Quevli Farms, Inc. v. Conner

224 N.W. 264, 176 Minn. 609, 1929 Minn. LEXIS 1370
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 22, 1929
DocketNo. 26,775.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 224 N.W. 264 (Quevli Farms, Inc. v. Conner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quevli Farms, Inc. v. Conner, 224 N.W. 264, 176 Minn. 609, 1929 Minn. LEXIS 1370 (Mich. 1929).

Opinions

Wilson, C. J.

Plaintiff and defendant Lakefield Farm Credit Company appealed from an order denying plaintiff’s motion for a new trial.

The action is to quiet title. Anna McGuire Quevli on July 8, 1920, owned 600 acres of land in Freeborn county. It was subject to what we will term the “'first group” of mortgages for $15,200, $4,800, $2,000, and $3,000; total $25.000, covering 560 acres, 280 acres, 130 acres and 160 acres, respectively. A 40-acre tract was wholly omitted. On the date mentioned the owner conveyed this land so mortgaged to E. E. Conner, the mortgages being deducted as a part of the purchase price. The grantee gave to grantor a “second group” of mortgages upon all the land for $15,000 on 320 acres, $5,000 on 120 acres, $5,000 on 160 acres; total $25,000. The deed and “second group” of mortgages were all recorded on July 22, 1920, the “first group” having been previously recorded.

Each of the mortgages in the “second group” contained a replacement clause giving the mortgagor the right to have the mortgage discharged of record to permit the renewal of the mortgages in the “first group” or any part thereof or to replace any or all of such mortgages by another mortgage or mortgages, not for a greater *611 amount, and requiring the owner to secure the indebtedness secured by the “second group” of mortgages by new mortgages to be recorded junior and inferior only to such mortgages so replacing the amount of the “first group.”

Default was made in the payment of interest on each of the mortgages in the “second group.” They were foreclosed by advertisement. The notice of the foreclosure sale was in each instance signed by the mortgagee personally. Her husband, Neis Quevli, is a lawyer. He prepared the notices for the foreclosures and made the usual affidavit as to costs and disbursements. No amount is included anywhere for attorney’s fees. Each of the three foreclosure sales was held December 29, 1924.

The mortgage of $15,200 was paid by Conner, and a satisfaction was made and delivered on October 22,1920, but it was not recorded.

The mortgage of $4,800 was assigned to Conner in blank March 12, 1921, and on January 5, 1925, the name of the Great Northern State Bank of St. Paul was inserted as assignee.

In June, 1922, Conner procured an assignment in blank of the $2,000 mortgage. On January 5, 1925, the name of the same bank was inserted as assignee.

Under date of December 22, 1920, Conner procured an assignment of the $3,000 mortgage in blank wherein the name of the same bank was written as assignee about January 5, 1925.

Under date of January 5, 1925, Conner borrowed $27,000 from said bank, a defendant herein and now in custody of the commissioner of banks, of which Conner was then president. This was a new loan. On May 14, 1925, four mortgages to secure the loan from Conner to the bank were recorded covering the 600 acres, not 560 as the first group, and divided as follows: $8,000 on 160 acres, $8,000 on another 160 acres, $7,000 on another 160 acres, and $4,000 on 120 acres. This is the “third group.” As far as the bank records show these mortgages were the sole security for the $27,000 loan. The satisfaction and assignments concerning the “first group” of mortgages were never entered upon the records of the bank as assets. Conner died September 26, 1925, and the bank closed its doors December 28, 1926.

*612 The bank claims that the mortgages in the “third group” were given in place of the mortgages in the “first group.”

No request was ever made by Conner or anyone else to have any of the “second group” of mortgages released or satisfied of record to permit the renewal or replacement of any of the “first group.”

After the foreclosure of the “second group” of mortgages the certificates of sale were assigned by Mrs. Quevli, the purchaser, to the Lakefield Farm Credit Company and thereafter to plaintiff. Upon the expiration of the year for redemption plaintiff went into possession. There was no redemption.

This action is to clear away the clouds on the title resulting from the “first group” of mortgages not being satisfied upon the record, and to clear away the claims of the bank under the “third group” of mortgages, which plaintiff claims are cut off by the foreclosures.

The court canceled the certificates of foreclosure and held the “third group” of mortgages superior to the “second group.”

The claim that the foreclosure of the “second group” of mortgages is a nullity is grounded on the fact that Neis Quevli, the lawyer-husband, did not have on record the statutory power of attorney authorizing him to foreclose the mortgages as required by G-. S. 1923, § 9606. It is conceded that Mr. Quevli participated in and rendered the services of a lawyer to his wife in connection with the foreclosure proceedings. He prepared the notices, made the affidavit of costs and disbursements, and presumably prepared the foreclosure records as finally recorded.

Mrs. Quevli, the mortgagee, signed the notices of sale personally. In the absence of a power of attorney the mortgagee is the only one who has power to give the foreclosure notice. This she did. Had the notices been signed by the attorney, a power of attorney would have been essential. The notices do not carry his name as her attorney. Indeed his name nowhere appears except in the affidavit in each case. But the sale is complete without the affidavit. Johnson v. Cocks, 37 Minn. 530, 35 N. W. 436; Johnson v. N. W. L. & R. Assn. 60 Minn. 393, 62 N. W. 381; Farnsworth L. & R. Co. v. Commonwealth T. I. & T. Co. 84 Minn. 62, 86 N. W. 877. The mortgagee had a right to foreclose her own mortgages. She had a right *613 to get help if necessary or if she chose to do so. She could legally get the necessary help from anyone who was willing to help her. We know of no reason why she could not properly get the necessary assistance from a laAvyer. The attorney’s (husband’s) help was a gratuity. His help did not destroy the fact that the notice, the important thing, was her act and that the foreclosure was in laAV hers. No attorney’s fees Avere included or charged as an item of expense. The mortgagor Avas not harmed. No one Avas prejudiced. The mortgagee intended to foreclose, as she had a right to do.

This is not the kind of a case that the legislature had in mind when it passed G. S. 1923, § 9606, requiring that when an attorney is employed to conduct a mortgage foreclosure his authority should be in writing and recorded. The purpose was to prevent unauthorized foreclosures and perhaps unnecessary burdens upon the debtor as well as to protect the mortgagor and subsequent lienholders. Peaslee v. Ridgway, 82 Minn. 288, 84 N. W. 1024. No such elements are in this case. The penalty sought to be imposed is unduly harsh and is unjust. It cannot be supported by reason or principle. How would the mortgagor have been served if the power of attorney had been given and recorded and Mr. Quevli had collected the statutory attorney’s fee? The case of Peaslee v. Ridgway, 82 Minn. 288, 84 N. W. 1024, does not hold to the contrary. Indeed under the circumstances here disclosed the lawyer-husband was not “employed to conduct such foreclosure” Avithin the meaning of G. S. 1923, § 9606.

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Bluebook (online)
224 N.W. 264, 176 Minn. 609, 1929 Minn. LEXIS 1370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quevli-farms-inc-v-conner-minn-1929.