Semmler v. Beulah Coal Mining Co.

188 N.W. 310, 48 N.D. 1011, 1922 N.D. LEXIS 133
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 12, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 188 N.W. 310 (Semmler v. Beulah Coal Mining Co.) 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
Semmler v. Beulah Coal Mining Co., 188 N.W. 310, 48 N.D. 1011, 1922 N.D. LEXIS 133 (N.D. 1922).

Opinions

[1013]*1013 Statement.

Bronson, J.

This is an action to quiet title in certain coal lands. The salient facts are not seriously in dispute; largely, they are stipulated. They are as follows: Adjacent to the town site of Beulah, N. D., lie a fractional 80 acres of land, underlaid, for some 45 acres, with valuable lignite coal. On June 22, 1915, the owner thereof, one Juzeler, executed a contract for a deed therefor to Carl Semmler, the plaintiff. This contract expressed a consideration of $2,450, of which $105 was paid at the time of its execution. For the balance of the consideration, the contract provided annual payments thereafter covering a period of six years. The contract contained the usual provisions in case of default and prescribed that time was of the essence of the contract. Pursuant to this contract, Semmler entered into possession, sunk a shaft, installed certain mining machinery, and mining buildings. With this outfit he mined a quantity cf coal on the premises. In accordance with his testimony the value of the improvements so placed by him upon the premises amounted to $8,600. On November 16, 1915, Semmler assigned his contract to the defendant First State Bank of Beulah. This assignment provided that it should be void if Semmler paid to the bank one note for $1,000 bearing even date therewith and due July 1, 1916. The money he received from the bank was invested in the mining property. Other moneys were advanced by the bank aggregating, in toto, $2,600, all of which were invested in mining improvements. Through such improvements, certain liens were created against the property. On June 16, 1916, Semmler quit-claimed his interest in the mining property to his wife.

On October 18, 1916, the First State Bank assigned its contract’and its indebtedness against Semmler to one Mounts. The latter was then connected- with a town-site company. He entered negotiations with the. bank for the purpose of securing title to the property, understanding that the same was in the market and that the holder must relinquish his contract. He paid the bank $2,600 and interest; also, the liens against the premises. His total payments, so made, aggregated $4,600.

[1014]*1014On February 7, 1917, Juzeler quitclaimed the land to one Kenyon, now deceased. Kenyon was then cashier of the First State Bank. No payments were ever made by Semmler upon the contract excepting the sum of $105. On February 14, 1917, Kenyon instituted statutory proceedings to cancel the contract for defaults of Semmler in failing to pay taxes and yearly payments stipulated in the contract. Pursuant to such proceedings, Kenyon declared the contract forfeited on March 19, 1917.

On August 3, 1917, Kenyon quitclaimed the land to the defendant coal company, which was then organized as a North Dakota corporation. Later, it reorganized as a Minnesota corporation with substantially the same stockholders, officers, and directors, taking over the property from its predecessor, the North Dakota corporation. Mounts, above mentioned, was and is the secretary of the coal company. He was reimbursed by the company for the payments made by him to the bank. Semmler ceased his mining operations on July 3, 1916, and since that time has not been in the actual occupancy of the land or the mine. The coal company, m August, 1917, commenced to improve the mining property. They have been in possession of the land ever since. Extensive improvements have been made aggregating about $200,000. This coal company has mined some 100,000 tons of coal upon this land. In March, 1917, Carl Semmler instituted an action against Kenyon to restrain the cancellation proceedings. Demurrer was interposed, to the complaint, by reason of failure to state a cause of action, and was sustained. Judgment, accordingly, was entered in June, 1917, dismissing such action. In July, 1920, this action was instituted by Carl Semmler and his wife to quiet the title in the land. Trial was had in April, 1921. The plaintiff then tendered the full amount due upon the contract. This tender was refused. Thereafter, in August and September, 1921, further evidence was taken. Plaintiff’s testimony is to the effect that these lands were worth $27,000 when taken by the defendant. Testimony of the defendants on the contrary is to the effect that such lands, without the improvements, were not worth more than $30 per acre, and that plaintiff’s improvements were not of any‘substantial value. The trial court made findings in favor of the plaintiff. These findings incorporated the undisputed facts above stated.. The court finds specifically that plaintiff’s improvements were worth $7,500; that the value of the use and occupation of the lands since August, 1917, is $10,000; that the value of the premises when taken by defendants was, and is now, $2,485. The trial court concludes that the contract was not legally canceled. This conclusion is based upon the [1015]*1015ground, as it appears from his memorandum opinion, that plaintiff was entitled to a deed containing the personal covenant by the vendor, and that Kenyon, who obtained his land from Juzeler on the quitclaim deed, was not entitled to receive forfeiture of the contract because he could not make conveyance in accordance with the terms thereof. The trial court ordered the defendants to pay the plaintiff $5,400 net, for use and occupation, and $11,000 for value of the land and improvements, if defendant desired to retain plain title, with certain other alternative provisions. Judgment was accordingly entered on December 6, 1921. The defendants have appealed.

Decision.

Upon the record no questions of fraud are presented. No equitable considerations are presented to vacate or set aside the cancellation proceedings. As assignee of the vendee in the contract the plaintiff, the vendee’s wife, asserts that the cancellation proceedings are invalid because the assignee of the vendor cannot convey title with personal covenant of warranty by the vendor, as required by the contract.

Upon the making of the contract for the sale of land, where the vendee takes possession, a relation more than personal is created between the parties. A privity of estate arises. In equity, an estate passes to the vendee. In equity, the estate is measurable as a fee subject to the vendor’s lien. In equity, there exists an equitable conversion. Roby v. Bismarck Nat. Bank, 4 N. D. 156, 160, 59 N. W. 719, 50 Am. St. Rep. 633; Clapp v. Tower, 11 N. D. 556, 93 N. W. 862; Nearing v. Coop, 6 N. D. 345, 349, 70 N. W. 1044; Woodward v. McCollum, 16 N. D. 42, 49, 111 N. W. 623; Earley v. France, 42 N. D. 52, 57, 172 N. W. 73; Shelly v. Mikkelson, 5 N. D. 22, 36, 63 N. W. 210. In law, the vendor retains the legal estate, but, in reality through the interposition of equity, this legal estate is retained for purposes of enforcing the vendor’s rights under the contract and the payment of the unpaid purchase price

This equitable estate possessed by the vendee may be sold and assigned in the absence of restriction in the contract. 39 Cyc. 1665; 27 R. C. L. 563. This right the vendee herein recognized. He assigned this right, first to the bank, for. security; later, to his wife.-. This legal estate possessed by the vendor, and recognized in equity as a vendor’s lien, may be conveyed or assigned. 39 Cyc. 1663; 27 R. C. L. 560. The vendor [1016]*1016herein recognized this right by conveyance to Kenyon, who later conveyed to the coal company.

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Bluebook (online)
188 N.W. 310, 48 N.D. 1011, 1922 N.D. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/semmler-v-beulah-coal-mining-co-nd-1922.