Parnell v. Goff

1912 OK 268, 122 P. 653, 32 Okla. 470, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 282
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 19, 1912
Docket1701
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1912 OK 268 (Parnell v. Goff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parnell v. Goff, 1912 OK 268, 122 P. 653, 32 Okla. 470, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 282 (Okla. 1912).

Opinion

Opinion by

ROSSER, C.

This suit was brought prior to statehood by James M. Parnell to redeem certain lots in the town of Wynnewood from a trustee’s sale under a certain deed of trust. The purchasers at the trustee’s sale took possession and built a house on the lots after the sale, and before the expiration of the time within which the mortgagor or holder of the equity of redemption had the right to redeem. Section 4759 of Mansf. Dig. of Ark. (Inch T. Ann. St. 1899, sec. 3070) allows a mortgagor to redeem property which has been sold under a mortgage any time within one year. ■

*471 Eben N. Jones sold the property in controversy to Sarah. F. Parnell, receiving part cash and two notes for the sum of $800 each. As security for the .payment of the notes, Sarah-E. Parnell, joined by her husband, executed a deed of trust to-J. T. Wheeler, as trustee, conditioned that if the notes were not paid the trustee should sell the property, after having it appraised and giving notice. In the deed of trust, the Parnells agreed to insure the buildings on the lets for the benefit of the holder of the notes. Some time after purchasing the property and giving, the deed of trust, Sarah F. Parnell sold it to D. L. Parnell, and D. L. Parnell assumed the payment of the notes. D. L. Parnell paid one of the notes and some interest on the other, but made default in the payment of the second note. After D. L. Parnell became the owner of the property, the building on it burned down. The building was insured; but the insurance was taken out for the benefit of the Parnells. The record does not show the amount of the insurance or when the building burned. One of the Parnells testified that Wheeler, the trustee, got some of the insurance money. Default was made in the payment of the last note. After the fire; the trustee advertised the property for sale, and it was bid in by the defendants A. J. Goff and A. E. Eskridge. At the sale, the trustee announced that the purchaser would get good title. In a few days after the sale, he executed a deed to the purchasers, and they took possession of the lots. A short time after they took possession, they began building a brick house 50x100 feet on the'lots. D. E. Parnell knew that the defendants were building the house, but made no assertion of his right to redeem, and permitted the building to be finished without asserting his right. When the building was completed, or about completed, his brother, the plaintiff, came to him and suggested to him that he had a right to redeem. D. L. Parnell declined to make any effort to redeem the property, but sold his equity of redemption to the plaintiff. While the trade was pending between them, the value of the house defendants had built on the lots was discussed. Plaintiff paid the trustee the balance due on the note, and tendered to the defendants, the *472 purchasers of the lots, the amount they had paid, with interest. The evidence was that the lots, without improvements, were worth something like $500, and showed that the house built upon the lots by the purchasers at the mortgagee’s sale was worth from four to five thousand dollars. The lower court found that the lots were worth $500, that the house built by defendants enhanced the value of the lots to the amount of $4,300, that they had paid $122.20 taxes, and that they had received rents to the amount of $275, and decreed that the plaintiff could redeem upon paying the sum of $4,647.20 within three months from the date of the decree, and adjudged that each party pay half the costs.

The principal question involved is as to whether the defendants Goff and Eskridge are entitled to be paid for the building placed upon the premises before the plaintiff can redeem; or, in other words, whether it was proper to make it a condition of redemption of the lots that the plaintiff pay the defendants Goff and Eskridge, in addition to tire amount paid by them at the trustee’s sale,, the amount that the lots were enhanced in value by the improvements placed there by defendants.

The evidence shows that the plaintiff and his grantor, D. L. Parnell, knew that defendants were building upon the lots, and that they made no objection and gave defendants no notice of their intention to redeem. Plaintiff, as his excuse for making no claim, stated that the persons building on the lots were strangers to him. Erom a reading of the whole record, it is impossible to escape the conclusion that neither the plaintiff nor his grantor would have made any effort to redeem the naked lots if the house Trad not been built on it. There can be no doubt but that, if the defendants had allowed the lots to remain in their unimproved ■condition during the period allowed for redemption under the Arkansas statutes, the plaintiff would have permitted the period to expire without redeeming. When the property was destroyed, D. L. Parnell received the money for the insurance, and, although the mortgage provided that he would insure the property for the benefit of the mortgagee, and though he had failed to do that, he did not pay the proceeds to the trustee, but seemed to *473 proceed upon the theory that' the lots were not worth the mortgage debt, and that he would not give himself any further concern with the matter. The evidence is clear that defendants, in good faith, believed they had, by their purchase at the trustee’s sale, obtained an indefeasible title.

In Jones on Mortgages (6th Ed.), sec. 1128, the rule is laid down as follows:

“When the mortgagee makes permanent improvements, supposing he has acquired title by foreclosure, upon a subsequent redemption, he is allowed the value of them, especially if the mortgagor has by his action to any extent favored the mistaken belief. In like manner a purchaser at a foreclosure sale, who has made valuable improvements in the belief that he has acquired an absolute title, is entitled to be paid for them in case the premises are redeemed.”

In McSorley v. Larissa, 100 Mass. 270, McSorley sued La-rissa as assignee of the mortgagee, and certain parties to whom Larissa had conveyed a portion of the property, and who had made permanent and valuable improvements upon it. It was held that they were entitled to be reimbursed for the improve-' ments placed upon the land. The court said:

“He that would have equity must do equity. And there is certainly no equity in allowing the plaintiff to take, without com-, pensation, the value of improvements which Allison, a purchaser in good faith, who supposed he had good and absolute title, has made.”

In American Buttonhole, etc., Co. v. Burlington Mutual Loan Ass’n, 68 Iowa, 326, 27 N. W. 271, the property was sold under a mortgage. Thé‘ court said:

“The right of plaintiff to redeem is conceded; but the district court required him to pay for the permanent improvements, and this is the first question we are required to determine. The defendants should be regarded as mortgagees in possession, and the plaintiff as mortgagor or statutory lien creditor seeking to redeem. In such case, the plaintiff is remediless at law, and is compelled to obtain redress in equity. The general rule in equity between such parties is that the person having the right to redeem cannot be compelled to pay for permanent improvements. Moore v. Cable, 1 Johns. Ch. [N. Y.] 385.

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Related

Estate of Bradley
144 P. 136 (California Supreme Court, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1912 OK 268, 122 P. 653, 32 Okla. 470, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parnell-v-goff-okla-1912.