Stockton v. Turner

153 N.W. 275, 30 N.D. 641, 1915 N.D. LEXIS 142
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 153 N.W. 275 (Stockton v. Turner) 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
Stockton v. Turner, 153 N.W. 275, 30 N.D. 641, 1915 N.D. LEXIS 142 (N.D. 1915).

Opinion

Christianson, J.

This is an action for the foreclosure of a real estate mortgage upon certain lands in Poster county. The mortgage bears date February 10, 1912, and secures the payment of a note dated on the same day in the sum of $2,883.75, bearing 7 per cent interest. The mortgage was signed by all four defendants named in the title of this action, and the note was signed by the defendants Turner and Caldwell, and payment thereof guaranteed by the defendants Gorthy and Lindberg.

The complaint is in the usual form. The answer admits the execution of the note and mortgage, but alleges that the same were never delivered to the plaintiff, but were placed in the Stutsman County Bank at Courtney, North Dakota, to be delivered to the plaintiff only when certain things should be done by one Coffey, the agent of the plaintiff. It is further alleged that these things were never done, and that the Stutsman County Bank never had authority to deliver the note and mortgage, and that for that reason they were as a matter of fact never delivered to the plaintiff; and, also, that certain payments: were made by the defendants, and that the note and mortgage involved in this action are for a larger sum than that which defendants; owed. [644]*644to plaintiff at the time the note and mortgage were executed. The plaintiff obtained a judgment in the district court, and the defendants appeal, an.d ask for trial de novo in this court. A considerable portion of the material facts are not in dispute, but there is some conflict in the testimony on certain incidental questions.

The note and mortgage involved in this action were given as partial payment, upon the balance due on a certain contract, or contracts, for the sale of land in Foster county. On April 12, 1909, one William Jones sold a certain 360-acre tract of land in Foster county'to the four defendants named in the title of this action, for the agreed price of $10,800. At the time of the sale the defendants paid $2,000 in cash, leaving' a balance of $8,800 remaining unpaid on the contract, payable as. follows: $1,800 on December 24, 1909; $1,000 on December 24, 1910; and $6,000 on December 24, 1911. Such deferred payments were - evidenced by promissory notes drawing 1 per cent interest, payable on the 24th of December of each year. This contract was offered in evidence on the trial of the action as Exhibit “1,” and will be so denominated in our consideration thereof in this opinion. On the 16th day of August, 1910, William Jones, the vendor in Exhibit “1,” purchased a 320-acre tract of land from the plaintiff for the agreed price of $12,680. The contract between the plaintiff, Stockton, and Jones, was also offered in evidence upon the trial as Exhibit “E,” and will be considered under this designation. Jones at that time assigned to the plaintiff, Stockton, the contract, Exhibit “1,” together with the notes mentioned therein, as collateral security for the payments due from Jones to Stockton. The only payments made upon Exhibit “1” and the notes therein described prior to the time of the assignment to the plaintiff, Stockton, were the first payment of $2,000, and $1,362.20 paid to Jones on December 24, 1909.

The defendants, thereafter, also made the following payments to Judge Coffey, who at that time was a practising attorney at Courtney, and represented the plaintiff in this action, to wit, $128.40 on September 8, 1910; $852 on December 24, 1910; $800 on July 24, 1911. These were all the payments made until April, 1912. On or about February or March, 1912, the whole balance of the purchase price under Exhibit “1,” including the final payment of $6,000 was past-due ; and some of the payments under Exhibit “E” were also past due. [645]*645According to the computation of the defendants’ attorneys, furnished in a supplemental brief filed in this court, there was on the 6th day of April, 1912, due upon Exhibit “1” and the notes covered thereby, a total sum of $7,851.93. Shortly prior to this time the plaintiff’s agent, Coffey, was appointed judge of the fifth judicial district in this state, and found it necessary to remove his residence from Courtney to Jamestown, and he thereupon made several efforts to get the defendants together to make a settlement of their equitable interests in the contracts. Prior to this time the defendant Archie J. Gorthy had acquired from William Jones the interest of Jones in the contract, Exhibit “E,” and the premises covered thereby. It appears that during February or March, 1912, at the time these negotiations were had, it was suggested by Coffey that these defendants obtain loans on the various lands covered by these contracts for the purpose of paying off encumbrances then outstanding against these lands, and that the balance of the money, if any, realized from such loans, be paid over to Mrs. Stockton to apply upon the balance due her.. Judge Coffey testifies that he also suggested that they give a second mortgage upon one of the tracts and obtain some additional money to be paid to Mrs. Stockton, and that she take a second mortgage on the other tract for whatever balance might remain due her. At this stage of the proceedings, Mr. Nichols, president of the Stutsman County Bank at Courtney, was called in by the parties.-

It was thereupon agreed that Judge Coffey should procure a deed from Jones for the land described in Exhibit “1,” and a deed from'the plaintiff, Stockton, for the land described in Exhibit “E.” As the defendant Lindberg was living in Montana, it was agreed that for the sake of convenience in executing the mortgage loan papers, the deed from Jones for the land covered by Exhibit “1” was to run to Caldwell and Turner only. This was satisfactory to all'the parties, and the deed was so taken, although all four defendants named in the title of this action were apparently still equally interested in and owners of the contract and the land described therein. The defendant Gorthy alone had any interest in the lands covered by Exhibit “E.” So, the deed for that tract was, of course, to be executed to him as grantee. Nichols agreed that he would procure loans upon 'the lands in the amounts which he subsequently did. Judge Coffey procured the deeds [646]*646for the respective tracts as agreed upon, and delivered the same to Mr. Nichols. Nichols, also, proceeded to obtain the loans on the lands in question, and placed a first mortgage loan for $4,600, signed by Turner and Caldwell, against the land described in Exhibit “1,” and a first mortgage loan for $5,000, and a second mortgage for $3,900, both signed by Gorthy alone, against the land described in Exhibit “E.” Nichols was given general authority to go ahead, not only to close the loans, but to disburse the proceeds thereof. It being understood that he was first to pay off certain prior encumbrances against the lands, and pay the balance of the proceeds over to the plaintiff to apply on her claim. It is undisputed that Nichols paid off prior liens and claims against the lands covered by Exhibit “1,” aggregating $4,-215.12, which would leave a balance of only $384.88 of the proceeds of the first mortgage loan placed against these premises.

As already stated, a first mortgage for $5,000, and a second mort-gage for $3,900, both executed by Gorthy, were placed against the lands covered by Exhibit “E.” Nichols paid off prior encumbrances against this land aggregating $4,421, which leaves a surplus of $4,479, realized from the mortgages against the lands covered by Exhibit “E.” There was therefore a total surplus of $4,863.88, realized from these three mortgage loans, after deducting the amounts utilized in paying off the prior encumbrances against all the lands.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Tenney Co. v. Thomas
237 N.W. 710 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1931)
Kittel v. Straus
181 N.W. 628 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1920)
Guild v. More
155 N.W. 44 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 N.W. 275, 30 N.D. 641, 1915 N.D. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stockton-v-turner-nd-1915.