Macloon v. Smith

5 N.W. 336, 49 Wis. 200, 1880 Wisc. LEXIS 26
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 5 N.W. 336 (Macloon v. Smith) 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
Macloon v. Smith, 5 N.W. 336, 49 Wis. 200, 1880 Wisc. LEXIS 26 (Wis. 1880).

Opinion

Cole, J.

Without doubt, the circuit court excluded the evidence in support of the first defense or counterclaim because it presented no case entitling the defendants to relief. In that view of the answer we fully concur. It is claimed by the learned counsel for the defendants J. Maurice Smith and wife, that the note and mortgage sought to be foreclosed were not voluntarily made; that they were executed under a species of duress or compulsion, so as not to be the free act of the mortgagors. But this claim, as it appears to us, is overwhelmingly disproved by the allegations of the answer. The answer sets out the agreement entered into between the plaintiff and J. M. Smith and wife, bearing date July 31, 1876. By the express covenants of this agreement, Smith and wife bound themselves to execute a note and mortgage to the plaint[213]*213iff upon tbe undivided one-balf of the premises described, to secure the amount paid out by the plaintiff in the construction andffurnishing of - the building which the parties contemplated and provided should be erected. There is surply no pretense that this agreement was not freely and voluntarily executed; and the note and mortgage in suit were given merely in accordance with its terms. It is futile to claim that the note and mortgage were executed under duress or compulsion, in view of these matters in the answer.

Rut it is said that if the note and mortgage were not void in toto, they should be reformed upon the facts stated, and the amounts stipulated in them to be paid should be greatly reduced. The most considerable item which it is insisted was wrongfully included in these securities, is the judgment in favor of the United States v. J. Maurice Smith et al. in the U. S. circuit court for the western district of Wisconsin. But the agreement before referred to .provides that, in case vSbm’iA should be unable to cause that judgment to be set aside and discharged, and the plaintiff should be of the opinion that it was necessary, for the purpose of securing the leases mentioned, that this judgment should be discharged of record, then he had the right to pay and satisfy the judgment, and to include the amount paid by him for that purpose, with interest, in the note and mortgage which it was agreed should be given. This right to discharge the judgment is provided for in language so clear as to leave no room for doubt upon the subject. As the plaintiff was thus plainly authorized to pay that judgment if he deemed it necessary to do so in order to protect his rights, and include the amount paid in his statement of expenditures upon the property, there is no ground for excluding" that sum from the amount of the mortgage debt. It certainly does not lie in the mouth of the mortgagors to insist that it should be deducted from the mortgage debt, in the face of their clear, positive and explicit stipulations, more than once repeated in the agreement, that it might [214]*214be included in tlie note and mortgage, provided, in tbe opinion of the plaintiff, it became necessary to pay the judgment for the protection of his interest in the building and premises; and for the purpose of perfecting the title to the property, and to secure liis interest therein, it seems that he considered it necessary to discharge this judgment, and did actually pay it in December, 1876, as he had the undoubted right to do. It is further alleged in the answer, that, “ under a like duress and compulsion,” the defendants were compelled to allow tlie plaintiff to include in the note and mortgage the unnecessary expense of laying a marble, instead of a wood, floor, in the room leased to the United States for a post-office;, and also the expense of finishing off a part of the building for the city offices, amounting together to nearly $800.

No satisfactory explanation or reason is assigned in the answer for allowing these claims when the note and mortgage were executed, February 1, 1878, if they were really unjust and improper. At that time the parties had an accounting and settlement of the moneys due the plaintiff according to the contract. This is an irresistible inference from the answer. It is true, at the outset of the answer there is tlie general charge that the plaintiff, holding the title to the real estate, refused to convey the same as he had agreed to do, unless the defendant would include in the note and mortgage the unjust and fraudulent claims for money unjustly and fraudulently expended, or claimed to have been expended, upon the property, and so, by duress of estate and not of his own free will, the defendant was forced to include in the note and mortgage the sum of $1,802.25, or thereabouts, in excess of the amount actually owing by the defendant on the agreement; and that the note and mortgage were made to extricate the title from the unjust grasp of the plaintiff, and as the only means of so doing, except by litigation.

We have already seen that the judgment of $1,000 was rightly paid; that the defendants could not be relieved from [215]*215including that in the note and mortgage;'and in respect to the other claims, for putting down the marble floor and finishing off the rooms for the city offices, the answer is barren of all facts which tend to show that any duress or coercion, in the proper sense of the word, was used to compel the defendants to allow them. According to the answer, the defendants were induced to consent that these claims should be included in the note and mortgage “under like duress and compulsion” to that which influenced them to include the judgment. Without spending any further time upon this point, we will say that there is nothing stated in the answer which would justify a court in setting aside the accounting and settlement made when the note'and mortgage were executed. Manifestly the matters stated in the answer do not impeach the settlement either for fraud or duress.

The note and mortgage bear date February 1, 1878, are given to secure the payment of $6,663.25, five years from date, with interest thereon at the rate of ten per cent, per annum, payable quarterly, on the first days of January, April, Jnly and October, in each year. There is a condition in the mortgage to the effect that in case of the non-payment of any sum of money, either principal or interest, insurance or taxes, at the time or times they should become due agreeably to the terms of the note and mortgage, or within ten days thereof, the whole amount of the principal sum secured by the mortgage should, at the option of the mortgagee, be deemed to have become'due, and the same, with interest thereon, should be collectible in an action at law, or on foreclosure of the mortgage, in the same manner as if the whole principal had been made payable at the time when any default should occur. There was a default in the payment of the interest due.on the first day of July, 1878; and on the twelfth day of that month the plaintiff exercised his option by giving notice to the defendant J. M. Smith that he elected to have the whole principal sum due.

The next question to be considered .is, Had the plaintiff the [216]*216right to exercise the option given him at the time and. in the manner he did? On the part of the defendants it is insisted that the interest was not due and payable on ’the first day of July, because days of grace, by the law merchant, were allowed for its payment. If this position is correct, notice of the option was prematurely given.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 N.W. 336, 49 Wis. 200, 1880 Wisc. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macloon-v-smith-wis-1880.