Severtson v. Peoples

148 N.W. 1054, 28 N.D. 372, 1914 N.D. LEXIS 121
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 22, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 148 N.W. 1054 (Severtson v. Peoples) 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
Severtson v. Peoples, 148 N.W. 1054, 28 N.D. 372, 1914 N.D. LEXIS 121 (N.D. 1914).

Opinions

Fisk, J.

This appeal comes here for trial de novo under the provisions of § 7229, Rev. Codes 1905. The action was brought to cancel and have adjudged to be null and void a certain deed executed and delivered on April 28, 1910, by this plaintiff and her husband, Ernest S. Severtson,' to the defendant, and to enjoin defendant from asserting-any title to the lands described in the complaint under such deed. In. her complaint plaintiff alleges the fact of her signing the deed aforesaid purporting to convey to the defendant the property in controversy; that such property, on the date the deed was executed, constituted the homestead of herself, husband, and children, and that suchi deed was signed by her “while she was under coercion, intimidation,, and duress, and undue influence practised, caused, and brought about by the defendant, who at said time claimed to be acting under authority of the Bank of New Rockford, North Dakota; that plaintiff’s husband, at the time of signing of said deed, was, and for many years. prior thereto had'been, an officer of said Bank of New Rockford; that the defendant, or his agent, prepared said deed without consulting-plaintiff and without her knowledge, and plaintiff was induced to sign said deed by reason of the wrongful and fraudulent representation made by defendant to plaintiff that her said husband had embezzled,, dissipated, and misappropriated the funds of the said Bank of New Rockford, and with such intention so represented and threatened that unless plaintiff immediately signed and executed said deed, defendant, and said Bank of New Rockford would immediately cause her said, husband to be arrested and imprisoned on a charge of embezzlement and misappropriating the funds of said Bank of New Rockford; that defendant as the officer and agent of said bank had theretofore made-such charges against and to her said husband, and had threatened her said husband with arrest and imprisonment; that she was at that time informed of such representations, threats, and charges; that plaintiff then and there believing that the defendant and said Bank of New Rockford would immediately cause the arrest and imprisonment of her-[378]*378husband, and to prevent such arrest and imprisonment, and for no other purpose or consideration whatever, signed said deed at the time it was presented; that plaintiff never consented, either jointly with her husband or otherwise, to the execution and delivery of said deed, or to the conveyance by her said husband, or to the conveyance of her said homestead; and that such a deed is void, and of all facts herein alleged said defendant has at all times had full knowledge and notice.” She also alleges in substance and effect that she did not sign such instrument in the presence of the subscribing witnesses, nor in the presence of B. F. Einker, the notary public who assumed to take her acknowledgment. She .also alleges that at the time of signing such deed no real estate whatever was described therein.

The answer puts in issue all the allegations of the complaint relative to fraud, undue influence, and coercion, and alleges affirmatively that plaintiff’s husband was owner of the premises in controversy, and that she joined with her husband in executing the deed to the defendant voluntarily and in the ordinary course of business, which deed was duly witnessed and properly acknowledged, and that the defendant, ever since the acknowledgment thereof, has been and now is the owner in fee simple of all the real property described therein, and the defendant prays that his title may be quieted.

At the conclusion of the trial in the district court, that court made findings of fact and conclusions of law favorable to the plaintiff, and judgment was given canceling,- as null and void, the deed aforesaid “as to the homestead interest of said Pearl E. Severtson and Ernest S. Severtson, her husband, in said premises as defined by law, which said homestead interest is to be ascertained as provided by law, and that said deed be decreed to convey no interest or estate in, or lien or encumbrance upon, said homestead interest in said property.”

We are unable to understand just what was intended by the district court to be adjudicated by the judgment as thus entered. It is apparent that the intention was not to declare such deed null and void in tolo, but merely as to the “homestead interest” of plaintiff and her husband in -such premises “as defined by -law.” The court did not therein assume to ascertain and adjudge what such homestead interest was at the date the deed was executed and delivered, or at all; for the language of the judgment, “which said homestead interest in said [379]*379premises is to be ascertained as provided by law,” clearly shows that the court contemplated that the ascertainment of such homestead interest should be left to a later time, and was to be arrived at in some manner provided by law. There is neither proof nor finding that all the real property described in the deed, or any particular portion thereof, constituted the homestead of the plaintiff and her husband. What the extent or value of such homestead was on April 28, 1910, is nowhere alleged in the complaint or disclosed by the evidence. It is true the court found that plaintiff and her husband and children were living on the premises described in the complaint, which consist ■of eleven lots in block 7, and seven lots in block 4 of the village of New Bockford, and that they occupied such premises as a homestead from the 28th day of April, 1910, until the date of the trial, and for several years prior thereto. But as the court did not decide that all of these lots or any particular lots included in the deed constituted plaintiff’s homestead, the judgment adjudicates nothing, except, perhaps, that plaintiff has an unascertained homestead right in all or a portion of such property, and that the deed, to the extent of such right when ascertained, is null and void.

The action being one to cancel the deed in so far as it involves the homestead of the plaintiff, it was, we think, clearly incumbent upon plaintiff, in order to entitle her to the relief prayed for in her complaint, to both allege and prove the extent and value of such homestead, or at least, to allege and prove that it does not exceed 2 acres, and that its value does not exceed $5,000. Manifestly, the court cannot, in the absence of such allegation and proof, adjudge such deed to be void. It can cancel such deed only in so far as it affects plaintiff’s homestead, especially in view of the fact as disclosed by the evidence, that the fee title to these lots was in her husband at the time of the execution of such deed.

The Re Delaney, 37 Cal. 176, is a case somewhat analogous on principle to the case at bar. In that case one Mary Delaney petitioned the probate court to set aside certain land to her because it was a homestead at the time of her husband’s death. She furnished no proof to •show what lands in fact constituted the homestead at the time of her husband’s death, and the court, in denying her petition, said: “She asks, in her petition, that all the lands embraced in the declaration be [380]*380set off to her, but she neither alleges nor proves what was, in fact, the-homestead at the time of her husband’s death. Such proof is indispensable ; and one essential fact to be established in making such proof' is the value, as limiting the extent of the right.

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Bluebook (online)
148 N.W. 1054, 28 N.D. 372, 1914 N.D. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/severtson-v-peoples-nd-1914.