Tripp v. Mid-West Investment Co.

255 N.W. 805, 62 S.D. 602, 1934 S.D. LEXIS 81
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 1934
DocketFile Nos. 7645-7648.
StatusPublished

This text of 255 N.W. 805 (Tripp v. Mid-West Investment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tripp v. Mid-West Investment Co., 255 N.W. 805, 62 S.D. 602, 1934 S.D. LEXIS 81 (S.D. 1934).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, J.

Plaintiff Tripp was the payee in and owner of a certain negotiable promissory note executed by one Biermann and others, in the principal sum of $2,500, with interest at 7 per cent, dated March 1, 1930, due March 1, 1933, together with a duly recorded real estate mortgage securing the same. In November, 1930, one Fred L. Crabbe and one Frank R. Beddow induced plaintiff Tripp to part with the Biermann note and mortgage and other property and securities which he owned in exchange for corporate stock of a concern known as Miid-West Investment Company. Pursuant to agreement with Crabbe and Beddow, plaintiff Tripp, on November 18, 1930, indorsed the Biermann note without recourse, executed an assignment of the Biermann mortgage to Crabbe, and delivered the note so indorsed, the mortgage, and the assignment thereof to Crabbe and Beddow. It is conceded that Tripp intended to and did transfer to Crabbe and Beddow at that time both the possession of and the title to said property. It is also conceded that Tripp was induced to sell and transfer said property to Crabbe and Beddow by reason of their false and fraudulent representations as to the value of the corporate stock of Mid-West Investment Company, which they represented to be guaranteed by a responsible surety company for the payment of a 10 per cent semiannual dividend and to be worth par and more and as sound as government bonds, when in truth and in fact, as they well knew, said corporate stock was entirely worthless. On November 26, 1930, Crabbe and Beddow, with Tripp’s full knowledge and consent, delivered said Biermann note and mortgage and the assignment thereof to* the defendant E. A. Guenthner for the express purpose of negotiation andi sale.

*604 On December 6, 1930, Guenthner applied to the defendant-appellant E. J. Feldman at his home in Pipestone, Minn., to- purchase said note and mortgage, which Feldman ag'reed to do, and the note and mortgage were -delivered to Feldman together with a duly executed assignment of the mortgage by Crabbe, assignee of Tripp, as aforesaid. Feldman at that time paid to Guenthner for said note andi mortgage the sum of $2,200 in the form of $1,000 in cash, the negotiable promissory note of one Abraham- Kautz in the amount of $700 (it being conceded that Kautz was solvent and financially responsible and that his said note was worth $700), and his own thirty-day negotiable promissory not in the amount of $500 (which he redeemed ten days later by paying" Guenthner $490 in cash).

On March 1, 1930, Abraham Kautz as vendor had executed to one Litke a contract for deed covering certain real property in M-enno, S. D. -On March 26, 1930, the vendor Kautz had assigned said- contract for deed to plaintiff Tripp-, at which time Kautz and defendant Feldm-an guaranteed to Tripp the performance of said contract by the vendees. Apparently this contract for deed was also one of the securities that Tripp transferred to Crabbe and Beddow in connection with the M'id-West Investment Company deal. In any event, when Guenthner, in December, 1930, sought to induce Feldman to purchase the Biermann note and mortgage, Guenthner’s wife, Hazille Guenthner, was the owner and holder of the vendor’s interest in said contract for deed and as part of the inducement to Feldman to purchase the Biermann note and mortgage the -Guenthners released him from all liability under his guaranty on this contract for deed.

In March, 1931, plaintiff Tripp instituted the present action, pleading the frau-d practiced upon him by -Crabbe and Beddow, seeking to rescind his. transactions with them and to- recover the various items of property which Crabbe and Beddow had thus fraudulently induced him to transfer to them, some of which they had in turn transferred to others- as above recited.

Defendant Feldman answered, claiming ownership of the Biermann note and -mortgage by virtue of purchase thereof for valuable consideration in due course of business, asking that plaintiff’s complaint be -dismissed as to him, and by way of -counterclaim that he (Feldman) be adjudged to be the owner of said note and mortgage.

*605 The cause came on for 'trial ¡before the court, who found the facts substantially as above recited, and further specifically found with reference to Feldman’s purchase of the note and mortgage as follows: “That the said Feldman in purchasing the said note and mortgage had no knowledge or notice of the fraudulent representations made as herein set forth by the agents of the Mid-West Investment Company to the plaintiff, and had no knowledge of any defect in the title to saidi instruments, and that he is a holder in due course and for value of the said promissory note.” Upon saidi findings the learned trial judge made conclusions of law as follows: “That the defendant, E. J. Feldman, is the holder in due course and for value of the negotiable promissory note described above, and that he is the owner of the mortgage described securing the same; that defendant, First National Bank of Pipe-stone, Minnesota, has no right, title or interest in said note and mortgage; that the title of defendant is' free and clear of any claim- of plaintiff, except that plaintiff has the right within ninety days of the date of entry o-f judgment herein, and upon the payment to the defendant, E. J. Feldman, of the sum of Twenty-one Hundred Ninety ($2190.00) Dollars, to the restoration thereof to him, and -that said Feldman deposit the note and mortgage described -in the Menno State Bank of Menno, South Dakota, the same to remain on deposit during the said ninety day period- and said bank upon the payment to it of the amount of Twenty-one Hundred Ninety ($2190.00) Dollars less any principal of or interest on said mortgage note received by the defendant Feldman, is authorized to deliver such note and mortgage to plaintiff contemporaneously with the payment of such money'- to defendant, Feldman; andi further upon such payment that plaintiff be restored to all his rights against the defendant, .Feldman, on account of the guarantee of the Contract for Deed referred to, and that the release of the said Feldman on account of said guarantee be can-celled-; that in the'event restoration to defendant, Feldman, is.not made within the period 'herein provided, that his title to said note and mortgage become absolute,' and that his release from the saidi Contract for -Deed be in full force and effect; that defendant, Feldman, recover his costs from the plaintiff herein.”

From all the judgment, excepting the portion thereof adjudging him to be the owner and holder in due course of said note and *606 mortgage, defendant Feldman has now appealed (appeal No. 7645). From- so much of the judgment as determines Feldman to be the owner and holder of the Biermann note and mortgage and requires plaintiff Tripp to make certain payments to Feldman as a condition precedent to the restoration of said note and mortgage to him, plaintiff Tripp has perfected a cross-appeal (appeal No. 7648).

The judgment in this case required Feldman to deposit the.Biermann note and mortgage immediately in a certain bank and directed that if Tripp, within ninety days-, made the payments specified in the judgment, the note and mortgage should be surrendered to him (the money going to Feldman); otherwise to be returned to Feldman free of all claims of Tripp. Feldman took his appeal before any payment was made or tendered by Tripp and before the expiration of the ninety-day period.

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

Related

Crosby v. Paine
211 N.W. 947 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1927)
Nelson v. Jones
1923 OK 836 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1923)
Martin v. Green
102 A. 977 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1918)
National Bank v. Taylor
58 N.W. 297 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1894)
Taylor v. National Bank
62 N.W. 99 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1895)
Pelham v. Chattahoochee Grocery Co.
41 So. 12 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1906)
Parr v. Helfrich
189 N.W. 281 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
255 N.W. 805, 62 S.D. 602, 1934 S.D. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tripp-v-mid-west-investment-co-sd-1934.