United States Bond & Mortgage Co. v. Keahey

1916 OK 15, 155 P. 557, 53 Okla. 176, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 385
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 11, 1916
Docket5945
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 1916 OK 15 (United States Bond & Mortgage Co. v. Keahey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States Bond & Mortgage Co. v. Keahey, 1916 OK 15, 155 P. 557, 53 Okla. 176, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 385 (Okla. 1916).

Opinion

*177 HARDY, J.

The United States Bond & Mortgage Company, which will be referred to as plaintiff, brought suit against Ida M. Keahey, J. J. Hacker, and wife, to recover on two promissory notes executed by defendant Keahey, and to foreclose a real estate mortgage given to secure the same. There is no controversy as to the material facts. The notes were executed by defendant Keahey on October 15, 1908, to H. A. Kahler, who afterward transferred the same to the Penn. Mutual Life Insurance Company, which company later transferred same to plaintiff. The execution of the notes and mortgage was admitted by defendant Keahey, while the Hackers defend on the ground that the mortgage, having been executed by defendant Keahey while a minor, was void because of the fact that the lands were her personal allotment, as a member of the Choctaw tribe of Indians. Plaintiff, in response to this, pleaded that defendants Hacker were estopped from questioning the validity of the mortgage, for the reason that they purchased the premises subject thereto. Judgment was rendered in favor of defendants Hacker and against plaintiff, and the mortgage sought to be foreclosed was declared to be void. The court further found in favor of plaintiff and against defendant Keahey for the amount of the notes sued on. From the order of the court overruling the motion for new trial, plaintiff prosecutes error.

The principal assignment of error is that the findings and judgment of the court are not sustained by sufficient evidence and are contrary to law. Several propositions are argued under this assignment, but the only one we deem it necessary to consider is whether, under the evidence, the finding of the court that defendants Hacker did not purchase the premises subject to the mortgage is sustained by the evidence. This being an equity *178 case, under the rule in Shock et al. v. Fish, 45 Okla. 12, 144 Pac. 584, where it is clearly shown that the finding and decree are against the weight of the evidence, this court will consider the entire record in said case, weigh the evidence, and render such judgment as the trial court should have rendered. The allottee, Ida M. Keahey, prior to the date of the defendant Hacker’s deed, sold the land to her father, J. H. Boatright, who had assumed the plaintiff’s mortgage and agreed to pay the same. Thereafter Boatright sold to Hacker, but the deed was made direct from Ida M. Keahey to defendant J. J. Hacker, and in the warranty clause of the deed it is warranted that the lands therein described—

“are free, clear, discharged and unincumbered, of and from all former grants, titles, charges, judgments, taxes and incumbrances, of what nature and kind soever, except a mortgage for $1,500.00.”

J. H. Boatright testified in reference to the transaction between him and Hacker as follows:

“Q. What, if anything, was agreed to between you and Mr. Hacker as to this $1,500 mortgage on the property? A. I will answer that the best way I know how to answer it. It’s like this, when I was trading with Mr. Hacker this farm property for this city property, why I mentioned a $1,500 mortgage that my daughter had placed on the land. Q. That is the mortgage that is being foreclosed in this case? A. That is my understanding, and I told him like this: That the $1,500 mortgage was against it, and I would trade him my equity there in the place for this property here, just even up. * * * Q. I will ask you, Mr. Boatright, if the question came up as to whether he would assume the mortgage or not? * * * A.-It was in Mr. Hacker’s office at that time we were up there to fix the deed, and the mortgage was mentioned, and also spoken of as void and of no effect, illegal. Q. Why? A. *179 Because my daughter was not of age, but still insisted that the mortgage be made a note of in the deed in order that I would not be tied up for anything. * * * Q. I will ask you if Mr. Hacker did not ask you to have your daughter sign a deed, not mentioning the mortgage? A. He did. Q. I will ask you if at the time of your trading that Mr. Hacker said that he would not accept the mortgage, but said to put it in, except the mortgage? A. As I remember it he didn’t recognize the mortgage as amounting to anything, but I wanted the mortgage mentioned in the deed so that I would be clear. Q. Then the deed was made as you understood the trade to be? A. Yes, sir. I just felt this way: That if the mortgage was all right, the land was good for it, and of course I wanted to be clear from it.
“By the Court: Q. Now, Mr. Boatright, Hacker didn’t think the mortgage amounted to anything? A. I don’t know whether he did or not, but I didn’t want to be liable on the mortgage; that is correct. Q. Now in the event the mortgage had to be paid, who was to pay it? A. Well, I just figured on it this way: That the land was good for the mortgage if it. had to be paid. That was my understanding. Q. From whom? A. From the one who owned the land at the time it had to be paid.”

The defendant J. J. Hacker testified:

“Q. What difference did it make if you didn’t assume the mortgage? A. It was against the land. Q. If you hadn’t assumed and agreed to pay the mortgage, they couldn’t have held you for it, could they? A. It was on the land. I thought they could have held me. * * * Q. What I am trying to get at is this: You knew that if you didn’t assume and agree to pay the mortgage, they could not make you pay itj didn’t you ? A. I thought that they could collect it off the land. I knew that was the only way they could get it out of me. Q. Then why in writing to them did you not tell them that you never assumed and agreed to pay it, and that they should look to Mr. Boatright? A. Because Mr. Boatright said he didn’t *180 want the responsibility of the loan, and that it was to be on the land.”

In addition to this, the defendant Hacker testified that, after purchasing the land, he wrote to the agent of plaintiff, directing that all communications in the future concerning the land be directed to him; and on April 13, 1910, plaintiff mailed defendant J. J. Hacker a statement of interest due at that time, and thereafter said defendant caused a draft in payment of the interest due to be mailed to plaintiff. On the 3d day of September, 1910, defendant J. J. Hacker-wrote plaintiff that, while he had received from them letters acknowledging receipt of payment of the interest coupon, he would be better satisfied if he received the canceled coupons, for he presumed that the mortgage had passed into other hands by assignment, and indicating his desire in the future to receive the canceled coupons, or else he would remit direct to the holder of the mortgage indebtedness. In explanation of his payment of the interest and the correspondence above mentioned, he stated that the reason, he paid the interest was that plaintiff was threatening to foreclose the mortgage, and he was not clear in his mind at that time whether he was liable for its payment, and was not ready to have same foreclosed, and he paid the interest in order to avoid the foreclosure. From this review of the testimony we think the finding of the court that defendant Hacker did not purchase the premises subject to the plaintiff’s mortgage was clearly against the evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
1916 OK 15, 155 P. 557, 53 Okla. 176, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-bond-mortgage-co-v-keahey-okla-1916.