Rennick v. Rennick

80 N.W.2d 300, 1956 N.D. LEXIS 168
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 29, 1956
Docket7624
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 80 N.W.2d 300 (Rennick v. Rennick) 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
Rennick v. Rennick, 80 N.W.2d 300, 1956 N.D. LEXIS 168 (N.D. 1956).

Opinion

GRIMSON, Judge.

On the 18th day of December 1953, Peter Rennick, by warranty deed, conveyed all of Section 11, Township 138, Range 79 to Albert Rennick and Donna Rennick, his wife. Peter Rennick was a widower, Albert Rennick was his son and Donna Rennick his daughter-in-law. Consideration recited in the deed was “$1.00 and other' consideration.” , The real consideration was expressed in a written contract between the parties, made at the same time by which the second parties, (Albert and Donna Ren-nick) agreed to pay to first party (Peter) the sum of $3,000 per year during the remainder of the natural life of said first party, such sums to be paid in 'one annual installment on 'the 1st day of October in each year beginning Oct. 1, 1954, and each year after said date so long as the said first party shall live. The contract further provided that “in the event that default shall be made by the second parties in the performance of this agreement then the said real property shall revert unto the said first party upon his written demand therefor, and he to become sole owner thereof and the second parties to be entitled to no reimbursement for any portion of such money so paid out.” It is cle'ar that this was an arrangement whereby the father deeded this property to the son and daughter-in-law in consideration of support for life. The deed, and the agreement were recorded. Immediately after consummation of this agreement it appears that by mutual consent Albert and Donna Rennick mortgaged the land to the Federal Land Bank of St. Paul. Before the bank, however, would accept the mortgage the title of the land’had to be cleared of whatever equity in the land was retained by the father, Peter Rennick, to secure the annual payments. To accomplish that a new agreement was entered into between Peter Rennick and Albert and Donna Rennick. Said agreement referred to the deed of Dec. 18, 1953 and, to the mutual desire of all parties to make the loan on the property

“and for that reason the agreement dated December 18, 1953 was cancelled and released, and
“Whereas in addition to' the making of such loan for the mutual benefit of the parties, it is the desire of the parties of the second part herein to take care of the party of the first part so long as he shall live,
“Now, Therefore, for valuable consideration, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, the parties of the second part hereby jointly and severally agree and bind themselves to pay to the party of the first part the sum of $3000.00 per year for the remainder of his natural life, such payment to be made on the 1st. day of November 1955, and a like sum of Three Thousand ($3000.00) Dollars on the 1st. day of November of each year thereafter so long as the party of the first part shall live.”

Upon the death of first party payments were to cease provided second parties paid the funeral expenses of first party and interest on $4000 of the loan on the home of the party of the first part as long as he lived. Then the agreement provides:

“That this agreement is in lieu of ■ and takes the place of that certain *302 agreement made on the 18th. day of December 1953, heretofore referred to, and that such agreement of December 18, 1953, shall become wholly ineffective except that the real estate described as Section 11, Township 138, Range 79, Burleigh County, North Dakota, which was transferred to the Parties of the Second Part by the Party of the First Part under the terms of such agreement of December 18, 1953, shall remain the property of the Parties of the Second Part to this Agreement;
“Provided, however, that in the event that the Parties of the Second Part shall fail to make the annual payments of Three Thousand ($3000.00) as herein provided for, the Party of the First Part may bring an action to cancel the deed heretofore given to the Parties of the Second Part and to regain title to such property subject to any mortgage or lien which might then be of record against such property.”

On Oct. 27, 1955, Albert and Donna Rennick deeded the property to Albert Mindt and Emma Mindt. For some reason, however, the Mindt’s refused to go on with the deal and quitclaimed the property back to Donna Rennick, Plaintiff, on Nov. 1st 1955. Soon thereafter this action was started to have all claims of Peter Rennick, the defendant adjudged null and void and the title to the premises quieted in the plaintiff.

The trial court found that only $200 had been paid on the 1955 payment leaving a balance of $2,800 unpaid and that “if such payment be not made as directed, the title to said premises be reinvested and quieted in said Peter Rennick.”

The plaintiff, Donna Rennick, appeals and asks for a trial de novo. There is no dispute as to the facts. The only issue is what claim, if any, Peter Rennick, the defendant, has on the land in question. That must be determined from the transactions between him and Albert, his son, and Donna, his daughter-in-law, as shown by the evidence in the case.

This is one of those cases arising between parent and children when arrangements have been made to turn over the property of the parent to the children in consideration of the children’s support of the parent during life. It is a case involving property transaction but is based on love and affection, faith and confidence between the parties. Here the father, Peter, was old, a recent widower, unable to read or write, relying entirely on the confidence he had in his son.

In Bruer v. Bruer, 109 Minn. 260, 123 N.W. 813, 814, 28 L.R.A.,N.S., 608, the court well states the nature of such cases as follows:

“Contracts and agreements of the kind are quite familiar to the courts. They are, as a rule, made by people well along in years with a child or other relative, and are intended to secure to the old people proper and suitable support and maintenance during their declining years, at the same time relieving them of the care and responsibility incident to the management of their affairs. They part with their property in the expectation and belief that their future necessities and comforts are fully provided for, and in an abiding faith that natural affection and filial duty will prompt and secure a faithful discharge of the obligations assumed by the child to whom they convey. There is in such transactions an element of confidence reposed by the old people in their grantee, sacred in its nature, a breach of which, and retention of the benefits, no court should tolerate by a refinement upon technical rules and principles of law. By the modern trend of authority these transactions are placed in a class by themselves, and enforced without reference to the form or phraseology of the writing by which they are ex *303 pressed, or whether by the strict letter of the law a forfeiture of the estate is expressly provided for.”

The complaint is, except for some admitted encumbrances, the ordinary complaint in an action to quiet title. The answer, after the general denial of plaintiff’s title, sets forth a counterclaim of title by the defendant, Peter.

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In Re Edinger's Estate
136 N.W.2d 114 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1965)
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104 N.W.2d 556 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 N.W.2d 300, 1956 N.D. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rennick-v-rennick-nd-1956.