Norton v. Berry

115 A. 287, 120 Me. 536, 1921 Me. LEXIS 98
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 26, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 115 A. 287 (Norton v. Berry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norton v. Berry, 115 A. 287, 120 Me. 536, 1921 Me. LEXIS 98 (Me. 1921).

Opinion

Hanson, J.

This is a bill in equity to establish that the conveyances under which the defendant holds title to the premises described in the bill constitute an equitable mortgage, and for redemption, [537]*537and is before the Law Court on appeal from the decree of the sitting Justice sustaining the bill, referring the matter to a master to take an account of the sum equitably due the defendant, and directing procedure for redemption, and establishing defendant’s title in default of redemption by the plaintiff.

The record title before it was conveyed to the defendant was in the plaintiff’s wife, Elizabeth C. Norton, who held it since 1898. In 1917 the plaintiff and his wife became estranged and the plaintiff commenced action against her to recover .the real estate described in the bill.

The plaintiff was indebted to the defendant for money advanced to pay a mortgage to one Cressy and for other sums advanced by defendant to pay expenses of the foregoing action. Acting for the plaintiff, the defendant took an assignment to himself of the Cressy mortgage, and admittedly at the time, and for a long period thereafter, was by agreement, and having a power of attorney as well, acting for the plaintiff and in his interest, consulting him, advising him in relation to his property, the ways and means of securing a deed from his wife, and as to the cancellation of a timber contract which the wife had entered into for sale of the valuable timber on the land, and furnishing the funds therefor.

During all the period, covering many transactions, and the payment of all required money therefor, the defendant admits he was acting for the plaintiff to accomplish one special object — using defendant’s own language — , “to fix it so that nobody could get it away from him.” And the defendant also admits that such was the purpose and intention up to the date of the deed, when he claims that the plaintiff abandoned his desire to pursue the equity further, and said to defendant in effect, — “I will give you a deed of my part of the property for what I owe you.”

The defendant therefore claims the property under a foreclosure of the Cressy mortgage above named, which became absolute May 4, 1918, and a warranty deed from Elizabeth C. Norton, wife of the plaintiff, in which the latter joined, dated September 8, 1919.

The sitting Justice found that “the evidence satisfactorily establishes, and the defendant in effect admits, that the transactions resulting in the acquisition and foreclosure of the Cressey mortgage, and thereafter up to September 8, 1919, constituted an equitable mortgage, as between the plaintiff and defendant.”

[538]*538“But the defendant contends that when he obtained the deed of September 8, 1919, his relations with the plaintiff were changed and that the plaintiff’s right of redemption was extinguished and the defendant became the absolute owner of the property.

“That a deed absolute in form, although from- a third party, may be shown to be an equitable mortgage between the parties to the suit, is well settled. The proof, it is true, must be clear and convincing.

“I think that the evidence introduced by the plaintiff measures up to this standard, and I .find the fact to be in accordance with the plaintiff’s contention.”

The sitting Justice also found that the original relations existing between plaintiff and defendant were never expressly terminated. A careful examination of the record discloses that the finding is fully sustained by the testimony, and appellant has failed to maintain the burden assumed on appeal of showing the findings of the sitting Justice to be clearly wrong.

The findings of the sitting Justice in equity proceedings upon questions of fact necessarily involved are not to be reversed upon appeal unless clearly wrong, and the burden is- on the appellant to satisfy the court that such is the fact; otherwise, the decree appealed from must be affirmed. Haggett v. Jones, 111 Maine, 348.

The defendant frankly admits the relation of debtor and creditor up to September 8, 1919, the date of the deed from the plaintiff and his wife. It will be remembered that securing a deed of the wife’s interest, the recovery of the property from the wife from whom the plaintiff was estranged appears throughout the case to have been the chief purpose of the plaintiff. It was for that declared purpose principally that plaintiff sought the aid of the defendant. It was in the accomplishment of that purpose that much of the indebtedness between the two arose. The means taken to bring this about, the best method of securing the wife’s consent and signature, were not devised by the plaintiff, but by the defendant, who was, at the request of the plaintiff, getting the title out of the plaintiff’s wife and into defendant’s name, ' 'so that no one could get it away from the plaintiff.” He had already paid the Cressy mortgage, and in addition had paid bills and executions, and loaned plaintiff money, all while acting as the financial and interested friend of the plaintiff, holding the Cressy mortgage as security, and a power of attorney, and up to the very day of the deed of September 8, 1919, he asserted he was [539]*539doing it all as the friend and agent of plaintiff, and that all he wanted from the transaction was the money due him and interest thereon. That in addition to these items he paid plaintiff’s wife for her interest does not strengthen the defendant’s position. Securing a deed from Mrs. Norton was the principal object of his agency and friendly cooperation, and he had agreed to furnish the money to pay her. Plaintiff could not get her signature. Defendant said he could, and that he could effect this even in the face of outstanding contracts with third parties which Mrs. Norton had entered into for the sale of timber. The event shows that he could do and did all he claimed, and that in addition to paying Mrs. Norton for her interest, he paid $500 to one Clark for a release of a timber contract made with Mrs. Norton.

All of these facts appear of record. All the details of the business up to the date of the deed show an unbroken, continuous relation of debtor and creditor. What is there in the evidence tending to show a change of that relation? The defendant says that before and on the 8th day of September, 1919, the plaintiff said to him “You may take my part of the property for what I owe you,” and that then and there the relation ceased; that the plaintiff was no longer his debtor; the incident was closed; he was no longer a creditor of the plaintiff. A witness for the defendant who witnessed the signature of plaintiff to the deed testified that after signing the plaintiff said, “I have sold everything to Berry.”

The plaintiff denies these statements, and reasserts his claim in the bill. Advanced in years and at the time of hearing weak mentally, plaintiff does not present as consistent personal support of his claims in the bill as is usually seen in equity proceedings, but the record amply discloses his honesty of purpose and his consistent continuous claim of the main point in the whole case, that on payment of the amount due defendant he was entitled to a conveyance of the property.

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Related

Braddock v. McBurnie
122 A.2d 319 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1956)
Devine v. Tierney
27 A.2d 134 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 A. 287, 120 Me. 536, 1921 Me. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norton-v-berry-me-1921.