Parry v. Reinertson

224 N.W. 489, 208 Iowa 739
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 2, 1929
DocketNo. 39496.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 224 N.W. 489 (Parry v. Reinertson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parry v. Reinertson, 224 N.W. 489, 208 Iowa 739 (iowa 1929).

Opinion

Wagner, J.

On February 18, 1922, Grossman, the then owner of the real estate in controversy, entered into a written contract with the defendant B. M. Beinertson for the sale by the former to the latter of said real estate upon certain terms and conditions therein mentioned, providing for the assumption by the purchaser of two mortgages thereon and the payment of the remainder of the consideration in monthly installments. On the 1st day of the following March, a warranty deed was prepared, in which Olive Beinertson (wife of R. M. Reinertson) is named *741 as grantee. Said deed stipulates that three mortgages then existing as liens against the real estate are assumed by the grantee. This deed was executed by Grossman and his wife on March 20, 1922, and filed for record and recorded the same day.

Simultaneously with the preparation of the deed, an instrument -which is denominated in the record “Exhibit No. 1” — and we will so speak of it in this opinion — was prepared by the scrivener. It is in form a written contract, or bond for deed, purporting to be a contract for the sale by Grossman, as party of the first part, to Olive Reinertson and R. M. Reinertson, as parties of the second part, of the same real estate. It is therein provided that the real estate is subject to the same three mortgages mentioned in the aforesaid deed. Said contract further provides that the Reinertsons are to pay to Grossman the sum of $2,477.46 in monthly installments of $50 each, and contains the following provision:

“And the said party of the first part, on receiving the full sums as above stipulated, agrees that he will execute and deliver to the said party of the second part at his own cost and expense a general warranty deed, conveying to said second party the fee simple of said premises, free from all incumbrances to the date of this contract, except as above stated (deed has been delivered) and to furnish the said second party an abstract of title to said premises showing merchantable title to the date of this contract. ’ ’

All of the quoted provision is in the printed form of the instrument, except the words “as above stated (deed has been delivered), ’ ’ which are typewritten. It is further stipulated in said written instrument that the party of the second part will keep the buildings now erected or hereafter to be erected upon said premises insured for the benefit of the said first party, his successors or assigns, “as long as this contract shall remain a lien upon said premises; ’ ’ and for failure of the parties of the second part to make payments as the same become due, the party of the first part is given four options, among which is the right to proceed in equity to foreclose the contract. Said instrument, Exhibit No. 1, is not signed by Grossman. The Reinertsons, as witnesses, both admit that they signed the instrument. On the back of said Exhibit No. 1 is a written assignment by Grossman to the intervener, but said written assignment is neither dated nor ac *742 knowledged. Attached to the instrument by mucilage appears a separate sheet of paper, constituting a certificate of acknowledgment of the execution of the instrument by the Reinertsons under date of March 27, 1922, by a notary public, and his seal is attached. This is the instrument under which the intervener claims an equitable mortgage for the remainder of the purchase price due from the Reinertsons to Grossman, and now claimed to belong to her by reason of Grossman’s assignment. This instrument was filed for record on the 16th day of June, 1922. All of same except the assignment by Grossman to the intervener was copied in the proper record in the recorder’s office.

Subsequent to the time of the filing and recording of said written instrument, the Reinertsons executed the three mortgages of the appellees. The two mortgages now held by the plaintiff and the Brattleboro Savings Bank were executed to McCutchen & Standring Company, a corporation, and assigned by it tó the present owners. The mortgage or trust deed under which the Bankers Trust Company claims, was executed direct to it.

It is affirmatively shown by the record that none of the owners of the three latter instruments, or the corporation under which the plaintiff and the Brattleboro Savings Bank claim, had any actual notice of the lien now claimed by the intervener under Exhibit No. 1.

The first thing for our determination is: Did Exhibit No. 1, as between Grossman and the Reinertsons, constitute an equitable mortgage in favor of Grossman for the unpaid portion of the purchase money? It is shown by the record that the Reinertsons have paid the intervener approximately the sum of $800 on the contract. It is well established that an agreement in writing to appropriate specific property to the discharge of a particular debt, or an instrument intended to be a mortgage, creates an equitable mortgage. The form of the instrument is not sive against either party. When the plain intent of the contract is shown by the instrument, aided by the surrounding facts and circumstances, equity will decree that the instrument is an table mortgage. In 41 Corpus Juris 293 we find the following apt language: ~ "Courts

"Courts of equity are not governed by the same principles as as *743 courts of law in determining whether a mortgage has been created, and generally, whenever a transaction resolves itself into a security, or an offer or attempt to pledge land as security for a debt or liability, equity will treat it as a mortgage, without regard to the form it may assume. Although the conveyance in question may lack the formal requisites of a mortgage at law, or be expressed in inapt ox untechnical language, equity will look to the substance, and give effect to the intentions of the parties. ’ ’

See, also, 19 Ruling Case Law 273; In re Assignment of Snyder, 138 Iowa 553; Vigars v. Hewins, 184 Iowa 683. The -plain intent of the instrument Exhibit No. 1, as interpreted by the conduct of the Reinertsons, when we take into consideration the fact that a deed wras simultaneously drawn by the scrivener, was to give Grossman a lien upon the real estate for the unpaid amount of the purchase price. Without further discussion at this point, we hold that, under Exhibit No. ,1, Grossman had an equitable mortgage upon the real estate, to secure the unpaid amount of the consideration, and that said claim or lien is now held by the intervener, under the unacknowledged assignment from Grossman.

The subsequent mortgagees had no actual notice of the rights of the intervener. Did they have constructive notice of said rights If not, then the rights of the subsequent mortgagees are superior to the rights of the intervener. At this ... point, it is perhaps not amiss to say that the . . . ltemertsons, while they admit that they signed . . the instrument, emphatically deny that they acknowledged the execution of the same. Olive Reinertson, who obtained the title under the warranty deed, testifies as a witness that she never appeared before the notary public and acknowledged the execution of the instrument; that she does not know the party who claims to have acted as notary public; that she signed the instrument on or about the 1st of March; that she never saw the instrument from that time until it was presented to her in the court room. Her husband, R. M.

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Bluebook (online)
224 N.W. 489, 208 Iowa 739, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parry-v-reinertson-iowa-1929.