Wallace. v. Johnstone

129 U.S. 58, 9 S. Ct. 243, 32 L. Ed. 619, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1662
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 14, 1889
Docket94
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 129 U.S. 58 (Wallace. v. Johnstone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wallace. v. Johnstone, 129 U.S. 58, 9 S. Ct. 243, 32 L. Ed. 619, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1662 (1889).

Opinion

Ms. Justice Lamab

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit in equity originally brought in a state court' by the appellees against the appellant and one E. B. Ford, to. quiet the title to about 3184 acres of land in Sioux and Clay counties in the State of Iowa.

The petition alleged that on February 17, 1875, the defendant, John A. Wallace,'who was then the owner in fee of the land in dispute, by a deed of warranty, which was’ afterwards duly recorded, for a Valuable consideration,' sold and conveyed the same to the plaintiffs and one William Leighton';' that on the same day said grantees executed and delivered to the defendant Ford a contract in writing, giving him the .option, for the period of sixty days from that date, of purchasing the land in question, upon the payment by him of the sum. of $5876, which contract was on that day assigned by Ford to defendant Wallace, and was afterwards duly recorded; that Leighton-afterwards conveyed his undivided one-fourth-interest to the plaintiff C. F. Davis, who afterwards conveyed one-half thereof to plaintiff Edward Johnstone; that neither of the defendants ever paid anything on the lands, and neither ever *60 exercised the option of purchasing within the 'time specified in the option contract, or at any time thereafter, and that the rights of the defendants under that contract had become forfeited ; that 'the plaintiffs, upon the purchase of the lands, assumed control of them, and had paid the taxes thereon; and that the defendants had no rights under the contract, nor any interest, legal or equitable, in the lands, but the contract, being upon the records of the counties where the lands lie, constituted a cloud upon the title to them.

The prayer of the petition was, that the option contract be declared forfeited, rescinded and cancelled, and the title to the plaintiffs be quieted' against all claims of the defendants, or either of them, and for further relief, etc.

Defendant Wallace answered, admitting the. execution and delivery of the deed and option contract of February 17, 1875, but alleging that, taken together, they were understood by the parties thereto as constituting a mortgage for the security of the money received by him at that time, which was in reality a loan; alleging, further, that the transaction was to avoid the effect of the usury laws of Iowa, the plaintiffs not being willing to accept Simply the legal rate of ten per cent interest-on such loan; that the lands were worth at- that'time fully $20,000, and' the • money actually received by him was only about $4250; that defendant Ford never had any real interest in the option contract, but actually assigned it to him before it was signed and executed by the plaintiffs and Leigh-ton, all of which was well known to said parties; that the loan was obtained in good faith, and he was willing to bind himself, in the way he did, for said $5876, for the use of the said $425.0 for sixty days, because he badly needed money, and believed he could sell the land so as to pay off the loan and leave a large surplus for himself ; and that this defendant has considered himself indebted to plaintiffs and Leighton in the gum of $4250, and lawful interest from February 17, 1875, and now asks that he be required to pay only that amount.

He, therefore, prayed that said deed be' declared by the court to be a mortgage; that the title to the real estate be decreed to be .in the defendant, subject to such claim as the *61 plaintiffs may legitimately have against it by virtue of that-deed, and any taxes they have paid; and that defendant have a legal right to redeem, as provided by law, upon suck teínas of payment of such amount as- the court shall think, just-and proper, and for other and further relief, etc.

The suit was then removed into the United States Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa, upon the ground of diverse citizenship of the parties, where defendant Wallace' ■filed a cross-bill substantially in matter and form the same as his answer, asking to redeem. Plaintiffs replied to the answer of Wallace, and answered his cross-bill denying every material allegation therein not in harmony with the allegations,of-the petition. Defendant Ford answered, admitting all the allegations of plaintiffs’ petition, and disclaiming any interest in the lands. ' Testimony was taken, and the decree of the Circuit Court was in favor of the plaintiffs; the option contract was cancelled and annulled; the title to the lands .in .question was quieted in the plaintiffs forever as against any claim thereto on the part of either of the defendants or any one claiming under' them through the option contract; and the cross-bill of defendant Wallace was dismissed. From'this decree Wallace prayed and perfected an appeal, which brings the case into this court.

The sole question presented in the case is — was the transac- ■ tion of February IT, 1875, an absolute sale or a mortgage ? If this question could be determined by inspection of the written papers alone, the transaction was clearly not a mortgage, but an absolute sale and deed, accompanied by an independent contract between the vendee and a third person,' not a party to the sale,, to convey the lands to him upon his payment of a fixed SUm within a certain time. Upon their face' there are none of the -indicia by which courts are led to construe such instruments to be intended as a mortgage or security for a loan ; nothing from which there can be inferred the existence of a debt, or. the relation of borrower and lender between the parties to the deeds or between the parties to the contract.

The question whether the extrinsic proof shows that the-' *62 $4250 was a loan to Wallace, and that the deed and option contract were made to secure its repayment with large interest, is a question of fact to be determined by the circumstances attending the execution of the instruments in question.

The evidence, as it appears in the. record, is much less contradictory than is usual in such cases where it is sought by parol testimony to change ah absolute conveyance, with a collateral agreement for a repurchase, into a mortgage.

With the single exception of the appellant, all the witnesses conversant with the negotiations between the parties unite in giving testimony tending to show that the transaction was a purchase of the lands 'by the appellees for the purpose of acquiring the property, and that they made a collateral agreement with Ford that if he, or his assigns, should, within sixty days, deposit in bank to their credit the sum of $5876, they would convey the lands to them.

It is not necessary to'discuss the testimony in detail. There are two points, however, to which we. will make reference. Edward Johnstone, one of the appellees, after giving the particulars of the contract, as expressed in the papers, says:

' Upon the purchase of- these lands we went into possession of them, and we paid taxes for them, and sold a portion; and I never heard anything of any claim of Mr. Wallace of this, being a loan, until I saw it set up in his answer to this case.
. ... I never heard from Dr. Ford or Mr. Wallace that he wanted a loan; there was .never such a thing as a loan intimated.
Did you dver hear Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 U.S. 58, 9 S. Ct. 243, 32 L. Ed. 619, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallace-v-johnstone-scotus-1889.