to redeem the land. The evidence shows that for some time prior to the execution of the deed plaintiff’s husband, acting for plaintiff, had been making efforts to raise the sum needed for the redemption of the land, and that, aided by Wipperman and others, he had succeeded in negotiating a loan from the state of the sum of $530, which amount was secured by a first mortgage upon the land in question: But the sum of $530 was not enough to enable the plaintiff to redeem from the foreclosure sale, and hence the plaintiff, represented by her husband, who called to his assistance said M. A. Wipperman, applied to several persons for an additional loan, to be secured by a second mortgage upon the land. But the applications for such additional loan were severally and in all cases refused, and such refusal was placed upon the ground that parties who had money to loan did not regard the security offered as adequate, and hence refused to make such additional loan on the security offered. It was in this conjunction that the defendant was applied to by M. A. Wipperman for an additional loan to plaintiff of $350, to be secured by a second mortgage upon the land. At the time the application for a loan was made no one was present except Wipperman, representing the plaintiff, and the defendant and they alone have testified as to what was said and done in the premises. Their testimony is, however, entirely harmonious, and it stands in this record uncontradicted. Mr. Wipperman, after testifying to the unsuccessful efforts which were made to secure the additional loan from others, said, referring to the defendant, as follows: “I went to Steve Braun about the first time Mr. Little was in’, and Mr. Braun said, ‘No; with that amount of money against it, he wouldn’t make a second loan’; and I told Mr. Little so. ‘Well,’ he said, ‘if it wasn’t for the plowing that I done 011 the land, I would simply let it g-o by default, and let the sheriff’s deed be issued.’ I went up to Mr. Braun again, and asked him if Mr. Little and Mrs. Little would deed to him if he would furnish that money. I didn’t say that Mrs. Little said so. I asked Mr. [413]*413Braun if they would deed to him if he was willing to furnish the money. He was not anxious to do that. He said he considered the land in a sandy region. I afterwards got Mr. Braun to take a deed with the understanding Braun was to furnish the money, provided Mr. & Mrs. Little would give a deed.” Referring to the crop expected to be raised that year, Wipperman testified, in substance, that it was agreed between himself and Braun that plaintiff should have the crop. Mr. Wipperman was asked whether there was any talk between himself and the defendant about the transaction being a loan, or about paying the money back to defendant. To this he answered, “There was not.” Again, this question was asked: “Q. Any understanding between you and Mr. Braun that any note should be given or any rate of interest fixed? A. There was not.” Mr. Braun testified as follows: “Q. What conversation did you have with Mr. Wipperman relative to the furnishing this sum of money? A. Well, he first wanted a loan as a second mortmortgage, but I told him that I would not consider it at all. Later on he came to me and says: Will you take a deed for this land and assume the mortgage?’ Q. What mortgage was this? A. That was the state loan, — the $530 mortgage to the state. I considered it, and I told him later on I would take it on a deed.” Defendant further testified that he did not see the plaintiff or her husband before the deed was executed and delivered to him; that when Mr. Wipperman delivered the deed he paid over $350 to Wipperman ; that there was no understanding or agreement between himself and Wipperman that the deed should operate as a mortgage, or that he (Braun) would reconvey the land to the plaintiff at any time upon repayment of the sum paid over to Wipperman. When asked what reason, if any, he gave to Wipperman for refusing the loan, he testified, “I simply said that I did not want anything to do with a second mortgage of any kind.”

It is conceded that, after the arrangement between defendant and Wipperman was made, the deed in question was executed by the Littles, and that the same was delivered to Wipperman by the Littles, knowing that the same was to be turned over to the defendant, and the deed was in, fact promptly delivered to defendant by Wipperman, and at the same time the defendant paid to Wipperman the sum of $350, which amount was in fact used by Wipperman in redeeming the land from the foreclosure sale.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 N.W. 800, 11 N.D. 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/little-v-braun-nd-1903.