Shanda v. Clutier State Bank

260 N.W. 841, 220 Iowa 290
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 14, 1935
DocketNo. 42748.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 260 N.W. 841 (Shanda v. Clutier State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shanda v. Clutier State Bank, 260 N.W. 841, 220 Iowa 290 (iowa 1935).

Opinion

Powers, J.

Elmer Konicek, on June 20, 1932, owned and occupied a farm of 75 acres in Tama county. He was unmarried. At that time the farm was subject to a first mortgage of $4,000 to the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, and a second mortgage for $1,500 to the Clutier State Bank, the defendant and appellee herein. The second mortgage was past due since March 1, 1932, both as to the principal and the semiannual interest installment which became due at that timfe. A semiannual interest installment which became due on the first mortgage on the 8th day of May was unpaid and the taxes for the year 1931, payable in 1932, covering the property were also unpaid. On that date, Konicek executed a warranty deed conveying said premises to the Clutier State Bank. The deed recites a consideration of $1 and other valuable consideration. At the time the deed was made out, a statement was made up showing that the encumbrance upon the land at that time, together with such interest installment and taxes and other necessary expense in connection with the farm as would accrue before March 1, 1933, would amount to approximately $6,150. And as a part of the transaction in which the deed was executed by Konicek to the bank, the parties entered into a written contract under the terms of which Konicek acquired an option to repurchase the land on *292 March 1, 1933, for $6,150, by giving notice of an intention to exercise said option on or before January 1, 1933. The contract further provided that Konicek was to have possession of the farm until March 1, 1933. Following this transaction, and in August, Konicek died and subsequently, and in February, 1933, plaintiff, the appellant herein, was appointed administrator of his estate. Almost immediately following his appointment he brought this action in equity, first, to have the transaction between Konicek and the bank declared void, and, if not void, to have the deed made by Konicek to the bank declared, in effect, a mortgage.

The right of the plaintiff as the administrator of the estate of Konicek to maintain such an action is not challenged, and we will, therefore, assume for the purposes of this case that the plaintiff had such right.

It is the claim of the plaintiff that the deed given by Konicek to the bank and the option contract given by the bank to Konicek are one transaction, and, first, that said transaction is void, (a) because the deed was procured by fraud, (b) because the contract giving to Konicek the right to repurchase was not executed by the president or vice president of the bank as required by its articles of incorporation and was not sealed with the corporate seal of the bank as required by the bank’s articles of incorporation and by section 10067 of the Code, (c) because the transaction by which the cashier of the bank, acting for the bank, gave Konicek an option to repurchase the real estate from the bank was void because not authorized by the board of directors of the bank; and, therefore, prohibited by Code, section 9283-cl, (d) because one Fisher, an assistant cashier of the bank, had an arrangement with the bank to acquire the land and, therefore, was disqualified as a notary as one having an interest in the transaction ; and, second, that even though said transaction be held to be valid, the deed should be construed as a mortgage, and plaintiff-appellant prays that an accounting be had to determine the amount required to redeem said land from said mortgage.

The trial court dismissed plaintiff’s petition and entered a decree quieting the title to the land in the defendant bank. From this decree, plaintiff appealed.

I. We give our attention first to the attack upon the validity of the transaction by which the bank acquired title to the land.

(a) As to the claim that the deed from Konicek was obtained *293 by fraud, it is only necessary to say that there is no evidence in the record to sustain it. Nothing is urged except that the land was of greater value than the indebtedness against it. This seems to be doubtful. The farm lay in two tracts with a highway between them. Bach tract was badly cut up by open ditches. Improvements appear to be very old and of little value. All the witnesses, with one exception, who testified as to the value of the land at the time of the transaction fixed the value at about $75 an acre, which would give the tract a total value of $5,625. The evidence does not indicate that the transaction was unconscionable or that there was any overreaching by the bank, and the evidence falls far short of showing, by a preponderance thereof, that Konicek did not receive full value for the farm in the form of credit on his indebtedness. There is no evidence of misrepresentation or deception. The trial court properly found this attack was not sustained by the evidence.

(b) It is next claimed by appellant that the contract, granting to Konicek an option, was void because not executed in the manner prescribed by statute and the articles of incorporation of the bank, and, by reason of such invalidity, the whole transaction was void. The option contract was executed in behalf of the bank by the cashier, and the bank’s corporate seal was not attached.

The articles of incorporation of the defendant bank provided that “all deeds, mortgages and instruments in writing affecting real estate which shall be made by the corporation shall be executed and acknowledged in the name of the corporation by the president or vice-president and attested by the cashier with the corporate seal thereto affixed”. And section 10067 of the Code provides that: “In the execution of any written instrument conveying, incumbering, or affecting real estate by a corporation that has adopted a corporate seal, the seal of such corporation shall be attached or affixed to such written instrument.”

The object of these provisions is to require a certain formality in the execution of instruments by a corporation having a seal by which the corporation conveys or relinquishes an interest in real estate in order to insure greater authenticity of the instrument. We do not believe they have any application to the execution of an instrument of the character of the one under consideration here. Appellant, himself, contends that the contract by *294 which the bank gave to Konicek an option and the deed by which Konicek conveyed the farm to the bank were but one transaction. We think he is correct in that. The effect of that transaction was to vest title to the farm in the bank, subject to a right of Konicek to repurchase at a fixed amount by a certain date. The bank never had any greater interest than that in the property. The legal effect was no different from what it would have been if the right to repurchase had been reserved in the grant and incorporated in the deed. The net effect of the whole transaction was not that the bank disposed of anything, but that it acquired something subject to a condition. Such a transaction has been held to be a sale on condition. Hughes and Dial v. Sheaff, 19 Iowa 335. The execution by the bank of the contract purporting to grant the option to repurchase was only a recognition by the bank that the conveyance to it was subject to that condition. We are satisfied that this contract was not an instrument “conveying, encumbering, or affecting real estate” by the bank which is contemplated by the provision of the articles of incorporation and the statute above referred to.

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Bluebook (online)
260 N.W. 841, 220 Iowa 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shanda-v-clutier-state-bank-iowa-1935.