Ueland v. More Bros.

133 N.W. 543, 22 N.D. 283, 1911 N.D. LEXIS 45
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 133 N.W. 543 (Ueland v. More Bros.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ueland v. More Bros., 133 N.W. 543, 22 N.D. 283, 1911 N.D. LEXIS 45 (N.D. 1911).

Opinions

Goss, J.

Briefly recited, the following are the facts in this case: Plaintiff L. A. Ueland was a purchaser at a foreclosure sale, and there was issued to him the usual sheriff’s certificate on foreclosure. The land so sold had previously belonged to and was mortgaged by M. A. Ueland, a brother of L. A. Ueland. Plaintiff brings this action to quiet title in him and to compel issuance to him of a sheriff’s deed. He claims no legal redemption has been made during the redemption year, and that a subsequent mortgage of the premises by M. A. Ueland’s grantees, Hiller & Hasz, under which More Brothers have sought to redeem, is void, and confers on them no right to redeem.

Some years after giving the mortgage on which foreclosure was had, M. A. Ueland and wife purchased certain threshing machinery through Hiller & Plasz, who, in turn, dealt with the machine company through More Brothers as state agents for said machine company. In [285]*285addition to the usual order for machinery signed by M. A. Ueland and Hiller & Hasz, M. A. Ueland had the following separate agreement with Hiller & Hasz, viz.: “It is hereby agreed by and between Hiller & Hasz, as party of the first part, and M. A. Ueland, party of the second part, that, if the machinery (describing it) does not fulfil the guaranty as given by manufacturers of above machinery, then Hiller & Hasz are to take the same off from my land, and return papers and all notes given in payment for above-mentioned machinery without expense to me.” Contemporaneous with such agreement, and as the papers mentioned therein, M. A. Ueland and wife, grantors, executed their warranty deed to the land involved to Hiller & Hasz as grantees for and as a $2,165 payment of the contract purchase price of the machinery; also executing notes, secured by chattel mortgage, for $1,135, to Hiller & Hasz as payees, as the balance of the $3,300 purchase price for such threshing machinery. These papers were delivered to Hiller & Hasz with the understanding that the same would not be recorded until the machinery had proven satisfactory to M. A. Ueland, purchaser, which fact, together with the details of the agreement between Hiller & Hasz .and M. A. Ueland, was known to More Brothers, one of whom, J. L. More, was present during the transaction and signed as a witness the ■deed and chattel mortgage, and became fully aware of all of the details of the entire transaction. Under the terms of the order, the machinery was shipped to More Brothers in care of Hiller & Hasz, with purchase price to be paid by Hiller & Hasz to More Brothers, with whom all settlements were to be had, practically making More Brothers the •sellers of the machinery to Hiller & Hasz, their agents, who, in turn, resold to M. A. Ueland, the real purchaser. Delivery was thereafter had of the machinery; the same proving worthless. Thereupon Hiller & Hasz, in fulfilment of their contract, accepted the machinery back from M. A. Ueland on his rescission of the contract. Prior to such rescission, during the time the machinery was being tried, More Brothers demanded a settlement with Hiller & Hasz, and procured from them the unrecorded deed from M. A. Ueland to Hiller & Hasz. They, also procured Hiller & Hasz to give them, More Brothers, a mortgage on the land to which Hiller & Hasz still held the unrecorded deed of M. A. Ueland and wife. This mortgage was for $1,805 and interest, the amount then owing on this and other transactions by Hiller & Hasz to [286]*286More Brothers, and was, together with said TJeland deed, immediately-placed on record by More Brothers. Afterwards M. A. TJeland began an action for rescission of the contract and cancelation of the deed of himself and wife to Iiiller & Hasz, and secured a judgment against, Iiiller & Hasz by default, adjudging the mortgage void, canceling the-notes given, and directing Hiller & Hasz to redeed the land to M. A. TJeland, which was done. More Brothers were not made parties to this: action, and did not participate therein, although they held the mortgage of Hiller & Hasz to them, which mortgage was of record at and prior to the time of commencement of the action by M. A. Heland' against Hiller & Hasz. The deeds above mentioned and the mortgage from Hiller & Hasz to More Brothers, were all subject to a prior recorded mortgage of $500 and interest on the same land, which mortgage was, two years after the entry of the judgment in favor of M. A. Heland and against Hiller & Hasz, assigned to L. A. Heland, plaintiff in these proceedings, and foreclosed by advertisement by a sale of the-premises on June 1, 1908. On May 22, 1909, More Brothers, claiming the right to redeem under their $1,805 mortgage, then amounting to-$2,309, paid.the sheriff $826.87, the full amount necessary to redeem said premises from the foreclosure sale under the prior mortgage, andi demanded and secured to be issued and delivered to them the usual sheriff’s certificate of redemption. Plaintiff refused to receive such redemption money, insisting that the mortgage to More Brothers, under which said redemption was made, was void and insufficient to entitle-More Brothers to redeem. Plaintiff began this action to compel the-sheriff to issue sheriff’s deed to him, and that the mortgage under which. More-Brothers attempted to redeem be declared void and title to said premises be quieted in L. A. Heland under the foreclosure of said first mortgage. Neither M. A. Heland and wife nor Hiller & Hasz are-made parties to this action.

While there is some conflict in the testimony on the question of the-intention of the parties, M. A. Heland and wife, as grantors, in delivering the deed to Hiller & Hasz as grantees, we are satisfied the evidence shows the same was intended to be delivered Hiller & Hasz in escrow, and to be held by them until such time as M. A. Heland declared himself to be satisfied with the machinery purchased, of which conditional delivery More Brothers had actual knowledge, that M. A. He-[287]*287land never accepted the machinery, and consequently never became the owner of it, and that the same was accepted back by Hiller & Hasz. We are also satisfied that the mortgage was taken by More Brothers to secure a pre-existing indebtedness, and with full notice that the contract was subject to rescission by M. A. Heland, in which event the property, the sole consideration for the deed, should be returned to Hiller & Hasz. Hiller & Hasz have never paid More Brothers the indebtedness purported to be secured by their mortgage to them.

Hnder the foregoing facts, do More Brothers have the right to redeem? If not, sheriff’s deed should issue to L. A. Heland, all rights of M. A. Heland having elapsed by his failure to redeem during the year of redemption. So far as the equities are concerned, the plaintiff is asking a court of equity to give him by forfeiture several thousand dollars’ worth of property. Likewise, the defendants More Brothers are brought with unclean hands into court to demand that a court-of equity keep hands off and permit them to secure, at least, full payment of a debt, because of lien security procured by them under circumstances amounting to a fraud on a stranger to the action, conceding, as their counsel does, that the mortgage upon which they seek to redeem, was, as between their mortgagor’s grantors and themselves, voidable, but never avoided and still in force, granting them the statutory right because of its want of rescission to perfect redemption, and thus secure title to the premises in question. Granting that the deed from M. A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 N.W. 543, 22 N.D. 283, 1911 N.D. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ueland-v-more-bros-nd-1911.