Wright v. Rohling

177 Iowa 368
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 29, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 177 Iowa 368 (Wright v. Rohling) 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
Wright v. Rohling, 177 Iowa 368 (iowa 1916).

Opinion

Evans, C. J.

ityT fraud and ciur &s£> The deed which is assailed herein was executed by the plaintiff' and his wife on January 25, 1913. This suit was begun immediately thereafter, the petition being filed on February 6th. . The real estate consisted of a farm of 80 acres, which was occupied as a home by the plaintiff and his family. Plaintiff’s family consisted of his wife and five children. The farm was of the value of $115 per acre at the time of such conveyance. It was encumbered by mortgages to the amount of $4,400, and was subject to a further equity of $1,800 for unpaid purchase money. The only purported consideration for the deed was the execution of a lease thereon by the grantee, Rohling, to the plaintiff and his wife, for a period of two years, rent free. At the time of such conveyance, the plaintiff was insolvent, and was threatened with suits of unsecured creditors and with bankruptcy proceedings. The petition avers that the plaintiff was induced by the defendant to execute such deed, by threats of criminal prosecution. There had been business relations between the parties for several years prior. The defendant Rohling was a member of a real estate and loan firm doing business at Council Bluffs. The defendant, or his firm, had financed the plaintiff in various transactions for some years. The farm in question was acquired by the plaintiff by purchase from his brother, Levi Wright, intervener herein, in March, 1912, at the price of $6,800. Prior to that time, he had owned and occupied another little farm, which he sold, at or about the time of the purchase from his brother of the farm now under consideration. The transaction of purchase between the plaintiff and his brother Levi was financed by the defendant in this wise: The first farm was already encumbered by a mortgage of $1,700, and the second farm by a mortgage of $2,300; the defendant procured for the' plaintiff, in the form of loans, an additional credit of $1,000 on the first farm, and an additional credit of $1,700 on the second farm. In each case, the [370]*370previously existing mortgage was retired, and a new one was made to cover the amount thereof and the additional credit. The plaintiff, therefore, executed to the defendant, or his firm, a mortgage on the first farm for $2,700. As a bonus or commission to defendant for such additional credit, he executed a further mortgage for $400. On the second farm, he executed a mortgage for $4,000, to cover the previous encumbrance and the $1,700 credit. As a bonus or commission to defendant on this transaction, he executed another mortgage for $300. In this manner, $5,000 of the purchase price was paid. For the remaining $1,800 of the purchase money, the brother, Levi, was to receive a mortgage subject to the foregoing; but the formal execution and acknowledgment of this mortgage had been neglected, up to the time of the transaction herein assailed. The plaintiff’s first farm was sold by him for $5,200. He had a margin therein, over and above the encumbrance, of $1,300. This margin of credit was assigned by him to the defendant as additional security. It was used, in part, by the defendant in the payment of accrued interest and taxes due up to February -1, 1913. The mortgages for $4,000 and $2,700, respectively, were negotiated to third parties by the firm of the defendant shortly after their execution; but such firm, nevertheless, looked after the collection of the interest thereon and the protection of the security thereof on behalf of the transferees. The assignment of the $1,300 item was obtained by the defendant less than a month prior to the deed involved herein.

The evidence of duress and fraudulent representations is in some respects indefinite and unsatisfactory, as will hereinafter appear. On the other hand, very important and significant facts are practically undisputed, and these are of such a nature as to give rise to strong inference against the defendant. It is evident from this record that the plaintiff was an ignorant man, and that he had placed great reliance upon the defendant for several years in the transaction of his business. He counselled with him often, and the defendant assumed to [371]*371give him counsel. The fact that the. defendant could obtain from the plaintiff a mortgage for $400 as a commission for obtaining an additional credit of $1,000, and that this could be done apparently without negotiation or question, is a suggestive circumstance, indicating the very modest business capacity of the plaintiff and a somewhat different business capacity on the part of the defendant. All of the circumstances of the case point in the same direction. When the plaintiff bought the land from his brother Levi, he had nothing to pay, except what the defendant loaned him. The defendant appears to have drawn the papers of conveyance and security between the two brothers. He drew the mortgage from the plaintiff to Levi for $1,800. This mortgage •was not acknowledged, and it was later returned to the plaintiff to be acknowledged by himself and wife. It was in their hands at the time the defendant obtained the deed involved in this case. It is undisputed that, at that time, the defendant advised the plaintiff to burn the mortgage, and that the plaintiff thereupon did bum the same. The defendant’s explanation of this circumstance is that the plaintiff told him that Levi did not want the mortgage and had given it back to him. The only effect of the surrender or the destruction of such mortgage would be to reduce the encumbrance to that extent upon the property which the defendant was acquiring. Its destruction operated to the benefit of no one save the defendant. As between the defendant and the intervener, Levi Wright, such conduct on the part of the defendant has become immaterial, because, upon the trial, he conceded the right of Levi to his lien. However, it throws a very unfavorable light upon the motives and the conduct of the defendant in the original transaction as between him and the plaintiff. As between him and the intervener, Levi, the defendant, in his original pleadings, denied the right of Levi to his lien, and such was the state of the pleadings up to the time of the concession made upon the trial. All the circumstances appearing in the record tend to show that the defendant had a great [372]*372influence, if not a subtle power, over the plaintiff. The plaintiff was not only manifestly ignorant and timid, but he was sick and in the care of a physician. Tie was greatly worried over his financial affairs and over threatened suits, and was greatly concerned as to what might happen to him in case of bankruptcy proceedings. The defendant was at the home of the plaintiff when the deed was obtained. ITe claims to have gone there at the request of the plaintiff. The only reason for such request apparent in the record was the plaintiff’s desire to counsel with him. As to the circumstances preceding the execution of the deed, the plaintiff testified as follow’s:

“He said, ‘They will jump on to that forty acres and sell it, and that will get you into very serious trouble.’ I wanted to know what kind of trouble. He said it was a penitentiary offense for me to do^ so. I said, ‘I can’t see how it is.’ He said that it was, and I would go if I did not deed the land to him. I says, ‘ There is nothing for me to do' only to do that to save myself. ’ Tie said that would save me then.

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Bluebook (online)
177 Iowa 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-rohling-iowa-1916.