Loy Ex Rel. Union Securities Co. v. Kessler

39 N.W.2d 260, 76 N.D. 738, 1949 N.D. LEXIS 95
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 26, 1949
DocketFile 7153
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 39 N.W.2d 260 (Loy Ex Rel. Union Securities Co. v. Kessler) 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
Loy Ex Rel. Union Securities Co. v. Kessler, 39 N.W.2d 260, 76 N.D. 738, 1949 N.D. LEXIS 95 (N.D. 1949).

Opinion

*743 Morris, J.

This action was commenced by the Union Securities Company, a corporation, to quiet title to eighty acres of land in Mercer County against five defendants. Voegele and Mercer County defaulted. The defendants Kessler, Jack T. Helm and Gustav Helm answered setting up among other things that the deed under which plaintiff claimed title was champertous and void because it was given in violation of Sections' 12-1714 and 12-1719, RCND 1943. The plaintiff then moved to’ amend the complaint by causing it to appear that the action was brought in the name of Theodore T. Loy for the use and benefit of Union Securities Company, a corporation plaintiff, and by maldng appropriate and consistent changes in the allegations of the complaint to conform to the new title, among them being the allegation, “That at the time of the execution of said deed, one Ben Voegele, one of the Defendants herein, was in adverse possession of said premises, and that said Theodore T. Loy for the year immediately prior to the execution of said deed, had not collected the rents or profits from said premises, and had not been in possession thereof, and that the said Theodore T. Loy is bringing this action for the use- and the benefit of the grantee of said deed, to-wit; Union Securities Company; a Corporation.”

The amendment was allowed after hearing and over the opposition of the defendant Kessler and the two.Helms. Voegele and Mercer County being then in default were not served with the notice of motion and made no appearance in the proceedings concerning the amendment. They did not appear further in the action and judgment was not rendered against them. The défendant Kessler and the Helms' demurred to the amended complaint upon the grounds that the plaintiff has not legal capacity to sue and that the complaint- does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The demurrer was overruled with leave to answer. They answered the amended complaint and set up several defenses. They, first allege that Mercer County acquired a tax title to the property on the 1st day of October 1939 *744 which it sold on contract to Ben Voegele in the fall of 1940. Voegele in turn sold his contract to the defendant Kessler, who pursuant thereto on the 10th day of November 1941, received a tax deed from the county. On the 8th day of March 1943, Kessler conveyed the property by warranty deed to the Helms.

The answering defendants further plead that the deed by which plaintiff claims title as use plaintiff and upon which the right to bring the action in the name of Loy is based, is a champertous conveyance and is void under the provisions of Sections 12-1714 and 12-1719, RCND 1943. They also plead that the deed is void as being contrary to public policy and that the use plaintiff is barred from maintaining the action by estoppel and laches.

The trial court found against defendants upon all points wherein they challenge the right of the plaintiff to bring and maintain the action. He also found that the tax deed to Mercer County upon which the defendants’ claim of title is based is void for failure .to give a legal notice of expiration of the period of redemption, and ordered that title be quieted in the plaintiff. The defendants appeal from the judgment entered pursuant to this order and also appeal from and seek review of the intermediate orders allowing the plaintiff to amend the complaint and the order overruling the demurrer to the amended complaint.

The owner of the property in question in 1926 appears to have been one E. T. Hankins, who failed to pay the taxes for that year and for subsequent years. The taxes were bid in by Mercer County. On May 18, 1939 the auditor of Mercer County issued a purported notice of expiration of period of redemption. The taxes were not redeemed on or before October 1, 1939 as prescribed in the notice of redemption. A tax deed was issued to the county on March 1, 1940, whereupon the county took possession and rented the property. On February 5, 1941 the county sold the property on contract to Ben Voegele who in turn sold his interest to the defendant Christ E. Kessler, who paid up all the taxes and received a deed from the county on November 10, 1941. On March 8,1943, Kessler conveyed the property by warranty deed to Jack T. Helm and Gustav Helm.

On March 4, 1939, E. T. Hunkins, unmarried, executed a warranty deed to Theodore T. Loy. On July 24, 1941, Loy and his *745 wife issued a quit claim deed to Union Securities Company, a corporation. At the same time he delivered to the Union Securities Company his unrecorded deed from Hunkins. Both deeds were recorded on January 19,1944. It does not appear that Loy ever took possession of the property. The Union Securities Company appears to have been represented in the various transactions connected with this land by R. G. Sailer, who was Secretary-Treasurer and General Manager of the Corporation. In the spring of 1945 Sailer advised the defendant Jack T. Helm that he claimed an interest in the land. Later on May 24, 1945, plaintiff’s attorney advised Mr. Helm by letter that the property belonged to Sailer.

We will first consider the points in which the defendants challenge the right of the plaintiff to bring this action. The amended complaint in effect pleads that the deed from Loy to the Union Securities Company is champertons as being violative of Section 12-1714, RCND 1943. The defendants also contend that the deed is champertous and further maintain that it is absolutely void and that the Union Securities Company may not assert title thereunder either in its own name or in the name of Loy for its benefit. This point was exhaustively briefed and vigorously argued on both sides. We deem it advisable here to review at some length the history of our champerty statutes and the decisions under them which construe and apply these statutes in civil actions.

It was the common law rule subsequently embraced in the statute, 32 Henry VIII, that conveyances of real estate held in adverse possession were void. Various reasons and purposes have been given for this rule, among them being that it discouraged litigation and protected the small man against the more powerful who by reason of his position was able to purchase rights of action and oppress the weaker through his ability to maintain litigation. The reason has also been given that a grantor out of possession was unable to invest the grantee by livery of seizin and that the grantor being out of possession was held to have only a right of action which was not assignable at common law.

*746 111 the Compiled Laws of Dakota Territory 1887, we find that Section 3303 provided, “Every grant of real property, other than one made by the territory, or under a judicial sale, is void, if at the time of the delivery thereof, such real property is in the actual possession of a person claiming under a title adverse to that of the grantor.”

While Section 4870 provided in part, “an action may be maintained by a grantee of land in the name of a grantor, when the grant or grants are void by reason of the actual possession of a person claiming under a title adverse to that of the grantor at the time of the delivery of the grant, and the plaintiff shall be allowed to prove the facts to bring the case within this provision.”

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Bluebook (online)
39 N.W.2d 260, 76 N.D. 738, 1949 N.D. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loy-ex-rel-union-securities-co-v-kessler-nd-1949.