Central State Bank v. Herrick

240 N.W. 242, 214 Iowa 379
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 12, 1932
DocketNo. 41013.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 240 N.W. 242 (Central State Bank v. Herrick) 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
Central State Bank v. Herrick, 240 N.W. 242, 214 Iowa 379 (iowa 1932).

Opinion

Kindig, J.

On and before December 1, 1915, the trustees of the Frederick M. Hubbell Estate owned certain real estate in Des Moines described as Lot 4, Block 1, Allen’s Addition. James A. McCoy, Sr., and James A. McCoy, Jr., on December 1, obtained from the Hubbell trustees a lease covering the real estate for the period of seventy years and one month. The lessees, McCoys, assigned the lease to another, and that assignee again assigned the same. Other assignments were made until May 1, 1916, when the lease through assignment came into the possession of the Accessory Sales Company. Thereafter the Accessory Sales Company assigned the lease to John A. Benson and W. C. Jaeger. Benson and Jaeger executed forty bonds each in the denomination of $500, and secured the same by a trust deed on the leasehold. This trust deed named the Central Trust Company of Des Moines as trustee.

Then on May 19, 1924, Benson and Jaeger again assigned the lease to Thomas W. Doll who assumed the bonds and the covenants named in the trust deed. Following that transaction, Doll, on February 27, 1926, assigned the lease to the defendant-appellant, O. P. Herrick. That assignment specifically provided that the transfer was “subject to the trust deed.” It appears, however, that the appellant did not expressly assume the obligations of the trust deed.

The Central Trust Company, on November 13, 1926, became insolvent and resigned its position as trustee, and the plaintiff *381 appellee, the Central State Bank, was then appointed successor trustee under the trust deed above named. Central State Bank v. Benson, 209 Iowa 1176. Accordingly, on November 29 thereafter, the original trustee, the Central Trust Company, assigned all its rights under the trust deed to the new trustee, the Central State Bank. So, on September 27, 1928, the appellee, as plaintiff, commenced an action to foreclose the trust deed, and judgment was granted accordingly. See Central State Bank v. Benson (209 Iowa 1176), supra. While the petition in foreclosure in the ease above named asked for an accounting' of the rents, taxes, etc., yet the district court expressly refused to pass thereon, and in its judgment reserved the issue in the following language: “The prayer for an accounting is denied at this time, and the court makes no finding thereon, but (it) may be taken up later.”

O. P. Herrick, the appellant, paid the rentals of $150 per month on the leased property to September 1, 1928, but did not pay rental thereafter, although he remained in possession of the premises until December 10, 1928. Such rentals included taxes and special assessments. All such taxes and special assessments were paid by the appellant until the year 1928, when the same became delinquent in the sum of $1,930.84. A provision of the lease is to the effect that when taxes and assessments become delinquent “such amounts and interest shall be admitted and taken and are hereby declared to be so much additional and further rent for the above demised premises. ’ ’

After the aforesaid delinquency, the lessors, trustees of the Frederick M. Hubbell Estate, paid the taxes and interest on the first day of December, 1928. Then, on December 22 of that year the trustees of the Frederick M. Hubbell Estate assigned its claim for the said rent and taxes to the appellee under an instrument containing, among others, the following recitation:

“Now, therefore, the undersigned (the trustees of the Frederick M. Hubbell Estate) hereby acknowledge receipt of said sums (the rents, taxes, etc.) from the said Central State Bank, Trustee (appellee), and hereby assign and transfer to said Central State Bank, Trustee, any and all claims, demands and causes of action, which it now has or which it previously had, for said sums arising under said lease against the original *382 lessees, James A. McCoy, Sr., and James A. McCoy, Jr., and any and all subsequent assignees or corporations or persons claiming or assuming to be such, to wit: Accessory Sales Company, John A. Benson, W. C. Jaeger, Thomas W. Doll, and/or O. P. Herrick and/or the person in possession, 0. P. Herrick.”

Hence, on December 28., 1928, the present action was commenced by the appellee to recover the aforesaid rents and taxes ' and on December 30, 1930, a judgment was entered against appellant in appellee’s favor for the sum of $2,440.07. From this judgment the appellant appeals.

I. At the outset, it is argued by appellant that the present controversy was fully adjudicated and determined by the aforesaid foreclosure proceeding. See Central State Bank v. Benson (209 Iowa 1176), supra.

While it is true that the petition in the foreclosure proceeding sought to recover for .the rents, etc., yet the case ivas not fully tried on that issue. When the foreclosure suit was commenced, the appellee in this case had not yet acquired the rents, taxes, etc., from the trustees of the Hubbell Estate. The foreclosure action was started on September 27, 1928, but the rents and taxes were not assigned to appellee' by the trustees of the Hubbell Estate until December 22, 1928. Moreover the district court expressly excluded the present issue from the foreclosure proceeding. In effect the district court dismissed the portion of the petition in the foreclosure action relating to the rents and taxes now involved in the present controversy. Obviously, then, the issues now under consideration were not involved, and therefore not determined in the foreclosure suit. Johnson v. Smith, 210 Iowa 591; Tutt v. Smith, 201 Iowa 107; Ford v. Dilley, 174 Iowa 243; Christie v. Iowa Life Insurance Company, 111 Iowa 177; Hart v. Nonpareil Printing & Publishing Co., 109 Iowa 82.

II. Even though the matter has not been adjudicated, it is further contended by the appellant that appellee, through the aforesaid transaction with the trustees of the Hubbell Estate, simply advanced the payment of the taxes under the trust deed. So appellant insists the only remedy to recover therefor is a suit under the mortgage which was previously foreclosed. All the moneys used by appellee with which to buy from the trustees of the Hubbell Estate the claim for the rents and taxes, *383 appellant asserts, were advanced by tbe bondholders under the trust deed.

Wherefore, appellant concludes, as before suggested, that the money having been advanced by the appellee as trustee under the trust deed, the only remedy now afforded to obtain reimbursement is through the foreclosure of the trust deed. This action is at law and appellant maintains that the same cannot legally be separated from the foreclosure suit previously tried.

To begin with, the trial court was justified under the record in finding that the bondholders advanced the aforesaid moneys to the appellee for the purpose of purchasing said claim for the rents and taxes. Unless that purchase was to be made, the bondholders would not have thus advanced their money to the trustee. It was not the intention of the bondholders to advance such money to the trustee in order that the latter might pay the rents and taxes and collect therefor under the trust deed in the foreclosure proceedings; but rather it was the purpose of such bondholders, when paying the money to the trustee, that the latter should, upon payment thereof to the lessors, receive from them an assignment quite independent of the trust deed.

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Bluebook (online)
240 N.W. 242, 214 Iowa 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-state-bank-v-herrick-iowa-1932.