Clapp v. Hadley

39 N.E. 504, 141 Ind. 28, 1895 Ind. LEXIS 239
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1895
DocketNo. 17,168
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 39 N.E. 504 (Clapp v. Hadley) 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
Clapp v. Hadley, 39 N.E. 504, 141 Ind. 28, 1895 Ind. LEXIS 239 (Ind. 1895).

Opinion

Hackney, J.

The appellee executed two mortgages of a tract of land in Noble county, one in the jmar 1871 and the other in the year 1886. These mortgages were held by the appellant, one as mortgagee and the other as assignee, when, on the 23d day of May, 1893, he procured separate decrees foreclosing them. Neither decree, so far as appellant’s allegations disclose, made any reference to the other or any order concerning the distribution of the surplus arising from sales upon such decrees.

On the 24th day of June, 1893, the appellant purchased under the junior mortgage decree for the full [29]*29amount- of the principal, interest and costs, and, upon payment of the costs only, he secured a receipt for the amount of his bid and a certificate of purchase.

Later, and on the 1st day of July, 1893, at a sale upon the senior mortgage decree, the appellant became the purchaser of said lands for the sum of $1,221.3 in excess of the principal, interest and costs of said decree. This surplus Hadley sued to recover, and the appellant intervened by cross-complaint, setting up the foregoing facts and alleging the insolvency of Hadley and that the' lands were worth less than the sum of the two mortgages. The court sustained a demurrer to said cross-complaint and that ruling presents the only question necessary to our decision.

It will be observed that the legal title to the mortgaged property was in Hadley, and, if the transactions stated constituted a satisfaction of the liens involved in the mortgages, decrees, and purchases, there would be little doubt that the appellee was entitled to the surplus. It is so provided by statute. R. S. 1894, section 1118, R. S. 1881, section 1104; Firestone v. State, ex rel., 100 Ind. 226.

As to the senior mortgage and decree there is no question but that they were satisfied so far as they created any liability against the appellee, and the sale under' that decree divested all interest of the appellee in the property excepting the right of redemption and the possible right to the surplus. Treating the appellant’s rights under the two mortgages, decrees, and sales as distinct each from the other, and as if held by different persons, there is and can be no question but that the sale under the senior decree cut off and thwarted every right of the purchaser under the junior decree, so far as the land was concerned, save only the possible right of redemption. As to these rights of redemption, we are not con[30]*30cerned, but by the concession of these considerations we have but the remaining inquiry as to the extent of interest in or lien upon the surplus fund, if any, which the holder of the junior certificate had as against the appellee. Was the purchase under the junior decree effective to satisfy the appellee’s debt secured by the junior mortgage and bring him within the statutory provision as to the surplus? Certainly not, if we regard the purchase under the senior decree as extinguishing any claim under the junior purchase which could ripen into title.

To hold the debt satisfied is to conclude that the land, worth less than the amount of the combined debt, has sold for a sum sufficient to satisfy the whole debt with $1,221.32 in addition, or, that the appellee has paid the combined debts with property not to exceed the value of such debts, and that he has $1,221.32 overplus. Looking to the appellant’s situation to learn if his credits have been discharged, we find that the senior decree is satisfied, and that instead of having received property or interest that may ripen into property to be held in satisfaction of the junior mortgage, he has an empty and fruitless certificate of purchase, made so by the satisfaction of the senior debt. Nor can it be said that the appellant, having bid in the property upon the junior decree, and receiving a certificate of purchase, thereby extinguished all liens theretofore existing by virtue of his mortgage and decree.

In the recent and well considered case of Robertson v. Van Cleave, 129 Ind. 217, it was held that the holder of a certificate of purchase under a junior lien, was not an owner, but that he was a lienor with the judgment, under which he purchased as the basis of his lien. See, also, Jewitt v. Tomlinson, 137 Ind. 326.

We conclude, therefore, that appellant’s junior lien [31]*31was not extinguished, as against the appellee, though it was required to surrender priority to the senior decree and purchase. After this surrender of priority, to what, if anything, did the lien attach? If there had been other and still younger liens, their holders could not, in good conscience, have asked to supersede the appellant’s junior lien in the distribution of the surplus arising from the sale under the senior lien. Nor would it appear that the appellee, whose debt remains unpaid, could, with better conscience, ask to take the fund, that which was the result of the property mortgaged for the payment of that debt. We answer, therefore, that equity must attach that lien to the surplus fund, and that for the enforcement of the lien the fund is the property mortgaged.

In Habersham v. Bond, Ga. Dec., part 2, 46, it was held that the lien of a junior mortgage is destroyed by a sale under the foreclosure of an elder one, but that the junior mortgagee has an equitable claim to the surplus arising from the sale, after satisfying the elder mortgage.

In Hart v. Wingart, 83 Ill. 282; the purchaser under a junior lien was held to' be .entitled to the surplus fund arising from a sale in satisfaction of the senior lien.

In West v. Shryer, 29 Ind. 624, it was held that a junior mortgage was entitled to participate in the surplus arising from the satisfaction of a senior mortgage, where such surplus was claimed by attaching creditors whose liens were, in point of time, subsequent, to that of the junior mortgage. The lien was thus carried to the surplus when the property had been taken out of the reach of the junior lien by applying it to the senior lien.

If an heir mortgage his interest in the land inherited, and the land is sold by the administrator for payment of the estate’s debts, the lien of the.mortgage is not defeated [32]*32but is transferred to the balance of the fund after paying such debts. Ball, Admr., v. Green, 90 Ind. 75. See, also, Koons, Admr., v. Mellett, 121 Ind. 585, where it is held that a judgment against a devisee of lands, after-wards sold to pay debts, follows the proceeds of the sale and binds such proceeds to the same extent that it bound the land. To the same effect is Ballenger v. Drook, 101 Ind. 172.

The same principle has been applied where the mortgaged real estate has been diverted from the lien by condemnation proceedings and equity has transferred the lien to the fund awarded as damages. Sherwood, Admr., v. City of Lafayette, 109 Ind. 411.

If, instead of selling the entire property upon the senior decree, a fractional part of it had been sold for a sum sufficient to pay the senior debt, there could then be no doubt that the remaining property would have continued subject to the junior purchase, with no interest to the appellee therein excepting in the right of redemption.

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Related

Thomas v. O'connell's Estate
44 N.E.2d 516 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1942)
Luken v. Fickle
84 N.E. 561 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1908)
Taylor v. McGrew
64 N.E. 651 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1902)
White v. Shirk
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State ex rel. Hadley v. Clapp
46 N.E. 533 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1897)

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Bluebook (online)
39 N.E. 504, 141 Ind. 28, 1895 Ind. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clapp-v-hadley-ind-1895.