Andrew v. Home Savings Bank

246 N.W. 48, 215 Iowa 401
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 13, 1932
DocketNo. 41580.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 246 N.W. 48 (Andrew v. Home Savings Bank) 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
Andrew v. Home Savings Bank, 246 N.W. 48, 215 Iowa 401 (iowa 1932).

Opinion

Kindig, J.

— This litigation involves a dispute over the 1930 rents on certain real estate in Crawford County. The dispute is between the appellee, L. A. Andrew, Superintendent of Banking of the State of Iowa, as the receiver of the Kiron Home Savings Bank, on the one hand, and, on the other, the appellants Union Savings Bank & Trust Company, of Davenport, Iowa, executor of the estate of Hattie M. DeLescaille, and M. L. Runge, receiver under a real estate mortgage.

On May 19, 1929, L. A. Andrew, the State Superintendent of Banking, was appointed receiver for the defunct Home Savings Bank, of Kiron, Iowa. Among the assets of the insolvent Home Savings Bank thus taken over by the Superintendent of Banking was the farm in question. When this farm came into the hands of the Superintendent of Banking, it was encumbered by a first mortgage of $16,000 held by Hattie M. DeLescaille. That mortgage pledged to the mortgagee, Hattie M. DeLescaille, the rents, issues, and profits of the real estate and provided for a receiver, in case the mortgage was foreclosed, for the purpose of collecting such rents, issues, and profits.

Thereafter, on January 22, 1930, the Superintendent of Bank *403 ing, as the bank receiver, through his examiner in charge, rented the land for the year commencing March 1, 1930, to a tenant named Axel Skarin. The rental named in the lease was $1,000, payable in advance. Accordingly, the tenant paid the Superintendent of Banking $1,000 as rental for the farm on January 22, 1930. Thereupon, the tenant took possession of the land and retained such possession during the entire rental period of one year. After the term of the lease had commenced, Hattie M. DeLescaille, the holder of the $16,-000 real estate mortgage, started an action on March 28, 1930, to foreclose such mortgage. In her petition filed in that action, Hattie M. DeLescaille asked for the appointment of a receiver to collect the rents, issues, and profits, as provided in the real estate mortgage. Then, on May 31, 1930, a decree was entered in the foreclosure action foreclosing the mortgage, but continuing .the receivership proceedings thereunder.

A foreclosure sale was held thereafter on July 7, 1930, and the mortgaged real estate duly sold thereunder. At this sale, however, the real estate did not sell for enough to satisfy the judgment entered in the foreclosure proceedings. As a matter of fact, the deficiency was $1,616.13. Consequently, in accordance with the previous order of continuance, Hattie M. DeLescaille, the plaintiff in the foreclosure proceedings, brought on for hearing her application for the appointment of a receiver to collect the rents, issues, and profits for the years 1930 and 1931, or until the period of redemption expired.

During these proceedings, Hattie M. DeLescaille died, and the appellant Union Savings Bank & Trust Company, of Davenport, was duly appointed the executor of her estate. So the executor, in due time, was substituted as the party plaintiff in the proceedings. Following the hearing in the receivership proceedings under the mortgage, the appellant M. L. Runge, on September 13, 1930, was appointed receiver. Although the appellant Runge was thus appointed receiver, he did not take possession of the mortgaged premises or oust the tenant placed thereon by the Superintendent of Banking. Moreover, the appellant Runge, as receiver under the mortgage, did not make a new lease with the tenant on the aforesaid land for the year 1930. By making this suggestion, we do not decide or indicate that Runge had the power to make such lease.

Previous to the appointment of Runge as receiver under thb mortgage, the appellant Union Savings Bank & Trust Company, as executor of the Hattie M. DeLescaille estate, on August 12, 1930, *404 filed its petition in the receivership proceedings of the Home Savings Bank asking that the Superintendent of Banking account for and turn over to the said appellant the $1,000 in rent collected in advance, as before explained. Subsequent to the appointment of Runge as receiver under the mortgage, he, as such trust officer, joined with the aforesaid appellant executor in making a similar demand on the Superintendent of Banking for said rent. Thereby both appellants, in effect, confirmed the lease made by the Superintendent of Banking in the manner and way aforesaid.

Upon the hearing in the district court thereafter, that tribunal denied the appellant’s claim and allowed the appellee Superintendent of Banking to retain the rents. Therefore, the appellants appeal.

It is claimed by. the appellants that the judgment of the district court should be reversed for the following reasons: First, because the Superintendent of Banking, through his examiner in charge, when collecting the rent in advance, as before explained, wrongfully deprived the appellants thereof; and, second, because the Superintendent of Banking, through his examiner in charge, lulled the holder of the real estate mortgage to sleep by representations that an attempt was being made to sell the land, and thereby induced her not to commence an earlier foreclosure action.

I. Apparently the money collected as rental in advance by the Superintendent of Banking through his examiner in charge still remains as part of the assets of the bank receivership proceedings. Consequently, the appellants argue that they are entitled to the same because the Superintendent of Banking, through his examiner in charge, wrongfully made the collection in advance, and thereby wrongfully deprived the real estate mortgagee thereof. When collecting the rent in advance, it is said by the appellants that the Superintendent of Banking knew that he would not continue paying either interest or principal on the aforesaid real estate mortgage. So, the appellants conclude that the Superintendent of Banking deliberately collected the rent in advance with the intention of making no further payments on the mortgage indebtedness. The Home Savings Bank, of Kiron, was not obligated personally on the real estate mortgage. That banking institution, previous to the bank receivership proceedings, had taken over the land subject to the real estate mortgage. Hence the Superintendent of Banking as such was not personally obligated to pay the mortgage.

*405 At this juncture, it is important to understand that the Superintendent of Banking, through his examiner in charge, made the aforesaid lease before the action to foreclose the real estate mortgage was commenced. Then at the time the lease was made, the mortgagee in the real estate mortgage had no lien on or an existing, as distinguished from the prospective, right to the rents, issues, and profits from the real estate. As has been said before many times, the clause in the real estate mortgage under consideration pledging the rents, issues, and profits does not create a lien thereon prior to the foreclosure proceedings, wherein a receiver is asked to collect such rents and profits. Lynch v. Donahoe, 205 Iowa 537.

“We have held definitely that the right of a mortgagee under the receivership proviso of his mortgage to appropriate to the payment of his debt the rents and profits of the mortgaged land, is a right distinct from his judgment lien upon the land itself and is ‘additional’ to such lien.” Union Central Life Insurance Co. v. Eggers, 212 Iowa 1355 (local citation 1363.)

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Bluebook (online)
246 N.W. 48, 215 Iowa 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrew-v-home-savings-bank-iowa-1932.