Sweley v. Fox

284 N.W. 318, 135 Neb. 780, 1939 Neb. LEXIS 40
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1939
DocketNo. 30481
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 284 N.W. 318 (Sweley v. Fox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sweley v. Fox, 284 N.W. 318, 135 Neb. 780, 1939 Neb. LEXIS 40 (Neb. 1939).

Opinion

Paine, J.

This is an action in equity to reform a real estate mortgage by inserting the description of an improved 80 acres which, it is claimed, was omitted therefrom by mutual mistake, and to reform the proceedings in a foreclosure case brought on said mortgage, or, in the alternative, to foreclose the mortgage as reformed. The defense was that the plaintiff was guilty of laches, that she did not offer to do equity, that the statute of limitations had run, and that there was no such clear, certain, and convincing evidence as is required to support a decree of reformation of an instrument. The trial court found for the defendants, and dismissed the plaintiff’s supplemental petition for reformation. The plaintiff appeals on the ground that the judgment entered was not supported by the evidence, and is against the weight of the evidence, and is contrary to law.

The evidence discloses that prior to 1929 John W. Fox, defendant, owned 320 acres of land five miles south of Litchfield, being the southeast quarter of section 21 and the northeast quarter of section 28, the whole farm being four 80-acre tracts of land lying north and south. The two south eighties were grass or pasture land, but worth in 1930 about $30 to $35 an acre. The north eighty was all plow land, and part of it very good farming land, and it was at that time worth perhaps $50 an acre, and was mortgaged for $1,500. The fourth eighty, being the second one from the north, was good farm land, with all the improvements thereon, consisting of a dwelling-house, barn, chicken-house, hog-house, windmill, etc., and the entire farm of 320 acres was worth in 1930 around $20,000.

In March of 1929, when Fox was planning to buy the Criffield filling station at Hazard for $7,000, a loan from the Lincoln Trust Company was approved for $8,000 on the whole 320 acres, but the deal fell through, and he never completed the loan. Fox bought a filling station in Litchfield in July, 1929, for $2,775, and he borrowed $3,000 for six months of the First National Bank of Litchfield, D. W. Titus, president, giving the bank a mortgage on the two [782]*782south eighties and on the north eighty, but the mortgage did not include the 80 acres with the buildings. In reference thereto, Mr. Fox gave this answer: “Well, the reason I kept that eighty out was — didn’t mortgage that eighty— was because that was my home, and my house and my barn was there, and I thought if I lost the rest of the stuff in this gasoline venture I would still have a little home left.”

When its mortgage of $3,000 became due, the bank undertook to assist Mr. Fox to secure a new loan for him from Harry Sweley, husband of the plaintiff. Mr. Engleman, a bank employee, called Mr. Sweley on the telephone and talked with him about making the loan to Mr. Fox, and Mrs. Sweley testifies that he told her, after telephoning, that the bank wanted him to make a loan of $3,000 on the improved eighty and the two south eighties of grass land owned by Mr. Fox. He agreed to make the loan, and Mr. Engleman in the bank drew the mortgage to Mr. Sweley of $3,000 at 6 per cent., but has no recollection whatever of the transaction. The mortgage was dated January 31, 1930, and recorded February 4, 1930, and this mortgage was given on the same three, unimproved eighties of land which had been mortgaged to the bank for $3,000, and did not include the eighty which was the home place. It is, therefore, undisputed that Mr. Sweley never at any time had a mortgage upon the home place.

Mr. Sweley died, and his widow, the plaintiff herein, secured the interests of the other heirs, and became the absolute owner of the mortgage, and, the same being in default, it was foreclosed, and a regular stay was taken, and then a moratory stay taken, and the sale was not confirmed and a deed issued to her until October 7, 1937.

After she secured the sheriff’s deed, the plaintiff went to the county treasurer’s office to pay her taxes, and for the first time learned that she did not own the improved eighty, being the second eighty from the north. A few days thereafter she brought this action to reform the mortgage, reform her foreclosure proceedings, or, in the alternative, to foreclose the mortgage as reformed.

[783]*783The plaintiff, to establish her claim for a reformation of the mortgage given in 1930 on the ground of mutual mistake, relies upon the telephone conversation which she says she heard between Mr. Engleman and her husband about making the loan to Mr. Fox. The attorney for plaintiff, in offering this testimony, claimed it was res gestae and part of the transaction. Judge Hostetler, trial judge, said it was hearsay, and was not in the presence of Mr. Fox, and was just what somebody told her, and he did not think it was res gestae, but allowed the testimony to be given on the ground that in a trial to the court it would not be error.

Aside from this telephone conversation which plaintiff testifies Mr. Sweley had, not with the defendant Fox, but with an officer in the bank whose loan Mr. Sweley was taking up, the plaintiff places weight upon two applications for insurance upon his buildings. The first one is dated September 5, 1931, and the second one is dated October 1, 1936.

The first policy of insurance was taken out by Mr. Fox over 19 months after the mortgage had been given to Mr. Sweley. Mr. Fox went to the bank, asked for fire and tornado insurance on his buildings, and the clerk in the bank filled out the application. This was not done at the request of Mr. Sweley at all. The first application, dated September 5, 1931, was for $1,000 on the house and $1,000 on the barn, and there were a large number of questions to be answered and blanks to be filled in on the application. “Cash Value — Land and buildings $16,000. No. of acres in farm? 320.” To the question, “How many acres on the farm are tillable?” he answered, “160.” He stated in the application that he had owned the farm for 15 years, and that it was incumbered for $4,500. Counsel for defendant insists that all of these answers were true, and described the situation of the whole farm of 320 acres; that there was a first mortgage on the north eighty of $1,500, and that there was a $3,000 mortgage upon the three unimproved eighties of the farm, which made a total of $4,500 incumbrance upon the farm, but the application did not [784]*784say that the 80 acres where the buildings were located were incumbered, and counsel for defendant argues that, when a clerk in a bank is filling in all of the information needed in an application for a fire insurance policy, it is not made out as carefully as an instrument conveying title. When he came to the question, “Name and address of mortgagee?” he filled in the name, “Harry Sweley,” and attached a “Loss payable clause” to him to the policy.

This insurance policy expired in 1936, which was after Mrs. Sweley had started proceedings to foreclose this mortgage of $3,000, and about that time Mr. Fox went to her to get her to sign papers so that he could get a loan through the Federal Farm Loan Association, and she asked him about renewing the insurance on the buildings, and she says that he told her that that would be up to her to get the insurance, and she went to Mr. Lang in the bank when she found the policy would expire on September 5, 1936, and Mr. Lang agreed to get Mr. Fox to sign an application for a new policy. He filled in the application blanks. “No. of acres in farm? 240. * * * Incumbrance — -Is the land incumbered? Yes. If so, what amount? $3,000.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
284 N.W. 318, 135 Neb. 780, 1939 Neb. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sweley-v-fox-neb-1939.