Meeker v. Larsen

57 L.R.A. 901, 90 N.W. 958, 65 Neb. 158, 1902 Neb. LEXIS 282
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 1902
DocketNo. 11,713
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 57 L.R.A. 901 (Meeker v. Larsen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meeker v. Larsen, 57 L.R.A. 901, 90 N.W. 958, 65 Neb. 158, 1902 Neb. LEXIS 282 (Neb. 1902).

Opinion

Duffie, C.

The facts in this case are not in dispute. September 28, 1886, the defendant Augusta Larsen, then Augusta Olson, with her husband, Carl Olson, executed to the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company a note and mortgage on the property in controversy for the sum of $1,800, due September 28, 1891. January 13, 1890, Carl Olson died intestate, and seized in fee of the mortgaged property, leaving surviving him the widow, Augusta Olson (who has since intermarried ivith the defendant Gust Larsen), and five children; these children being appellants in this case. At the maturity of the above-mentioned mortgage, the widow, Augusta Olson, endeavored to obtain an extension, and, this being refused, applied to her brother Frank G. Brown, now deceased, for a loan of money sufficient to enable her, in connection with a fund which she herself had, to take up the mortgage. • Accordingly, on November 24, 1891, Frank G. Brown and Sophia K. Brown, his wife, advanced to her the sum of $1,300, and took from her a mortgage upon the property in controversy for that amount, due five years after date. The mortgage purports to convey the entire property, although Augusta Olson was only possessed of a life estate therein under the homestead laws of this state. The $1,300 borrowed from Frank G. and Sophia K. Brown., together with $518.60 furnished by the widow herself, was used, to pay the $1,800 mortgage to the Connecticut' Mutual Life Insurance Company; and this mortgage was thereupon satisfied and released by an instrument bearing date the 8th day of December, 1891, which was duly delivered to the widow, and by her recorded. Frank G. Brown, one of the mortgagees, died on August 27, 1892, and Sophia K. Brown, the other mortgagee, departed this life July 15, 1899, and the plaintiff is the administrator of the estate of both decedents. Since the making of the mortgage for $1,300 the widow, Augusta Olson, has intermarried with Gust Larsen, and is impleaded herein in the name of [160]*160Augusta Larsen. The $1,300 not being paid at maturity, Meeker, as executor, brought this action to enforce the same against the land. In his petition in this case he sets out the foregoing facts and further alleges as follows:

“It was agreed at this time between Augusta Olson, now Larsen, Frank G. Brown and Sophia K. Brown, both since deceased, and the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company, that the mortgage and note executed by Carl Olson and Augusta Olson to the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company above described, were to be held by the said Frank G. Brown and Sophia K. Brown as security for the sum of $1,300 so advanced by them as above set forth, and that the said Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company on the 8th day of December, 1891, executed a release and discharge of their said above-described mortgage and forwarded the same to Augusta Olson to be turned over by her to the said Frank G. Brown and Sophia K. Brown until the said $1,300 was fully paid, but that the said Augusta Olson failed to deliver said release as aforesaid but by mistake of fact did, on the 23d day of February, 1892, file the same for record in the office of the register of deeds of Lancaster county, Nebraska.”

The prayer of the petition is, among other things, that the plaintiff “be subrogated to the rights of the mortgage of the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company as above set out, and that the discharge and satisfaction of their said mortgage be canceled, and that an accounting may be taken of the amount due the plaintiff, and that said premises may be sold according to law and out of the proceeds thereof the plaintiffs may be paid the amount adjudged to be due them with interest. * * * That if the court should find there was no equity in plaintiff’s bill as to the subrogation to the rights of the mortgage of the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company * * * that the court decree a foreclosure and order sold the dower interest in the land aforesaid, and that it be decreed that Augusta Olson has a life estate in the remainder thereof by virtue of her homestead right and that said life [161]*161estate and dower right be sold and the proceeds thereof be brought into court for the satisfaction of the plaintiff’s claim.”

The minor defendants filed an answer by their guardian ad litem, admitting that they had an interest in the land, and further denying each and every allegation of the petition. A similar answer was filed on behalf of another of the Olson children who was of full age. Augusta Larsen, the widow, admitted the execution of the notes and mortgages in question, and the facts relating to the title to the property, and denied each and every allegation of the petition not admitted. The court entered a decree finding the plaintiff entitled to be subrogated to the rights of tbe Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company under its mortgage to the extent of the amount due on the $1,800 mortgage, and ordering that the satisfaction of said mortgage to that extent be canceled and set aside, and directing a sale of the land to satisfy the amount found due.

Prom the foregoing statement it will be seen that the principal question to be determined is the right of the plaintiff to be subrogated to the lien of the mortgage held by the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company, to the extent that the money furnished by Frank G. and Sophia K. Brown was used to pay and satisfy said mortgage. The eighth finding of the court, which is probably as strong-in plaintiff’s favor as the evidence will allow, is as follows:

“The court further finds that upon the 24th day of November, 1891, Frank G. Brown and Sophia K. Brown, since deceased, at the request of Augusta Larsen, then Olson, advanced for the payment of said note and mortgage due to the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company the sum of $1,300, and the court finds that said sum of money was so applied upon the payment of said note and mortgage, the defendant Augusta Larsen furnishing the balance thereof, and that said note and mortgage was fully paid and said mortgage satisfied and discharged of record.”

It will be observed that there is nothing in this finding [162]*162tending to establish that there was any agreement existing between the parties that Brown and his wife were to have a first lien upon the mortgaged premises for the amount of money furnished by them to discharge the mortgage of the insurance company, or that said mortgage was to be kept alive for their benefit. In relation to the claim made in the petition that such an agreement existed, the plaintiff, in his brief, expressly disclaims that there was any evidence to support it. He says: “We claim nothing by reason of the alleged agreement to keep the mortgage of the Connecticut Mutual Insurance Company alive. We failed in the proof as to this allegation. It was not intended as a feint, but appellants have put up their best defense on this point, and in the trial court rested wholly upon the failure to prove such an agreement.” The immediate question to be determined, then, is whether, under the proofs in this case, on the principle of subrogation, the plaintiff can be treated as the equitable assignee of the mortgage of the Connecticut Mutual Insurance Company, and whether the indebtedness secured by that mortgage can be treated as still subsisting and be enforced against the mortgaged property for the benefit of the plaintiff, notwithstanding it has been discharged of record.

Courts of equity are often called upon to enforce the right of subrogation where one pays the debt of another which he was under a legal obligation to pay either because he was surety or guarantor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 L.R.A. 901, 90 N.W. 958, 65 Neb. 158, 1902 Neb. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meeker-v-larsen-neb-1902.