Strelow v. Bohr

290 N.W. 603, 234 Wis. 170, 1940 Wisc. LEXIS 84
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 290 N.W. 603 (Strelow v. Bohr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strelow v. Bohr, 290 N.W. 603, 234 Wis. 170, 1940 Wisc. LEXIS 84 (Wis. 1940).

Opinion

Fritz, J.

For the consideration of the appeal of the defendants, Clement Bohr, Arthur Schoenike, and Ruth Eben-reiter, from the order denying their motion for summary judgment, and likewise a review, pursuant to plaintiffs’ notice, of that part of the order which denied their motion for a summary judgment, it suffices to note the following facts and proceedings, which appear without dispute from the pleadings and affidavits filed herein. This action is the second of two actions brought by the plaintiffs against the above-named defendants upon a contract made on May 23, 1938, between the plaintiffs and Clement Bohr for the sale to him by the plaintiffs of their farm and the livestock and other personal property used by them in operating the farm. The terms of the contract were incorporated in three instruments, to wit, (1) a quitclaim deed by which plaintiffs conveyed the farm to Bohr, with a provision therein that it was “subject to mortgage of $5,000 and accrued interest held by Mrs. W. J. Ruhbusch; and subject to a second mortgage of $425 held by Mrs. W. J. Ruhbusch with accrued interest; and subject to a chattel mortgage of $300, held by E. W. Schmidt, with accrued interest, all of which mortgages the grantee, Clement Bohr, assumes and agrees to pay;” (2) a bill of sale by which plaintiffs, in consideration of $1,000 then paid to them by Bohr, transferred to him the personal *173 property “subject to any and, all outstanding mortgages and incumbrances” (but there was no provision therein that Bohr agreed to pay the debt secured by a chattel mortgage on the cattle) ; and (3) a written agreement which provided that whereas plaintiffs were “to look after and care for the personal property on said farm until the same may be removed or sold by” Bohr, plaintiffs’ services were to be compensated by their receiving the proceeds of the milk of the cows “during such time while they have the care and custody thereof;” that plaintiffs “reserve the right to cut the standing and growing timber on” eighty acres “but that all such timber must be cut, felled, and removed within one year from the date of this instrument,” and that they “shall have the right to go on said land for the purpose of removing the same within such year;” and that they “also' reserve the right to retain possession of the premises for a period of one month without the payment of any rent; . . , and the right to remove and harvest all the crops seeded, planted or growing-on said land, such crops however to be all removed on or before January 1, 1939.”

Within four days after the execution and delivery of the instruments, plaintiffs brought their first action against Clement Bohr, Ruth Ebenreiter, and the Gillett Sales Company, for which, plaintiffs alleged, Ruth Ebenreiter was an agent. In their complaint in that action plaintiffs alleged that through an error in drafting the bill of sale, there was omitted a clause that “the grantee assumes and agrees to pay” the chattel-mortgage debt; that in the recorded copy of the bill of sale Bohr’s name was erased and the name of Ruth Ebenreiter substituted as the vendee; that she is a part owner of the Gillett Sales Company and Bohr acted as her agent in the transaction with plaintiffs; that immediately following the recording of the altered bill of sale, the Gillett Sales Company and A. L. Schoenike, as an auctioneer, advertised the personal property for sale at an auction to be *174 held on May 28, 1938, and if it was sold, Ebenreiter could possess herself of the profits of the sale without extinguishing the liability for the chattel-mortgage debt for which plaintiffs are personally liable; and that the value of the personal property was in excess of the $1,000 paid as the additional consideration for the transaction, and to permit an auction sale without having made satisfactory arrangements with the mortgagees would work irreparable damages to plaintiffs. In that complaint plaintiffs prayed for relief that Bohr be ordered, “as a- condition precedent R> dispossessing himself of any of said property conveyed to him by plaintiffs, to obtain” (a) a satisfactory release from the chattel mortgagee relieving plaintiffs from any personal liability thereunder; (b) a release from the holder of the mortgages on the farm of any personal liability of plaintiffs thereunder; and (c) an authorization by that mortgagee permitting plaintiffs to cut and remove the timber from the farm during the ensuing twelve months; and that the bill of sale be ordered corrected by inserting a provision that Bohr assumes and agrees to pay the incumbrances on the personal property, and that plaintiffs have such other and further relief as may be just and equitable. The first action was tried in February, 1939, and the court filed its decision in writing upon which formal findings and a judgment were filed March 1, 1939. The judgment provided that the bill of sale be corrected by inserting a provision that Bohr assumed and agreed to pay the chattel-mortgage debt, and by inserting his name, in lieu of the name of Ruth Ebenreiter as vendee, in the recorded copy. In addition the judgment denied plaintiffs’ prayer for relief that Bohr be ordered as a condition precedent to dispossessing himself of any of the property, which plaintiffs conveyed to him, to obtain (a) releases of plaintiffs’ liability under the chattel and real-estate mortgages, and (b) an authorization permitting plaintiffs to cut and remove the timber from land conveyed by them to Bohr; and the judgment dissolved an injunction pendente lite.

*175 On March 20, 1939, plaintiffs commenced the action at bar and again alleged in their complaint the making of the same contract and the execution and delivery of the same instruments between the plaintiffs and Bohr in relation to the sale of the farm and the personal property to Bohr and his payment of $1,000 to them. In addition they alleged that he agreed, as part of the consideration for the sale of the property, to permit them tO' cut and remove the timber within twelve months, and harvest and remove all growing crops by January 1, 1939; that he assumed the incumbrances for $5,000 and $425 on the real estate and $325 on the personal property and agreed to pay the incumbrances in order that plaintiffs may cut and remove the timber without hindrance from the owner of the real-estate mortgages; that plaintiffs are still in possession of the property and have tendered possession to Bohr “providing he carry out the terms of the written agreementbut that he has failed to pay the mortgages so that plaintiffs may cut and remove the timber, and on February 17, 1939, the holder of the mortgages commenced foreclosure and obtained an order enjoining the removal of timber; that on May 27, 1938, the holder of the chattel mortgage commenced foreclosure and the sheriff took possession of the personalty and left it in charge of plaintiffs ; and that defendants are associated together in business enterprises, and Bohr gave a chattel mortgage to the personalty to Schoenike, and a bill of sale to Ebenreiter on March 3, 1939, and gave a quitclaim deed of the farm on March 2, 1939, to the defendant Jule Vandree to harass plaintiffs.

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Bluebook (online)
290 N.W. 603, 234 Wis. 170, 1940 Wisc. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strelow-v-bohr-wis-1940.