Northwestern State Bank v. Hanks

240 N.W. 281, 122 Neb. 262, 1932 Neb. LEXIS 15
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 1932
DocketNo. 28013
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 240 N.W. 281 (Northwestern State Bank v. Hanks) 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
Northwestern State Bank v. Hanks, 240 N.W. 281, 122 Neb. 262, 1932 Neb. LEXIS 15 (Neb. 1932).

Opinion

Chase, District Judge.

This is a suit in equity brought by the Northwestern State Bank of Hay Springs against DeWitt C. Hanks and Lydia J. Hanks, husband and wife, to quiet the title to the real estate described in the petition.

The plaintiff relies on an instrument in form of a warranty deed executed and delivered to it by the defendants, dated November 23, 1926. The defendants contend that in the execution of this instrument it was intended by the parties to be mere security for a debt owing from defendants to plaintiff, and is in legal effect a mortgage.

After hearing the evidence, the trial court by its decree found that, in the taking of said deed, it was intended by the parties as security fob the indebtedness of the defendants to the plaintiff, together with advancements made by the plaintiff for the defendants in paying other obligations for the defendants. The court also found the amount due from the defendants to the plaintiff in order to redeem, and decreed that the defendants forthwith pay to the plaintiff the sum of $15,554.59, with interest at 10 per cent, per annum, and costs, and decreed further that, if the above payment was not made within thirty days from and after the entry of the decree, the defendants be forever barred and foreclosed of all right, title and interest and all equity of redemption in the premises and that, in ease of failure to make such payments within the time limited, a writ of assistance issue to the sheriff of the county for restitution of the premises to the plaintiff.

Both parties filed motions for new trial and both motions were overruled by the court. Whereupon; the defendants prosecuted an appeal from the findings of the trial court to this court, asserting eleven separate assignments of error.

The Northwestern State Bank of Hay Springs will be termed plaintiff herein, and DeWitt C. Hank,s and Lydia J. Hanks as defendants.

[264]*264It appears that there was a forcible entry and detention proceeding brought by plaintiff against defendants prior to commencing this action, which was heard in this court, and is reported as Northwestern State Bank v. Hanks, 118 Neb. 442, and by stipulation of parties the testimony in the former case was and is, in the main, the testimony in the instant case. That case was decided upon a question hot involved in this proceeding and hence the decision is in no way applicable to the issues involved herein.

The record fairly reflects the following facts: That on and prior to the 23d day of November, 1926, the defendants appeared to be suffering from considerable financial embarrassment and were indebted to the plaintiff and to various other persons; that on said date the defendants executed and delivered to the plaintiff an instrument in form a warranty deed, reciting as a consideration the sum of “One dollar and cancelation of indebtedness;” that simultaneously with the execution of this instrument the parties entered into an agreement, termed a lease, in which the plaintiff, as lessor, agreed to lease the premises to the defendants as lessees. The lease recited the consideration of one dollar and was for a period of one year, to begin on March 1, 1926, and terminating on the last day of February, 1927; that as a' further consideration for the leasing of the premises the defendants agreed to pay all taxes levied against the premises for the year 1926. The lease contained a provision giving the defendants an exclusive option to buy and purchase the premises for a sum equal to the total amount of said indebtedness, which the plaintiff had assumed in accepting the warranty deed hereinbefore mentioned. The lease contained the further provision in which the lessor agreed to list the premises for resale with the Hay Springs Commercial Company upon terms to be agreed upon. In the lease the items of indebtedness which the plaintiff assumed for the defendants in the acceptance of the warranty deed, specifically stated, are as follows: Unpaid taxes for the year 1925 and prior years in the sum of $371.60, a certain judgment lien which [265]*265the plaintiff had against the defendants in the sum of $834.50, with interest at 10 per cent, per annum; the sum of $874.90, with interest in the sum of $192.25, which the plaintiff claimed against the defendants and which was involved in a suit pending between the parties at the time, an indebtedness growing out of a promissory note secured by a mortgage on the premises at the time in favor of one A. L. Johnson, which was then in foreclosure and had merged into a decree for the sum of $7,385.30, with interest at 10 per cent, from the 14th day of December, 1925.

The defendant DeWitt C. Hanks testified that the agreement between the parties in the execution of these instruments was that the deed was intended as mere security for the indebtedness which he owed ,the bank and other people and which the bank had paid for him, and that in accepting the deed the cashier of the bank stated to him that it was intended the same as a mortgage; and further that the plaintiff bank would give him the right to sell the land and get more money out of the place if he could; that the bank-would buy his paper and hold it for awhile and give him a chance to sell the land and get something out of it. He further testified that when the bank discovered that one Abegg, the mortgagee in the mortgage which the plaintiff assumed, was foreclosing it and about to sell the, premises, was when the plaintiff agreed with the defendant that they would take over his land under this arrangement, pay off the Abegg mortgage, and hold the land to secure their indebtedness and give him the option of selling it within a year, that he understood that the instrument was to be nothing more than a mortgage, and that no one representing the bank ever said anything about buying his land.

Lydia J. Hanks testified that the bank, acting through its cashier, only wanted the defendants to give it security for what the defendants owed it, and that the plaintiff bank wanted the deed only as a mortgage.

' The witness Horn, who testified on behalf of the defendants and was present when the transaction involved in the [266]*266lease was consummated, testified that he heard nothing said about the purchase of the land.

It further appears without dispute that at no time during the course of these proceedings did the plaintiff tender back or deliver over to the defendants any of the defend-ants’ notes or evidence of indebtedness which the plaintiff contends was paid in acceptance of the title under the' deed. It further appears that the attorney for the defendants prepared a brokerage contract in which the defendants listed the land for sale and agreed to sell it, by which brokerage contract these defendants were then treated as the owners of the fee simple title to this land.

The witness Denman, who was cashier of the bank at the time the transaction was consummated and personally in charge of the negotiations out of which the deed and lease grow, as a witness for the plaintiff, testifies that the instrument was executed as a warranty deed because the bank wanted to avoid a foreclosure proceeding.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
240 N.W. 281, 122 Neb. 262, 1932 Neb. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northwestern-state-bank-v-hanks-neb-1932.