Wemer v. Long

185 N.W.2d 243, 1971 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 748
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 11, 1971
Docket54332
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 185 N.W.2d 243 (Wemer v. Long) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wemer v. Long, 185 N.W.2d 243, 1971 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 748 (iowa 1971).

Opinion

REES, Justice.

This is an action for declaratory judgment brought by the plaintiffs in which they ask judgment against the defendants adjudging their right, title and interest as equitable owners of an 80-acre tract of real estate in Wapello County be established and confirmed, or alternatively, that they have judgment declaring the real estate contract involved to be void in its inception by reason of fraud on the part of the contract vendors. The trial court dismissed the petition of plaintiffs, and we affirm the trial court.

On or about July 31, 1959, plaintiffs Norman G. Werner and Betty L. Werner entered into a contract with the defendants Carl S. Long and Bernice G. Long for the purchase of an 80-acre farm tract in Wa-pello County, described as the North Half of the Northeast Quarter of Section 12, Township 71, Range 13, for the sum of $12,000. Payment was to be in part by the transfer to the defendants Long of certain property on Rochester Road in the city of Ottumwa then owned by the Werners which was subject to a mortgage thereon which the Longs were to assume. It was understood the value of Werner’s equity in the Ottumwa property was $6,833.57, and the balance of $5,166.43 was to be paid in annual payments of $400 or more commencing November 30, 1959, such payments to include interest at the rate of six percent per annum from and after July 1, 1959.

The contract further provided the plaintiffs were to pay all taxes and assessments as they became due or before they became delinquent after the 1958 taxes due in 1959 had accrued and had been paid. The contract further provided that time was of the essence and that upon default in payment of any installment the contract should be void and of no force or effect, and that upon forfeiture thereof all rights of the plaintiffs therein should cease and terminate.

The plaintiffs went into possession of the real estate upon the execution of the contract, and made payments of the $400 annual installment in 1959, 1960 and 1961.

At the time of the execution of the contract record title to the 80-acre farm rested in one B. H. Burns, who apparently took title in 1943, and had contracted to sell the premises on October 10, 1946 to E. E. Brandon and Mildred Brandon; the Bran-dons had in turn, on April 24, 1959 assigned their contract and entered into a separate contract with Robert E. & Francis *245 L. O’Neil. On July 30, 1959 the O’Neils assigned their contract and entered into a written assignment which provided by its terms that it was to be construed as a quit claim deed with the defendants Bernice G. and Carl S. Long, who on the following day, July 31, 1959, entered into a contract with the Werners with which contract we are here concerned. E. E. Brandon and Mildred Brandon, husband and wife, acquired record title to the premises by warranty deed executed by B. H. Burns on February 10, 1966.

In May, 1962 Brandon prepared a notice of forfeiture of his contract dated April, 24, 1959 and directed the same to Robert E. and Francis L. O’Neil, Carl Long and Mrs. Carl Long, and Norman G. Wemer and Betty Wemer. The notice of forfeiture was based upon the non-payment of the 1960 taxes assessed against the real estate, payable in 1961, and default in the payment of the first half of the 1961 real estate taxes, due in 1962, all of which were delinquent at the time of the service of the notice of forfeiture, which was served upon the Werners on May 3 and May 5 of 1962 but was not served upon the defendants Long until June 19, 1962. The defendants Long, in order to avoid the forfeiture of the Brandon contract, delivered their check in the amount of $116.87 to Brandon on July 18, 1962, which check was endorsed to the county treasurer of Wapel-lo county by Brandon to effect payment of the delinquent taxes for 1960 and the first half of 1961.

Following payment of the taxes by Long to Brandon, Long caused to be served upon the plaintiffs Wemer a notice of forfeiture of his contract based upon Werner’s default in making payment before they became delinquent of the 1960 taxes and the taxes for the first half of 1961. Upon the trial of the case, plaintiff Norman Wemer testified he was not served with a notice of forfeiture. However, the trial court found that a return of service which was introduced as an exhibit evidenced a valid service of the notice personally upon Norman G. Wemer on July 24, 1962 and on Betty L. Wemer on July 28, 1962. The Werners do not claim they made payment of the amount of delinquent taxes to the defendants Long during the 30-day period following service of notice of forfeiture, nor that they did anything else to avoid the forfeiture of the contract. During the 30-day period following the service of the notice of forfeiture, and on August 21, 1962, the defendants Long mailed to the plaintiffs a letter warning them that their failure to remit the sums advanced by Longs for the payment of taxes and for the nonpayment of which the forfeiture was based would result in plaintiffs losing the farm. A copy of the letter so addressed by defendants Long to the plaintiffs was introduced as an exhibit. However, the plaintiff Norman Wemer denied ever having received the original of the letter, and in fact denied receiving every communication testified to by the defendants as having been addressed to him.

The notice of forfeiture with the service endorsed thereon was filed in the office of the Wapello County Recorder on August 29, 1962 by the defendants Long, and on the same date defendant Long sent to the plaintiffs by certified mail, return receipt requested, a letter informing plaintiffs that all their rights to the farm under the contract had been forfeited. In the letter he made a demand that they surrender possession thereof within seven days or that they agree to pay him rent on the farm in the amount of $500 for the balance of 1962 and at the rate of $650 annually thereafter with rental payments to be due on October 25, 1962, and each October 25 thereafter. The receipt of this letter was also denied by the plaintiff Norman Wemer irrespective of the fact that an exhibit, a return receipt for the same, bears his signature.

The rental which was demanded as due on October 25, 1962, was not paid, and on November 29, 1962 the defendant Long sent by certified mail to the plaintiffs a letter demanding payment of the $500 rental claimed by him to be due, and the plaintiff *246 denied receipt of the letter. Thereafter the plaintiff Wemer mailed to the defendant Long his check for $400, and Long thereupon sent to the plaintiffs his receipt showing the application of the $400 payment on the defendants’ claim for rent, claiming an unpaid balance of $100 for that year.

Substantially the same facts attended thereafter each year; the rental was not paid in time, and demand was made by the defendant Long for rent, and payments were then made by the plaintiff of $400 for each year, receipts were mailed by the defendants showing the application of plaintiffs’ payments to defendants’ claims for rent.

The trial court found that despite the claim of the plaintiff Wemer as to not having received any of the communications and receipts from the defendants that the plaintiffs knew the defendants were claiming rental due from their possession of the farm after the forfeiture of the contract, but that the defendant Long likewise knew the plaintiffs were claiming payments were being made under the contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
185 N.W.2d 243, 1971 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 748, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wemer-v-long-iowa-1971.