Putnam v. Broten

232 N.W. 749, 60 N.D. 97, 1930 N.D. LEXIS 213
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 232 N.W. 749 (Putnam v. Broten) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Putnam v. Broten, 232 N.W. 749, 60 N.D. 97, 1930 N.D. LEXIS 213 (N.D. 1930).

Opinion

Christianson, J.

This is an action to determine adverse claims to a quarter section of land in Griggs County in this state. The ultimate question involved is one of priority of mortgages. All rights asserted in the suit are predicated upon certain mortgages executed by the defendant John Broten, who, it is admitted, became the owner in fee of the premises in question on June 29, 1921, by virtue of a warranty deed, executed and delivered to him by the then owner. Three mortgages are involved and give rise to the questions in controversy here.

The first mortgage was executed by John Broten and his wife to the State Savings Bank of St. Paul, Minnesota, on November 1, 1920, for the sum of $2,000. On November 8, 1924, the State Savings Bank assigned this mortgage to the defendant Tillberg but the assignment was not recorded until January 30, 1928. In the meantime, to-wit, on October 5, 1926, the State Savings Bank executed a satisfaction of said mortgage, which, on the 8th day of October, 1926, was duly recorded in the office of the register of deeds of Griggs County. It is upon this mortgage that the defendant Tillberg predicates his claims in this case. lie asserts that the State Savings Bank was without authority to satisfy the mortgage; that the satisfaction was obtained *100 from it through mistake or fraud; that the debt secured by the mortgage is unpaid and that the mortgage remains a valid lien upon the land.

On October 2, 1922, the defendant John Broten and his wife executed a second mortgage upon the premises to the Midland National Bank of Minneapolis to secure the payment of the sum of $850. This mortgage was duly recorded and thereafter on November 26, 1923, the Midland National Bank assigned this mortgage to the defendant Till-berg. On October 21, 1926, Tillberg in turn assigned the mortgage to one IT. O. Aamoth. Aamoth thereafter foreclosed the mortgage by action instituted by him as plaintiff against John Broten and his wife as defendants. Decree of foreclosure was entered, special execution issued, and on January 9, 1928, the premises were sold at execution sale to the defendant Glen Broten who duly received a sheriff’s certificate of sale. No redemption was made from such sale and on February 15, 1929, a sheriff’s deed was issued to the defendant Glen Broten. The title asserted by the defendant Glen Broten in this action is based solely upon the sheriff’s deed so issued to him upon the foreclosure of such second mortgage.

; On October 18, 1922, the defendant John Broten axid his wife gave a third mortgage upon the premises to the Security National Bank of Fargo to secure the sum of $5,700. Oxi October 18, 1926, the Security National Bank assigned this mortgage to said IT. C. Aaxxxoth. The assignment was duly recorded and oxi December 9, 1926, Aamoth instituted proceedings to foreclose this mortgage by advertisement. On January 27, 1927, the premises were sold at such foreclosure sale to said IT. C. Aamoth, and a sheriff’s certificate of foreclosure sale was duly issued to him. On August 1, 1927, said Aaxnoth assigned such sheriff’s certificate of sale to one A. C. Bjerken. Srxch assignment contained a specific stipulation to the effect that Aamoth was the owner of the prior mortgage upon the premises given to the Midland National Bank of Minneapolis; that such mortgage was a lien prior to the mortgage upon which the sheriff’s certificate was issued to Aamoth and that Aamoth waived the liexi of such prior mortgage, that is, he waived the priority of the mortgage given by Broten and his wife to the Midland National Bank and assigned by it to Aamoth. Aaxnoth further expressly agreed that the lien of such mortgage should 'bo postponed and *101 become subsequent to tbe lien of the mortgage upon which the sheriff’s certificate of sale was issued so that the holder of said sheriff’s certificate should have a lien on the premises prior and superior to that of the lien of the mortgage assigned by the Midland National Bank to Aamoth and then owned by him, “notwithstanding that the said mortgage was recorded in the office of the register of deeds at a time prior to the recording of the mortgage which was foreclosed and upon the sale of which” the certificate of sheriff’s foreclosure sale was issued. No redemption was made and on February 28, 1928, Bjerken received a sheriff’s deed upon the sheriff’s certificate. On January 10, 1929, Bjerken and his wife conveyed the premises to the plaintiff Asa Putnam by warranty deed. Prior to such conveyance Bjerken and his wife had given a mortgage upon the premises to one Sanders for $6,000. After the title had been conveyed to Putnam, he gave a mortgage for $6,000 to the defendant Northern & Dakota Trust Company. This mortgage was given to retire the mortgage given to Sanders, and the Sanders mortgage was duly satisfied. The title asserted by the plaintiff Putnam rests upon the warranty deed which he received from Bjerken, and Bjerken’s title in turn rests upon the sheriff’s deed issued to him upon the foreclosure of the third mortgage. The claim asserted by the Northern & Dakota Trust Company is the $6,000 mortgage executed to it by Putnam. The defendants, Daniel and Louis Larson, claim a leasehold interest for the years 1928 and 1929 under a farm contract executed by them and Bjerken in April, 1928.

The plaintiff Putnam instituted this action March 23, 1929, against Glen Broten and John Broten. The complaint contains the usual averments of a complaint in a statutory action to determine adverse claims. Some time after the institution of the action, pursuant to the order of the trial court, II. E. Tillberg, the Northern & Dakota Trust Company, the Security National Bank of Fargo, Louis Larson and Daniel Larson, were brought in as additional parties defendant.

The defendants John and Glen Broten answered alleging that Glen Broten is the owner in fee and entitled to the possession of the premises by virtue of the sheriff’s deed executed to him upon the foreclosure of the second mortgage. They further alleged that the defendant Till-berg is the owner of the first mortgage upon the premises (which mortgage is particularly described) ; that the satisfaction of such mortgage *102 executed by the State Savings Bank was obtained by the Security National Bank of Fargo or IT. C. Aamoth, one of its officers, with knowledge that such mortgage had been assigned to Tillberg and that the making, securing and recording of said satisfaction was without the knowledge or consent of said Tillberg and hence fraudulent and void.

The defendant Tillberg answering admitted that the defendant Glen Broten was the owner of the premises and alleged that he, the said Tillberg, was the owner of a first mortgage thereon, to-wit, the mortgage for $2,000 executed by John Broten and his wife, to the State Savings Bank of St. Paul, Minnesota, and by it assigned to Tillberg. ITe further alleges that the State Savings Bank had no right or authority to satisfy the mortgage and that the Security National Bank of Fargo, through its manager, IT. O. Aamoth, “by inadvertence and mistake and misrepresentation and fraud, secured a pretended satisfaction of said mortgage from the said State Savings Bank of St. Paul, Minnesota, at a time when the said H. C. Aamoth . . . well knew that the said State Savings Bank of St. Paul, Minnesota, had no right, title or interest to said mortgage ancl that the said mortgage was the property of said Tillberg.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
232 N.W. 749, 60 N.D. 97, 1930 N.D. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/putnam-v-broten-nd-1930.