Anderson v. Baxter

4 Or. 105
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 4 Or. 105 (Anderson v. Baxter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Baxter, 4 Or. 105 (Or. 1871).

Opinion

[107]*107By the Court,

Thayer, J.:

This is a suit by the appellant, James Anderson, as plaintiff, to foreclose a mortgage upon certain real property situated in the county of Marion. The complaint was filed on the — day of April, 1870. The respondent, T. J. Baxter, defendant in the Court below, demurred to the complaint on the grounds that the suit had not been commenced within the time limited by the Code. The Circuit Court overruled the demurrer, and the defendant appealed from the decision to this Court. The appeal was heard at the term of this Court held in the year 1870, and the decision of the Circuit Court upon the demurrer was reversed and the cause remanded to the Court below for further proceedings.

The case coming on to be heard in the Circuit Court upon the mandate of this Court filed there, judgment was given in favor of the defendant and against the plaintiff for the costs and disbursements, and the plaintiff, by leave of that Court, filed an amended complaint in the suit, to Avhich the defendant interposed a demurrer upon the same grounds as before. The Circuit Court, at a term thereof held in January, 1871, regarding the decision of this Court upon the former appeal as decisive of the question raised by the demurrer to the amended complaint, sustained the same and gave judgment for the defendant, from which the plaintiff brings this appeal.

The only question we are necessarily required to consider is, whether or not the amended complaint referred to presents a state of facts that takes the case out of the principles of law determined by this Court upon a former appeal.

But as no opinion was then written, it has been deemed advisable to give at this time the opinion of the Court upon the questions determined in this case at the former term as Avell as those now submitted for our consideration.

The plaintiff alleges in his complaint, in substance, that on the 14th day of October, 1857, one William H. Nordyke and wife sold and conveyed, by deed of that date, the real property in question to Nathan HoAve and Horace Howe, [108]*108Jr. That said Howes on the same day executed to said Nordyke a mortgage upon said property to secure eighteen hundred dollars of the purchase-money thereof, conditioned to be paid in two installments of nine hundred dollars each, in one and two years from date, with interest. That the mortgage contained a clause that until default by mortgagors in the performance of said condition, it should be lawful for them to retain the possession of the said property and to use and enjoy the same. That mortgagors wholly failed to pay the money or interest secured to be paid by the said mortgage, and abandoned the said mortgaged premises and went out of the (then) Territory (now State) of Oregon, and have continuously ever since remained out of said possession and absent from the State.

That after the default in the payment of said money, the said Nordyke, the mortgagee, entered and took peaceable possession of said premises under his said mortgage, and being so in possession thereof, he, on the 12th day of May, 1859, in consideration of twenty-two hundred dollars, sold and assigned the said mortgage to the plaintiff, which assignment was, at or about the day aforesaid, duly acknowledged and recorded; and the said mortgagee then and there delivered said mortgage, and the possession of the said premises, to said plaintiff, who then and there peaceably entered and has continuously ever since remained in the quiet and undisturbed possession thereof to the present time, and has received the rents and profits thereof, paid the taxes and other necessary expenses for repairs, and made valuable improvements thereon, an account of which was set forth in said complaint, in a bill of particulars, in which the mortgagors were credited for the use of the premises for each year, and were charged with the taxes'paid, and the expense of improvements.

The plaintiff also alleges, upon information and belief, that said Horace Howe, Jr., died out of the State about the year 1862, or 1863; that he left no will, and no widow or children, and that Horace Howe is the father, and the only sui’viving heir-at-law of the said Horace Howe, Jr.; that on or about the 11th day of March, 1870, said Nathan Howe, [109]*109and his wife, and the said Horace Howe, for the consideration of one hundred and fifty dollars, conveyed, by quit-claim deed, all their right, title and interest in the said premises, to said .defendant T. J. Baxter, who took, with full notice of plaintiff’s mortgage, possession and rights in the premises. The plaintiff also sets out in the complaint a copy of the mortgage; but it is not alleged, nor does it appear, that any personal obligation for the payment of the debt was given by the mortgagors, or .by .the defendant; nor is there any covenant in the mortgage for the payment of the sum intended thereby to be secured.

Plaintiff prays relief, that said account be examined, and after ascertaining the balance due upon the mortgage, that the said premises be decreed to be sold and said balance and the costs and disbursements of the suit be paid out of the proceeds.

The question raised by the demurrer, is as to whether the suit has been commenced within the time limited by the Code of Civil Procedure.

Section 378 of the Civil Code provides that a suit shall be commenced within the time limited to commence an action, as provided in title second, chapter one, of the Code, and further provides, “That a suit for the determination of any right or claim to, or interest in real property shall be deemed within the limitation provided for actions for the recovery of the possession of real property.”

Section four, title second of chapter one of the Code, provides that actions for the recovery of real property, or for the recovery of the possession thereof, shall be commenced within twenty years. And subdivision two of section five, title second, chapter one, provides that actions upon sealed instruments shall be commenced within ten years. The case at bar falls within these provisions of the statute, and it will readily be observed that if it is a “suit for the determination of any particular right or claim to, or interest in real property,” the time is limited to twenty years. But if it is a suit upon a sealed instrument, and not for the determination of any right or claim to, or interest in real property, then it is limited to ten years. [110]*110Formerly, a mortgage of real property was regarded as a conveyance of the legal title, subject, of course, to be defeated by the performance of a condition, and this doctrine still prevails to some extent. Courts of equity, however, have always regarded a mortgage as a mere security for a debt, and the foreclosure-thereof as a proceeding to satisfy the debt secured thereby; and Courts of law'as well as Courts of equity, in many of the States, have taken the same view; that is, that a mortgage was a mere lien or pledge, and that the general title to the mortgaged property was in the mortgagor. In the language of one of the authorities, “The mortgagee has neither a jus in re nor ad rem, but a specific lien, similar in character to a general lien created by a judgment upon the land of the judgment-debtor.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hanns v. Hanns
423 P.2d 499 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1967)
Haggerty v. Nobles
419 P.2d 9 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1966)
Cabell v. Fed. Land Bank of Spokane
144 P.2d 297 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1943)
Evans v. Finley
111 P.2d 833 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1941)
Investors Syndicate v. Smith
105 F.2d 611 (Ninth Circuit, 1939)
Carklin v. Grigsby
9 Alaska 378 (D. Alaska, 1938)
Coakley v. Phelan
1935 OK 918 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1935)
Libel v. Pierce
31 P.2d 1106 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1934)
Schleef v. Purdy
214 P. 137 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1923)
Hurlburt v. Chrisman
197 P. 261 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1921)
Aya v. Morson
178 P. 207 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1919)
State Land Board v. Lee
165 P. 372 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1917)
Higgs v. McDuffie
157 P. 794 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1916)
Kaiser v. Idleman
108 P. 193 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1910)
Noble v. Watkins
87 P. 771 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1906)
Kaston v. Storey
80 P. 217 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1905)
Colonial & United States Mortgage Co. v. Northwest Thresher Co.
70 L.R.A. 814 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1905)
Wells v. Scanlan
102 N.W. 571 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1905)
George v. Butler
57 L.R.A. 396 (Washington Supreme Court, 1901)
Dekum v. Multnomah County
63 P. 496 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Or. 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-baxter-or-1871.