Davis v. Spaulding
This text of 36 Iowa 610 (Davis v. Spaulding) 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.
Opinion
The statute providing for redemption of real estate sold on foreclosure of mortgage was passed April 2, 1860, and took effect April 13, and is as follows :
“ That, in all cases when judgments or decrees are rendered [612]*612by any of tbe courts of this State upon a foreclosure of mortgages on real estate, tbe defendant’s judgment creditors, and other creditors having liens on mortgaged premises, shall, in case of tbe sale of tbe mortgaged premises on execution, have tbe same time to redeem, and tbe same rights to redemption as in cases of sales on ordinary judgments at law, as provided for in chapter 110 of the Code, and all acts inconsistent with tbis act are hereby repealed.” Rev., p. 873.
It bad recently been held, in tbe case of Kramer v. Rebman, 9 Iowa, 114, that the provisions of chapter 110 of tbe Code of 1851 were not applicable to a sale of lands, under tbe .foreclosure of a mortgage, and that in such case there could be no redemption. It was, doubtless, to remedy this defect, and to place tbe sale of lands under a foreclosure, upon exactly tbe same footing as sales under general executions, that chapter 103 of the Laws of the Eighth General Assembly (Revision, p. 873, above quoted), was passed.
And this purpose, it accomplishes beyond any question, for it provides in specific terms that tbe same rights of redemption shall apply to both eases. The two kinds of sales thus having been placed upon the same footing and subjected to the same rules, the legislature afterward, at tbe same session, enacted the appraisement law, which in material respects changes chapter 110 of tbe Code of 1851. This statute was passed April 3, 1860, and took effect April 21, 1860.
Section 3360 is as follows: “ That no goods, chattels, lands or tenements shall be sold on execution issued from any court, for less than two-thirds of tbe fair value thereof at the time of sale, exclusive of all liens, mortgages or incumbrances thereon, except as hereinafter provided.”
Section 3372 provides that when real estate is sold after appraisement, tbe officer, on tbe payment of tbe purchase-money, shall execute to the purchaser a deed which shall convey all tbe interest on which tbe judgment operated as a lien, etc. Do these provisions apply to tbe sale of lands under tbe foreclosure of a mortgage ? That they do we entertain no doubt. To bold otherwise would defeat tbe obvious purpose [613]*613which actuated the legislature of subjecting the two kinds of sales to the same incidents. The language is general and broad enough to include cmy sale. It provides that no goods, chattels, lands or tenements, shall be sold for less than two-thirds of the fair value thereof; and that when real estate is sold after appraisement, as provided by the act, the officer conducting the sale shall execute a deed. "We know of no reason for limiting this language to sales under a general execution, especially as the legislature had just provided that lands sold under special execution should be redeemed in all respects as those sold under general execution. In the act respecting redemption of lands sold under mortgage foreclosure, reference is made to chapter 110 of the Code, because- at that time that chapter contained all the provisions upon the subject of redemption from sales under execution.
When this chapter was amended by the appraisement law and a limitation upon the right of redemption was imposed, this limitation became general and applied to all sales, those under foreclosures of mortgages as well as those under general executions.
The meaning of this section must therefore be that the officer shall proceed to ascertain the value, unless otherwise directed by the execution debtor, as in the act prescribed.
That it does not extend the time for making the election is clearly inferable from Gillett v. Edgar, 22 Iowa, 293.
The judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
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