Court Opinion

ID: 4011143
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 11:13:55.946581+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:10:43.631919
License: Public Domain

This action was begun on the 14th day of February, 1940, by R. F. Gehrke Sheet Metal Works, a copartnership, plaintiff, against Claus Mahl and Augusta Mahl, his wife, Charles Ramthun and Anna Ramthun, his wife, defendants, to establish a lien upon certain described lands, the legal title to which was in the defendants, Charles Ramthun and Anna Ramthun.  The case was tried to the court which found in favor of the plaintiff.  Judgment was entered on July 8, 1940, establishing the lien, from which judgment the defendants appeal.
The facts as found by the court may be summarized as follows: The plaintiff is the owner of certain judgments against Claus Mahl.  The first judgment was docketed December 14, 1932.  The other judgments were docketed thereafter from time to time previous to May 3, 1937.  Executions were issued which were returned unsatisfied.  On November 19, 1932, Mahl conveyed lots 6 and 7, block 31, to the First National Bank of Shawano to secure certain indorsements made by Mahl and held by the bank; that the transaction was in fact a mortgage; that on June 29, 1936, the First National Bank of Shawano conveyed the property to certain trustees; that on January 14, 1932, Mahl and his wife executed a warranty *Page 416 
deed to the Citizens State Bank of certain real estate; that although in form a conveyance by a warranty deed, the transaction was in fact a mortgage to secure certain obligations owing by Mahl and his wife to the bank.  The court found that on or about July 18, 1938, the mortgage upon lots 6 and 7, block 31, was paid, and the trustees conveyed the property to Anna Ramthun on that date by deed which was duly recorded; that on June 19, 1934, the mortgage given January 14, 1932, was paid, and that the land covered by said mortgage was conveyed by the bank to Anna Ramthun and Charles Ramthun; that on April 7, 1939, Anna Ramthun executed a mortgage to the Home Loan  Investment Company to secure the payment of $1,000, said mortgage being upon lots 6 and 7; that on May 7, 1934, Charles Ramthun and Anna Ramthun executed a mortgage to the Home Owners' Loan Corporation upon lot 3, block 32, being the property conveyed to the Citizens State Bank to secure the sum of $4,320.45.  The court further found that Mahl gave to Charles Ramthun and Anna Ramthun his note for $2,160, dated December 27, 1928; that on November 28, 1930, Mahl borrowed from Charles Ramthun and Anna Ramthun $2,000 for which he gave his note.  The court further found:
"That until the time the trustees of the First National Bank executed the deed to Anna Ramthun, she had no interest in the property to be conveyed, nor any knowledge that there was an intention on the part of Claus Mahl to procure the conveyance to be made to her, and that Claus Mahl had not definitely formed any intention of having the deed made to Anna Ramthun until immediately before the execution thereof.
"That at the time he procured the conveyance by the trustees of the First National Bank and the Citizens State Bank to Anna Ramthun, and after recording the deeds, it then became the understanding that the former conveyance was to be in full settlement of the notes hereinabove described.
"That the defendant, Claus Mahl, by devious methods intended to hinder, delay and defraud his creditors, but that *Page 417 
neither Charles Ramthun nor Anna Ramthun entertained any such intention, and they did not knowingly participate in the fraud, and that Charles Ramthun and Anna Ramthun had no knowledge of the financial status of Claus Mahl."
The court further held that the mortgage given by Charles Ramthun and Anna Ramthun on April 7, 1939, to Home Loan  Investment Company was prior to any lien of the plaintiff, and further:
"That the defendant, Anna Ramthun, at the time tots six (6) and seven (7) of block thirty-one (31) were conveyed to her, knew or had knowledge of facts sufficient to put her on inquiry as to the interest of Claus Mahl in the property, and that Anna Ramthun had knowledge of the fact that Claus Mahl had arranged with the trustees of the First National Bank to put the property in her name.
"That Anna Ramthun has not parted with any valuable consideration, nor change of position as a result of the conveyance of the bank to her at the instance of the defendant, Claus Mahl."
