Swanson v. Realization & Debenture Corp.

73 N.W. 165, 70 Minn. 380, 1897 Minn. LEXIS 76
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 8, 1897
DocketNos. 10,829-(122)
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 73 N.W. 165 (Swanson v. Realization & Debenture Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swanson v. Realization & Debenture Corp., 73 N.W. 165, 70 Minn. 380, 1897 Minn. LEXIS 76 (Mich. 1897).

Opinions

COLLINS, J.

Appeal from a judgment entered on findings of fact and conclusions of law filed upon the trial of an action brought by a mortgagor of real property to enjoin and restrain permanently the defendant sheriff from selling at a foreclosure of the mortgage under the power, and also to have the mortgage and the notes thereby secured adjudged void and canceled upon the ground of usury.

There was little or no dispute over the facts, but they are quite complicated, and had best be fully stated: Swanson, the plaintiff, was the owner of the mortgaged land, April 17, 1891, at which time he and his wife executed and delivered the mortgage in controversy. The Security Investment Company, a corporation, was the mortgagee; and the entire transaction was conducted and concluded by its president and general manager, Willis A, White. The mortgage was given to secure plaintiff's note for $1,500, payable to the corporation in five years, with six per cent, interest coupons attached, payable semiannually. At the same time this plaintiff and his wife executed and delivered another mortgage upon the land, in which White was named as mortgagee, and also a mortgage upon certain personal property with White as mortgagee. These last-named mortgages were given to secure three notes payable to White, — one for $300, bearing ten per cent, interest, and payable November 1, 1891; one for $150 with ten per cent, interest after maturity, payable January 1,1892; and the third for the same amount with the same rate of interest after maturity, payable November 1, 1892. This was all one transaction. Swanson actually received $1,800 in cash, and the three notes last mentioned, as well as the mortgages securing them, were really the property of the corporation.

It was agreed that the loan was to bear ten per cent, interest, and it is claimed that the two notes, each for $150, represented, in [386]*386fact, nothing but the difference between the six per cent, annual interest on $1,500, evidenced by the coupons, and the ten per cent, agreed upon as the annual rate of interest. No bonus was charged, or agent’s fees deducted from the $1,800, and it was shown upon the trial that the fees or commissions of the local agent through whom the application for loan was made, $45, were paid by the mortgagee corporation.

November 5, 1894, the $1,500 note and the mortgage securing the same were duly assigned by the mortgagee to this defendant, a foreign corporation, to enable the latter to act as trustee for the original mortgagee. The court did not find what coupons had then been paid, but from the evidence it seems that default in the payment of interest was not made until the November 1, 1894, coupon matured. Foreclosure proceedings under the power were instituted May 4, 1895, default having been made in the payment of at least one interest coupon; and, as authorized in the mortgage, the defendant assignee elected to declare, and did declare, the whole debt due. This action was soon afterwards commenced.

June 14, 1892, Swanson and his wife executed and delivered a third mortgage upon this land to one Tronnes. This was given to secure the payment of a note for $800, and, default having been made in payment, a foreclosure under the power was had; sale of the premises being duly made December 9, 1895, to the mortgagee, Tronnes.

October 29, 1892, one Mary Dowling duly obtained a judgment for the sum of $104.55 against said mortgagors, Swanson and his wife, in justice’s court, in the county in which the land was situated. A transcript of this judgment was duly docketed in the office of the clerk of the district court for Polk county May 31, 1893. The judgment was then sold and in writing assigned by said creditor, Dow-ling, to one Montague, and by Montague to one Meagley, and by the latter to Willis A. White, before mentioned. He was the owner of this judgment December 9, 1896, and no part of it had been paid. None of these written assignments had then been, or were thereafter, filed in the office of the clerk of said district court; and, of record, Dowling still appeared to be the judgment creditor.

December 9, 1896, White filed due notice of his intention to re[387]*387deem as a judgment creditor from the foreclosure sale under the third, or Tronnes, mortgage. No redemption was made by the mortgagors, and, in due- form, White, as creditor, made the redemption by paying to the sheriff of the proper county the full sum necessary for the purpose; receiving from such sheriff a certificate of redemption, which was duly recorded December 11,1895. Tronnes refused to accept the money paid in redemption, of which White was duly advised. The sheriff still holds the funds.

In April, 1892, one Maghan duly obtained a judgment for $14.33 in the municipal court for the city of Duluth, in St. Louis county, against Mary Dowling, the judgment creditor before mentioned. This judgment was duly transcripted and docketed in the office of the clerk of the district court for said county, and was also duly transcripted and docketed in the same office in Polk county. January 2, 1897, by virtue of an execution duly issued upon said judgment, the sheriff of the last-named county levied upon the judgment in favor of said Dowling and against said mortgagors, which had theretofore been assigned, and had been made the foundation of the redemption. A sale upon such execution was thereafter had of the judgment, and at such sale it was sold to one Austin. This was January 29, 1897, and on the same day the mortgagors (judgment debtors) paid the full sum due, and the judgment was satisfied by Austin.

At some time during the year of redemption it was verbally agreed between the mortgagors and Tronnes, the purchaser at the foreclosure sale, that the period of redemption should be extended one year. The cause was tried by the court without a jury.

Upon the facts as stated, the court’s conclusions of law were that the $1,500 note and the mortgage securing the same should be canceled and adjudged void, that White never redeemed from the Tronnes foreclosure sale, and that plaintiff was still entitled to redeem the premises from the sale just mentioned.

While it is obvious that, from the very complicated facts, several questions were presented to the court below, we are of the opinion that two only will have to be discussed at this time; the first being raised by assignments of error pertaining to the findings of fact, as [388]*388well as to one of the conclusions of law. The question thus raised is whether, upon the facts, the court below was justified in finding that'the note for $1,500 was usurious.

It bore interest at the rate of six per cent., although the agreement was that the full amount of the loan should bear interest at ten per cent. The two notes, each for $150, represented the difference between the six per cent, interest evidenced by the coupons, and the ten per cent, stipulated for, this difference being exactly $300. If the contract was tainted with usury, it was because the payment of four-tenths of the interest agreed upon was in part advanced; for $150 became payable in about nine months, instead of being spread out over 2-J years in semiannual payments of $30 each, while the other $150 matured in about 18 months, all thereof being advanced, instead of being spread out in semiannual payments of $30 each, commencing three years from the date of the note.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 N.W. 165, 70 Minn. 380, 1897 Minn. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swanson-v-realization-debenture-corp-minn-1897.