Security National Bank v. Lowrie

238 N.W. 304, 59 S.D. 102, 1931 S.D. LEXIS 160
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1931
DocketFile No. 6879.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 238 N.W. 304 (Security National Bank v. Lowrie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Security National Bank v. Lowrie, 238 N.W. 304, 59 S.D. 102, 1931 S.D. LEXIS 160 (S.D. 1931).

Opinions

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff is a judgment creditor of defendant Lowrie and is seeking to enforce its judgment against Lowrie by garnishment in aid of execution. The garnishees T. H. Null and J. H. Boots, in separate answers, denied- liability, and plaintiff took issue with both answers of the garnishees. Judgment for plaintiff, and the garnishee Boots appeals from the -judgment and an order denying a new trial.

Because the pleadings do not limit the issues, and the contentions and theories of the parties appear only in the progress of the trial, a detailed statement of facts with their application to the theory on which the court bases its judgment is necessary.

At one time Lowrie was the owner of the north -ten acres of the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter of section 12, town *104 ship no, range 62, in Beadle county. On February 25, 1920,' Lowrie sold this property to O. R. Billington. Billington agreed to pay therefor $1,000 in cash, $7,500 on or before the first of July, 1920, and assume a mortgage of $5,500 then upon the property. Billington was associated 'with John F. Hoeck and Harry E. Gorton, and these associates were jointly interested in the property with Billington. Several payments were made on this contract, in all the sum of $5,000. Then a new contract was made with Hoeck and Gorton (Billington in the meantime having parted with his interest) whereby Lowrie agreed to accept a final payment of $700.66 and to- convey to Hoeck and Gorton an undivided two-thirds interest, Lowrie to retain as a joint owner the other one-third interest. Hoeck and Gorton paid $700.66 and became entitled to a conveyance of the two-thirds interest. But Lowrie did not convey the two-thirds interest as agreed and Hoeck and Gorton commenced an action to rescind and recover the payments made by them. While this action was pending, Hoeck obtained Gorton’s interest, and the final adjudication was in favor of Hoeck. He recovered a judgment for the amount of the payments with interest (approximately $6,000), and in the decree it was provided that such amount should' be a lien upon all the property involved. By that adjudication the contracts of sale were rescinded and Lowrie became the owner of the entire tract, free from the conditions of such contracts, but subject to the lien of the decree and the first mortgage of $5,500. Respondent (plaintiff in this action) was then a judgment creditor, and the lien of respondent’s judgment, of course, attached to Lowrie’s interest. Whether the lien of respondent’s judgment was junior to the lien of Hoeck’s judgment, it is not necessary for us to decide, for the lien was lost when Null acquired title through the foreclosure of the first mortgage.

Respondent’s contentions are founded upon what transpired at the time the Hoeck judgment was taken against Lowrie and transactions subsequent thereto. Just before the taking of the Hoeck judgment an agreement was reached between Lowrie and Hoeck for a settlement of the litigation then pending between them. The nature of the settlement appears from the following trust agreement (The agreement was titled in -the action between Hoeck and Lowrie. The title is omitted) :

“In consideration of the assignment by the defendant, in the *105 above entitled action, of the lease of the real property described in the complaint, the surrender of possession of said property, and defendant’s consent that judgment may be entered 'in favor of the plaintiffs for the amount claimed in the complaint, together with costs and disbursements, such judgment to be decreed to be a lien against all of said property, subject only to the mortgage for $5500 now of record against said property, the undersigned hereby accepts the trust created by this instrument and hereby promises and agrees that he will forthwith take an assignment of such judgment in his own name; that he will forthwith cause execution to issue upon said judgment and cause said property to be sold thereunder; that he wall bid in said property in his own name for at least the full amount of said judgment, costs and disbursements and expenses of sale in trust for the parties interested therein; that he will procure a sheriff’s deed for said property and hold said property in trust for the purpose of carrying out the agreement and understanding of the parties to said action; that he will pay all taxes lawfully assessed and levied against said property before they become delinquent, pay interest on said mortgage when it becomes due, and all necessary expenses of caring for said property; that he will promptly collect all rents and profits arising from said property, and apply the same to the payment of said taxes, interest and expenses ; that he will sell such property as soon as a fair and reasonable amount can be obtained therefor; that he will add to the proceeds of said sale, the amount of all rents and profits derived from said property, deduct from the amount so obtained all sums expended by him for taxes, interest and necessary expenses, including a reasonable allowance as compensation for his services in executing this trust, and pay to the defendant one-third of the amount remaining after making such deduction.
“In the event that anyone should redeem from the sale of said property under execution, the undersigned promises and agrees to pay to defendant the sum of two thousand and no hundredths dollars ($2,000).
“Dated at Huron, South Dakota, this 18th day of October, 1923. “T. H. Null.”

The contentions of the parties to this action center in this agreement.

*106 T. H. Null was one of the attorneys for Hoeck. Pursuant to the agreement, Ploeclc assigned his judgment to Null, a special execution was issued thereon, the premises were sold, no redemption was made, and in due time a sheriff’s deed was issued to Null. Lowrie, in performance of his part of the agreement at that time, surrendered possession of the premises and assigned the lease. Null took charge of the land and collected rents, but has never made an accounting of his trust. There is now pending in this court another action wherein J. H. Boots, as Lowrie’s assignee, Is seeking an accounting by Null. The opinion in that case is filed simultaneously with this opinion and is published in 59 S. D. 109, 238 N. W. 307. Some time after Null obtained the title he mortgaged the premises to the Union Bond & Mortgage Company to secure a $3,000 loan. The validity of this mortgage-is not questioned in this or the other suit. Since acquisition of the/ title 'by Null, the first mortgage for $5,500 has been foreclosed, and Null has acquired title by sheriff’s deed under that foreclosure. The title is still in the name of Null. As the situation now stands, Boots, as assignee of Lowrie, is demanding an accounting of Null, claiming all the Lowrie’s interest, Null is claiming absolute title by virtue of the second sheriff’s deed obtained under the foreclosure of the first mortgage, and respondent in this action has obtained a decree declaring its judgment to be a lien upon an undivided one-third of the property subject to certain rights of Null.

It is difficult to follow the process of reasoning’ whereby the trial court arrived at the conclusion that Lowrie is still the owner of a one-third interest, and that respondent’s judgment is a lien thereon.

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Related

Carr Enterprises, Inc. v. United States
539 F. Supp. 528 (D. South Dakota, 1982)
Boots v. Null
238 N.W. 307 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
238 N.W. 304, 59 S.D. 102, 1931 S.D. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/security-national-bank-v-lowrie-sd-1931.