As a matter of taw, the court concluded:
"That the judgments described in the complaint and the findings of fact are a lien against lots six (6) and seven (7) . . . subordinate to the mortgage described in the complaint and referred to in the findings of fact and prior to the interest of any of the defendants in said real estate, but subject to whatever dower interest the wife of Claus Mahl may have in and to the same.
"That the plaintiff is entitled to an order by this court, decreeing that lots six (6) and seven (7) . . . be sold in accordance with the interest of said parties as provided in paragraph 1 of the conclusions of law."
Judgment was entered accordingly, from which the' defendants appeal.
Upon the merits the sole error assigned by the appellant is —
"That the court erred in adjudging that all the judgments mentioned in the complaint and which were docketed subsequent to the recording of the deed from Mahl to the First National Bank, and conveyed to the defendant, Anna Ramthun, were liens against such lands and established as such."
The assignment is based on the fact that Claus Mahl conveyed the lands prior to the docketing of the judgment.  As a result it is claimed that the judgments against Claus Mahl did not become liens because he had no interest in the land subject to a lien.  It is claimed that in any case Anna Ramthun was abona fide purchaser and protected as such by the recording act.
A consideration of the arguments made in support of the assignment and in opposition to it raised some questions in the mind of the court that did not seem to be sufficiently considered in the briefs.  In aid of the court additional briefs were requested of the parties upon a stated question.  At the request of the court, Ralph M. Hoyt, Esq., of the Milwaukee bar, furnished the court with a brief amicus curiae.  The question submitted was not intended to be a statement of the facts in this case but rather to direct attention of counsel to matters not dealt with in the principal briefs.  Counsel on both sides filed additional briefs.  Counsel for the defendants, in spite of explicit directions to the contrary, chose to modify the question and reargue the case.  Counsel amicus curiae, however, supplied the court with a complete analysis of the entire problem.  Counsel for the appellants was given an opportunity to reply to the brief amicus curiae.
The deed from Claus Mahl to the bank having been given to secure obligations of Claus Mahl, it was under the authorities *Page 419 
as between the parties and those having notice, a mortgage. Upon that proposition there is no disagreement.Brinkman v. Jones (1878), 44 Wis. 498; Schroeder v.Arcade Theater Co. (1921) 175 Wis. 79, 184 N.W. 542.
As between the grantor and the grantee and those having actual notice, the legal title remained in the grantor, and in case of default would have to be enforced like an ordinary mortgage.  Schroeder v. Arcade Theater Co., supra; Brinkmanv. Jones, supra.
However, the defendants argue that Anna Ramthun was abona fide purchaser and as such took good title under the recording act (sec. 235.49, Stats.).  This contention raises two questions:  First, Were the judgments when docketed a lien upon the interest of Claus Mahl in the lands in question? Second, Did Anna Ramthun have actual notice of the interest of Claus Mahl in the lands in question?
The docketing of a judgment is not notice at common law or under any statute of this state to anybody dealing with the judgment debtor.  Bartz v. Paff (1897), 95 Wis. 95,69 N.W. 297.
By the provisions of sec. 270.79 (1), Stats., —
"Every judgment when properly docketed . . . shall, for ten years from the date of the rendition thereof, be a lien on the real property in the county where docketed . . . of every person against whom it is rendered and docketed, which he has at the time of docketing or which he acquires thereafter within said ten years. . . ."
Under similar statutes it has been held that judgments are liens upon unrecorded as well as recorded title of the judgment debtor.  Macauley v. Smith (1892), 132 N.Y. 524,30 N.E. 997; Marston v. Williams (1890), 45 Minn. 116,47 N.W. 644; Emerson-Brantingham Implement Co. v. Cook
(1925), 165 Minn. 198, 206 N.W. 170.  See note to this case, 43 A.L.R. 44. *Page 420 
Sec. 235.51 of the statutes is as follows:
"235.51  When deed not defeated by defeasance.  When a deed purports to be an absolute conveyance in terms, but is made or intended to be made defeasible by force of a deed of defeasance or other instrument for that purpose, the original conveyance shall not be thereby defeated or affected as against any person other than the maker of the defeasance or his heirs or devisees or persons having actual notice thereof, unless the instrument of defeasance shall have been recorded in the office of the register of deeds of the county where the lands lie."
