Scott v. Hay

97 N.W. 106, 90 Minn. 304, 1903 Minn. LEXIS 680
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedOctober 23, 1903
DocketNos. 13,462—(167)
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 97 N.W. 106 (Scott v. Hay) 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
Scott v. Hay, 97 N.W. 106, 90 Minn. 304, 1903 Minn. LEXIS 680 (Mich. 1903).

Opinion

LOVELY, J.

This is an action to determine adverse claims to several thousand acres of pine lands in St. Touis county, to which plaintiff asserts title-under a quitclaim deed from- Parian Semple, of Oshkosh, Wisconsin. The interest of each defendant is set forth in their separate answers,, and, upon issues tendered in reply, were tried to the court, who made-extended findings substantially in favor of each defendant, upon which, judgment was directed establishing their respective rights. ’ Plaintiff,, upon a settled case containing the entire proceedings, moved to set-aside the order for judgment, and for a new trial, because the conclusions of fact .were.not justified by the evidence, and for errors occurring at the trial, which was denied. This appeal is from that .orden.

[307]*307The result'of'the court’s conclusions in application to each of the three defendants practically constitutes an entire and distinct controversy. The record is very voluminous, extending through twelve hundred pages of printed matter, upon which one hundred fifty-seven assignments of error are predicated. Many of them, however, are not discussed, and; upon the well-settled rule we have adopted, they are not entitled to specific attention on this review. Minneapolis, St. P. & S. Ste. M. Ry. Co. v. Firemen’s Ins. Co., 62 Minn. 315, 64 N. W. 902; Cook v. Kittson, 68 Minn. 474, 71 N. W. 670; Keigher v. City of St. Paul, 73 Minn. 21, 75 N. W. 732; State v. Hulder, 78 Minn. 524, 81 N. W. 532; Dennis v. Pabst Brewing Co., 80 Minn. 15, 82 N. W. 978; Hahn v. Bettingen, 81 Minn. 91, 83 N. W. 467; Potts v. St. Paul A. P. Assn., 84 Minn. 217, 87 N. W. 604. But every material question bearing upon the subjects of inquiry before the trial court has been attentively examined and thoroughly considered.

For an understanding of the essential facts which are in dispute, or embraced in the findings of the trial court, we may summarize that Parian Semple, who was originally the owner in fee of the lands described in the complaint, with his wife, on October 7, 1893, to secure a loan of $40,000, mortgaged the same to defendant Hay, a banker of his city. Rater, in December of the same year, Semple conveyed to Hay an undivided half interest in other tracts of land in St. Louis county, by an instrument in form a warranty deed, for the purpose of giving additional security for the payment of such sums as were at that time, or thereafter might become, owing to Play, which could be sold, and the proceeds, less necessary expenses, be held for the benefit of the mortgagee. In February of the year following, a release of the mortgage, but designating only á small number of tracts therein, not in the complaint, was made by Hay. An important contention on this review is whether such instrument was a full of only a partial satisfaction, which is hereafter considered.

. The debt secured by the Play mortgage, when due, was’ unpaid, and a foreclosure suit was in November, 1897, instituted against the mortgagors in the district court of St. Louis county. The defendants answered, did not deny the indebtedness, but claimed that there had been an extension of time for payment; which made the action premature. . Negotiations thereafter took place between the parties,. [308]*308whereby it was agreed that the trial of the suit might be delayed to afford opportunity for Semple to sell the timber on the lands, to liquidate or reduce the loan; and it was not until October, 1898, that judgment was entered determining the amount due to Hay, with costs, to be $49,703.95. Hostilities arose between Semple and Hay, which led to the employment of an intermediary named Loper, through whose efforts sales of the stumpage were effectuated, and the avails, less expenses and amounts given Mrs. Semple to secure her consent, were turned over to the mortgagee. In the latter part of November, 1899, a sale, of the pine upon a considerable portion of these lands was made by Semple and wife to the Knox Lumber Company, defendant, for the aggregate sum of $21,218.75. Four hundred dollars was paid to Mrs. Semple, and a commission to Loper, which, with other expenses, left remaining for Hay $19,644, which was turned over and applied 'by the latter to reduce- his loan to that extent. This purchase by the Knox Lumber Company is substantially its interest of the property in this suit.

In December, 1899, the lands embraced in the foreclosure judgment were offered for sale by the sheriff under the usual proceedings in such cases, and I-Iay bid in a considerable portion thereof for $11,536; but the sheriff’s certificate was not executed until March 7, 1900, nor recorded until May 3, 1901, although upon due hearing the sale, upon report of the sheriff, had been confirmed within proper time by order of the court. Afterwards, on January 3, 1900, the timber on the lands bid in at this sale by Hay was conveyed by warranty deed from Semple and wife to the defendant Bell. This transaction was adopted by Hay, who executed a quitclaim deed of the same property to Bell. The total consideration for this sale was upwards of $11,000. It was made through the assistance of Loper, who received the money, and paid the same to Hay, less expenses, commission to himself, and a consideration to Mrs. Semple for her acquiescence; the balance being applied on the judgment, which the court finds was in accordance with the wishes of Semple.

The plaintiff, Scott, is the brother of Mrs. Semple. He contests the right of Hay to any interest in the lands in suit, also of the Knox Lumber Company and Bell to the pine purchased by these defendants, and rests his title to the property upon his quitclaim deed from Semple [309]*309and wife, which was recorded on November 17, 1900., Several parcels of land owned by Semple, subject to security for Hay’s loan, were also sold to parties other than defendants; and the proceeds, less expenses, commissions, and amounts paid to Mrs. Semple, as the court has found, were with Semple’s consent, applied for that purpose.

. There was a quitclaim deed from Semple and wife to Hay, which was sought to he utilized for that defendant; but it was not recorded until after the quitclaim deed to plaintiff Scott, and the court held that Hay acquired no rights thereby. Defendants do not question this finding, and it need not be considered further.

The court found as a fact that the conveyance from Semple and wife to Scott, under which the latter asserts his rights in this suit, was not made in good faith, or for a valuable consideration, against the mortgage and judgment liens of Hay, or of the sales of pine to the lumber company and Bell, which the court held were made in good faith and for full value.

It was sought, on the part of the plaintiff, at the trial, to establish that at the time when the foreclosure suit above referred to was commenced, in 1897, and during the period of the subsequent transfers, Semple did not possess sufficient alienary or disposing capacity, but was of unsound mind, and- incapable of ’ conducting the negotiations wherein he permitted the judgment of foreclosure to be secured, as well as in the conveyances to the lumber company and Bell. Considerable evidence was offered and received upon this issue, and several assignments are based upon the refusal of the court to receive testimony in certain depositions from family physicians to show that Sem-ple was insane.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 N.W. 106, 90 Minn. 304, 1903 Minn. LEXIS 680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-hay-minn-1903.