Citizens State Bank v. Julian

55 N.E. 1007, 153 Ind. 655, 1899 Ind. LEXIS 95
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 1899
DocketNo. 18,258
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 55 N.E. 1007 (Citizens State Bank v. Julian) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens State Bank v. Julian, 55 N.E. 1007, 153 Ind. 655, 1899 Ind. LEXIS 95 (Ind. 1899).

Opinions

Jordan, C. J.

Appellant commenced this action in the Jay Circuit Court on June 1, 1893. The venue thereof was subsequently changed to the Delaware Circuit Court. The purpose of the suit was to recover a personal judgment against Jacob B. Julian upon certain promissory notes executed by him, and to obtain the foreclosure of a mortgage [657]*657on certain lands in Jay county, Indiana, executed to secure the payment of said notes.

The plaintiff in its complaint also set up and demanded the right to redeem the mortgaged premises from the lien of a senior mortgage. All of the defendants, except Jacob B. Julian, Amanda T. "Whitson, and The Elm Peeler Oil Company, filed disclaimers. The last two named defendants filed answers to the complaint. On the issues joined, there was a trial by the court and a special finding of facts, and conclusions of law in favor of these two defendants. A personal judgment was rendered in favor of appellant against Julian on the notes for $8,950. The right of appellant to foreclose its mortgage, or to redeem from the lien of the senior mortgage, was denied by the court.

The errors assigned are in respect to the conclusions of law on the facts found, and upon the action of the court in denying appellant’s motion for a new trial. The material facts as found are substantially as follows: On July 27, 1876, Jacob B. Julian was the' owner in fee simple of the undivided one-half of eighty acres of land situated in Jay county, Indiana. On that day he executed to one George H. Bone-brake three promissory notes, payable in bank, each for $1,000, due in three, nine, and fifteen months respectively after date, bearing interest .at ten per cent, per annum. On the same day Julian and wife, to secure the payment of these notes, executed to Bonebrake the mortgage in suit upon his interest in the aforesaid eighty acres of land. This mortgage was duly recorded, within the time provided by law, in the recorder’s office of Jay county, Indiana. On July 29, 1876, for a valuable consideration, Bonebrake sold and assigned these mortgage notes by indorsement to the appellant, the Citizens State Bank of Noblesville. There was no assignment of the mortgage by Bonebrake to appellant other +han that which resulted from the assignment of the notes secured thereby. No record of any kind was ever made of [658]*658such indorsement upon any of the records in the recorder’s office of J ay county, Indiana, nor was any assignment of said mortgage ever recorded in the latter office. On January 11, 1877, one William T. Mae'y sold and assigned to Calvin W. Diggs certain notes secured by a prior and duly recorded mortgage on the lands in question executed in 1874, which mortgage was a valid lien on the lands in controversy at the time Julian became the owner thereof. On March 18, 1877, Diggs, as the holder of said senior mortgage and the indebtedness secured thereby, instituted an action in the J ay Circuit Court to recover a judgment on his said notes and to foreclose the mortgage securing them. To this action Bone-brake was made a party defendant, as a junior mortgagee, but appellant was not made a party to that action, and had no notice of its pendency. In that action, Diggs recovered a judgment on his notes and a decree foreclosiug his mortgage and ordering the sale of the mortgaged premises in satisfaction of the judgment recovered. On April 7, 1877, the land was sold by the sheriff under this decree to Diggs for the sum of $1,150.72. Diggs, at the time he purchased at the sheriff’s sale, had no knowledge or notice that Bonebrake had assigned the note, secured by the junior mortgage, to appellant. After the expiration of the year allowed for redemption, Diggs, it seems, received a sheriff’s deed conveying the land to him under said sale. The latter held this real estate until May 24, 1881, when he sold and conveyed it by warranty deed to James Moorman for a valuable consideration. The latter, at the time of his purchase of the land from Diggs, had no notice of the assignment, in the manner stated, of the Julian mortgage by Bonebrake to appellant. Moorman, after holding the land for several years, died the owner thereof, and his last will and testament was on the 4th day of October, 1888, duly probated in the Randolph Circuit Court. By his said will, Moorman devised to certain devisees, including the heirs of Nancy Thomas, one of her heirs being the appellee Amanda T. Whitson, all of his lands [659]*659situated in Wayne and Jay counties, Indiana, embracing the real estate in controversy. After tbe will of James Moor-man was probated, a partition suit was instituted in March, 1889, by the devisees of the said Moorman, and partition of the real estate so devised by him was ordered and a part thereof was set off jointly to certain ones of his devisees, including the appellee Amanda T. Whitson, and the land now in controversy was embraced in and set off in said partition. This partition was duly confirmed by the court. After-wards, in the Wayne Circuit Court in September, 1889, proceedings to partition the land, which had been previously set off in the Randolph Circuit Court to certain devisees of said Moorman, including the appellee Amanda T. Whitson, were instituted, to which all of the persons interested in the lands sought to be partitioned were made parties. The court in this latter action awarded partition of said lands among the parties, and the commissioners appointed by the court 3et off and assigned in severalty to the appellee Amanda T. Whitson, as her moiety of the lands embraced in said partition proceedings, the real estate which is now involved in' this action. This partition was duly confirmed by the Wayne Circuit Court.

The first and second conclusions of law upon the facts found by the court are to the effect that Calvin W. Diggs, James Moorman, and the appellee, Amanda T. Whitson, were innocent purchasers of the real estate described in the complaint, and that plaintiff was not entitled to foreclose its mortgage against said lands, and that the latter are not liable to the said mortgage lien.

There are but two principal questions involved in this appeal: (1) Was appellant, as the assignee of the mortgage notes from Bonebrake, required to enter of record an assignment of such mortgage after the taking effect of the act of the legislature which was in force on the 2nd day of July, 1877? (2) If the above question be answered in the affirmative, is the appellee, Amanda T. Whitson, under [660]*660the facts, entitled to he protected against appellant’s mortgage as a good faith holder or owner of the lands in controversy?

The act of 1877, requiring the assignment of mortgages to be recorded, was approved March 6th of that year and went into effect, as previously stated, on July 2nd, following. The provisions of that statute are embraced in §§1093, 1094 R. S. 1881, and Horner 1897, §§1107, 1108 Burns 1894. These sections are as follows:

“§1107. Any mortgage of record, or any part thereof,, may be assigned by the mortgagee, or any assignee thereof, either by an assignment entered on the margin of such record, signed by the person making the assignment and attested by the recorder, or by a separate instrument executed and acknowledged before any person authorized to take acknowledgments, and recorded on such margin, or in the mortgage records of the county, in which case such assignment shall be noted in such margin by the recorder, by reference to the book and page where such assignment is recorded. And after such entry is made of record, the mortgagor and all other persons shall be bound thereby, and the same shall be deemed a public record.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 N.E. 1007, 153 Ind. 655, 1899 Ind. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-state-bank-v-julian-ind-1899.