Teisinger v. Hardy

5 P.2d 219, 91 Mont. 9, 1931 Mont. LEXIS 60
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 18, 1931
DocketNo. 6,853.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 5 P.2d 219 (Teisinger v. Hardy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Teisinger v. Hardy, 5 P.2d 219, 91 Mont. 9, 1931 Mont. LEXIS 60 (Mo. 1931).

Opinion

*12 ME. JUSTICE ANGSTMAN

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff brought this action to quiet title to certain described lands situated in Richland county, his complaint being in the usual form. James Hardy, son of W. A. Hardy, is the only defendant who appeared in the action and he will hereafter be referred to as the defendant. By answer he alleged that on May 24, 1921, W. A. Hardy was the owner of the lands in question and on that day he gave a mortgage on it to A. B. Brown to secure a note, and that Brown indorsed the note and assigned the mortgage to defendant on February 19, 1926; that he is now the owner and holder thereof and that the note is still unpaid and the mortgage still subsists as a lien on the property paramount to any claim of plaintiff thereto.

He also alleged that on November 9, 1922, W. A. Hardy executed and delivered to A. W. McDonald a note in the sum of $11,000 and a mortgage on the property securing it; that thereafter the McDonald mortgage was foreclosed, resulting in a decree of foreclosure on September 11, 1925, and a sheriff’s certificate of sale to McDonald on October 17, 1925; that on March 3, 1926, McDonald, for value received, assigned the certificate of sale to defendant who received a sheriff’s deed on July 15, 1927.

Plaintiff' by his reply alleged that the Brown note secured by the mortgage has been fully paid and discharged and that the mortgage lien no longer exists; that the McDonald note and mortgage were executed by W. A. Hardy at a time when he was insolvent and for the purpose of hindering, delaying and defrauding his creditors and particularly the Yellowstone Valley Bank & Trust Company; that defendant, when he took the assignment, knew the facts and circumstances surrounding the transaction and that he paid no consideration for the assignment but took it in furtherance of the purpose of W. A. Hardy to hinder, cheat, delay and defraud his creditors.

*13 The canse was tried to the court without a jury, the Honorable Robert C. Stong, Judge presiding. The court found that plaintiff is the sole owner in fee simple of the property, and in general found that the allegations of the reply were sustained by the evidence. Accordingly, judgment was entered for plaintiff, from which defendant appealed.

Plaintiff, as his source of title to the property, relied upon a sheriff’s deed of February 14, 1927, resulting from a sale of the property under execution in an action brought by plaintiff against W. A. Hardy, wherein plaintiff obtained judgment on November 4, 1925. Brown, whose sister was married to W. A. Hardy’s brother, testifying as a witness for plaintiff, gave substantially the same evidence as he did upon the former trial, which is succinctly set forth in the opinion in Teisinger v. Hardy, 86 Mont. 180, 282 Pac. 1050. He also testified that the reason why W. A. Hardy wanted the transaction handled as it was, as stated to him by W. A. Hardy, was because Teisinger had levied on his property and he wanted to keep the property out of his name and in his son’s name. .

On the former appeal we held the evidence was sufficient to warrant a finding that the Brown mortgage was fully paid prior to the assignment to defendant. This being so, the lien of the mortgage could not be kept alive by an assignment to defraud creditors. (27 C. J. 463.) Hence the finding by the trial court with respect to the Brown mortgage, being fully sustained by the evidence, will not be disturbed by us.

With respect to the McDonald mortgage defendant contends that the pleadings are not sufficient to present the issue of fraud and that there is not sufficient evidence to support a finding of fraud. He first argues that the allegations of the reply constitute a departure from the allegations of the complaint. The complaint alleges ownership of the property by plaintiff and his right of possession; that defendant claims some right which is alleged to be groundless and invalid. The complaint meets with the requirements prescribed in Slette v. Review Pub. Co., 71 Mont. 518, 230 Pac. 580. The *14 answer, as above noted, in so far as it has application to the McDonald mortgage, alleged superior title in defendant by reason of the foreclosure and sheriff’s deed. The reply in substance charges that the McDonald mortgage was given by W. A. Hardy to hinder, delay and defraud his creditors, and particularly the Yellowstone Valley Bank & Trust Company; that defendant knew this, and that he gave no consideration for the assignment of the sheriff’s certificate of sale on which the sheriff’s deed was based.

“The office of a reply is to join issue on or avoid new matter alleged in the answer; it cannot aid the complaint by supplying an omission broadening the scope or adding a new ground of relief.” (Fleming v. Consolidated Motor Sales Co., 74 Mont. 245, 240 Pac. 376.)

Does the reply here broaden the scope of the complaint or add a new ground of relief? It obviously does not. Until the defendant asserted his title, plaintiff was not advised of the nature of his claim or whether he would assert any claim, and was not obliged to anticipate what claim the defendant might rely upon. The reply simply seeks to defeat the title set up by defendant and is not a departure from the cause of action pleaded in the complaint. (Schlageter v. Gude, 30 Colo. 310, 70 Pac. 428; Snyder v. Wheeler, 81 Kan. 508, 106 Pac. 462; Miner v. Morgan, 83 Neb. 400, 119 N. W. 781; Neve v. Allen, 55 Kan. 638, 41 Pac. 966; Whitehead v. Callahan, 44 Colo. 396, 99 Pac. 57; Platt v. Parker-Washington Co., 161 Mo. App. 663, 144 S. W. 143; Barron v. Wright etc. Co., 292 Mo. 195, 237 S. W. 786.)

Defendant asserts that the reply is a departure from the complaint because plaintiff in his complaint relies upon a legal title, while in the reply he asserts an equitable one depending upon an equitable adjudication of the invalidity of defendant’s title. This contention cannot be sustained. An action to quiet title is one in equity (Dahlberg v. Lannen, 84 Mont. 68, 274 Pac. 151), and “the court in which such action is tried shall have jurisdiction to make a complete adjudication of the title to the lands named in the complaint.” *15 (Sec. 9487, Rev. Codes 1921; and see Pollock M. & M. Co. v. Davenport, 31 Mont. 452, 78 Pac. 768.)

When defendant asserts a legal title, plaintiff may by reply set up facts in avoidance of the title upon which a court of equity may grant equitable relief against it. (School District No. 73 v. Wrabeck, 31 Minn. 77, 16 N. W. 493; Whitehead v. Callahan, supra), and by a parity of reasoning, plaintiff may assert a legal title in himself and avoid the title asserted by defendant on equitable grounds.

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Bluebook (online)
5 P.2d 219, 91 Mont. 9, 1931 Mont. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/teisinger-v-hardy-mont-1931.