Banning v. Sabin

48 N.W. 8, 45 Minn. 431, 1891 Minn. LEXIS 183
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 17, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 48 N.W. 8 (Banning v. Sabin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Banning v. Sabin, 48 N.W. 8, 45 Minn. 431, 1891 Minn. LEXIS 183 (Mich. 1891).

Opinion

Dickinson, J.1

The case, as presented on a former appeal in this action, is reported in 41 Minn. 477, (43 N. W. Rep. 329.) Upon the new trial which followed our decision on that appeal the findings of the court were in favor of the plaintiff. After the denial of a motion for a new trial, judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff for the recovery of the land which is the subject of the action, and declaring that the defendant had no estate, right, or lien in it. This is an appeal by the defendant from that judgment. A summary of the facts may be here stated:

In 1853, Fullerton, the owner of the land, mortgaged it to Hall to secure the payment of a debt of $1,000. The defendant’s claim of title is through the foreclosure of this mortgage, which was by action commenced in November, 1857. The particular circumstances connected with the prosecution of that action to judgment and sale are set forth in our opinion on the former appeal, and need not be here repeated. In 1854 the title of Fullerton was conveyed by deed to Baker. In 1855 a judgment for the recovery of money was rendered and docketed against Baker. The plaintiff claims to have acquired title by a sale of the land on execution under this judgment, which sale was made July 16, 1857. On that execution sale Washburne became the purchaser. In 1856, after the docketing of the judgment against Baker, the latter conveyed an undivided half of the land to Nelson, and July 12, 1858, four days prior to the expiration of the period for redemption from the execution sale, Baker conveyed the other undivided half to Armstrong, who thus became a tenant in com[433]*433mon with Nelson in the ownership-of the land, subject to the 'senior lien of the Hall mortgage, (the action to foreclose which was then pending,) and subject to the rights of Washburne as purchaser at the execution sale, the time to redeem from which was about to expire. All the persons whose joinder as parties was necessary to a complete foreclosure of the mortgage, including Baker, Nelson, and Washburne, were made parties' when the action was commenced. Arm'-strong’s interest in the property having been acquired during the pendency of the action, it was not necessary that he be made a party in order to render a foreclosure completely effectual. ’ At some time between the time of the purchase by Armstrong of the undivided half of the property (July 12, 1858) and July 20, 1858, Washburne assigned to Armstrong the sheriff’s certificate of execution sale. The-court did not find any more-particularly than is here stated as to the. time of this assignment. On the day last-named, the period for redemption from the execution sale having expired, the sheriff executed to Armstrong his official deed of conveyance. By subsequent mesne conveyances from Armstrong the plaintiff has acquired an undivided half of whatever title Armstrong may have had. The stipulation for a discontinuance of the foreclosure action, as to Washburne, was subsequent to the events just referred to. The judgment in the action was rendered in July, 1859, and the foreclosure sale thereunder was in October, 1859, the mortgagee Hall being the purchaser. There was no redemption, and whatever title Hall acquired, to the land here in controversy, which is a part of the mortgaged premises, was conveyed to the defendant in 1878; and in May, 1879, he went into actual possession, and ever since has remained in possession. On the former appeal it was held that the judgment was not intended to be, and was not in form or in fact, a judgment against Washburne, foreclosing his right of redemption. The case as now presented does not differ from that upon which our former decision was rendered in any particular which can alter the conclusion as to the nature or effect of the judgment in the foreclosure action. While the circumstances now presented suggest, as a reason for the stipulation to discontinue as to Washburne, the probability that it was supposed that the transaction with Armstrong constituted a redemption from the.execution [434]*434sale, that has no bearing upon the point as to whether the judgment was effectual as to Washburne or his assigns. Upon that point the views expressed in our former decision are referred to, but need not be here restated. Indeed, we do not understand that the correctness of the decision is here directly questioned.

1. It is strenuously urged by the appellant that Washburne and those claiming under him are estopped to deny that the effect of the sale pursuant to the judgment was to confer a complete title upon the purchaser, discharged of any right of redemption in Washburne or. those in privity with him. It is said, in support of this proposition, that the failure to enter judgment against Washburne was an irregularity; that the court had jurisdiction, Washburne being a party, and, the judgment and sale not being void, the delay, so long continued, to call in question its validity, precludes- its being done now. This is fallacious, and proceeds upon an erroneous assumption as to the scope and legal effect of the judgment and of the sale thereunder. There was no adjudication as to Washburne. While he was a party to the action, the judgment was of no more effect to foreclose his right to redeem than it would have been if the judgment had declared and determined the rights of the other defendants, but had in express terms excepted Washburne from its operation. It left unadjudieated whatever rights he may have had as really as though the action had been formally dismissed as to him before, judgment, or as though he had never been joined as a party. The judgment and sale were nevertheless effectual to foreclose the right of redemption of the other defendants, and to transfer the title to the purchaser, subject to the right of redemption still remaining in. Washburne or his assigns, if that was not in any other manner terminated. Martin v. Fridley, 23 Minn. 13; 2 Jones, Mortg. § 1395. It is hardly necessary to say that the sale in accordance with the judgment is referable to the judgment, and is to be deemed to have been a sale of the land subject to and not free from any lien or. right of redemption remaining in Washburne or his assigns. As'the judgment was not a judgment against him, and as the sale was subject to his rights, whatever they may have been, the doctrine of estoppel has no application. Washburne and his successors are [435]*435surely not estopped by the judgment and sale to claim that the proper legal effect shall be ascribed to them.

2. It is contended by the appellant that the payment by Armstrong to Washburne, and the assignment by the latter to the former, must be deemed to have been, in legal effect, a redemption from the execution sale, and therefore that the execution sale did not ripen into a title in Armstrong, under whom the plaintiff claims; but at this point the appellant is confronted with the obstacle that the facts as found by the court do not necessarily lead to this conclusion. The transaction was not in form, nor in necessary legal effect, without regard to the intention of the parties, a redemption; and the court does not find either that it occurred during the time when a redemption might be made or that the parties participating intended thereby to redeem. If, in fact, the payment by Armstrong to Washburne and the assignment of his sheriff’s certificate by the latter were not until after the time to redeem had expired, then by that event the title of Washburne had become absolute, subject .only to the Hall mortgage, and that of both Nelson and Armstrong had been divested.

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Bluebook (online)
48 N.W. 8, 45 Minn. 431, 1891 Minn. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/banning-v-sabin-minn-1891.