This statute does not in terms apply to the situation disclosed by the facts in this case.  The conveyance in this case was not "made defeasible by force of a deed of defeasance or other instrument for that purpose."  The title of the grantee was defeasible in this case if at all by reason of an oral understanding between the parties that the deed was given as security for the discharge of the grantor's obligations.  The statute does, however, declare a principle of law which should apply to a situation such as this, on the principle that the greater includes the lesser.  As the court said in Brinkman v.Jones, supra (p. 520):
"We can see no good reason why a person who has taken a defeasance in writing which makes an absolute deed a mortgage, should stand in a worse position than the man who makes an absolute deed, which, by a purely parol agreement, is proved to be a mortgage; yet in such case, as the section referred to does not and cannot apply, the right of the party claiming the estate against an absolute deed by a defeasance of a less degree of dignity in the law, would be protected against a subsequent grantee, upon proof of notice of his rights; and in that case, there being no statute on the subject, proof of knowledge of such facts as would put a prudent man upon inquiry, and render it fraudulent for him to purchase without making inquiry, would be sufficient."
Under any theory, whether under the statute or under the common law, the question in this case is whether Anna *Page 421 
Ramthun had actual notice of the state of the title of Claus Mahl.  The trial court found that she "knew or had knowledge of facts sufficient to put her on inquiry as to the interest of Claus Mahl in the property."  That knowledge, under the doctrine laid down in Brinkman v. Jones, supra, amounts to actual notice.  However, the defendants contend that the evidence does not sustain the finding.  The consideration for the transfer of the title to Anna Ramthun was an indebtedness owing by her father, Claus Mahl, to her.  She paid no consideration to the bank for the conveyance.  She could not help but know that she was receiving something from her father in satisfaction of the debt which he owed to her.  The only thing she received was the conveyance of the lands in question.  The only thing that she did not know was that judgments had been rendered against her father prior to the time of the conveyance of the land to her.  Waiving consideration of the fact that the consideration she gave was antecedent, she was in the position of a purchaser of the lands in question, the legal title to which was conveyed to her.  Being a purchaser of the lands she was bound to ascertain at her peril whether there were judgments against her father.  While the question has not been considered by this court it is held by the great weight of authority that the lien of a judgment is superior to all conveyances of and liens on the debtor's land which are made or accrue after the judgment lien has attached. See 34 C.J. p. 611, § 928, and cases cited in note 48.
While it is true that the conveyance was not made by Claus Mahl, it was a conveyance made by the bank at his direction and for his benefit.  Having received the lands in satisfaction of the debt owing her by her father, Anna Ramthun cannot say that she did not know her father had an interest in the lands.  The evidence amply sustains the finding of the trial court.
Under our statute, while the docketing of a judgment is not notice to those subsequently dealing with the judgment *Page 422 
debtor, the lien of a judgment attaches to the real property of the debtor at the time of the docketing.  Inasmuch as a subsequent conveyance by the judgment debtor does not defeat the lien, purchasers of lands must search the record for judgments against the debtor at their peril.  So here the defendant, Anna Ramthun, was acquiring an interest which belonged to her father, and while she had no notice of the docketing of the judgment which was a lien upon his interest in the land, she was under obligation to ascertain at her peril whether there were outstanding judgments.
In this case the trial court held that the lien of the judgments was subordinate to the mortgage given by Anna Ramthun to the Home Loan  Investment Company in the amount of $1,000, on the theory that the Home Loan  Investment Company, the holder of the mortgage, had no knowledge of facts which would indicate to them that deeds to the bank were only mortgages and therefore no actual notice.
The court also found that the mortgage owned by the Home Owners' Loan Corporation was subordinate to the liens of the judgments because the mortgagee had knowledge of facts sufficient to put it upon inquiry and therefore actual notice. No question is raised with respect to these holdings.  We state the facts simply to illustrate how the court applied the law in this case.
It is considered that the conclusions reached by the trial court were correct, and the judgment must be affirmed.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed, the respondents not to tax costs for the additional brief for the reason that it was not responsive to the question propounded by the court. *Page 423