Dobler v. Bawden

25 N.W.2d 866, 238 Iowa 76, 1947 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 308
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 11, 1947
DocketNo. 46956.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 25 N.W.2d 866 (Dobler v. Bawden) 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
Dobler v. Bawden, 25 N.W.2d 866, 238 Iowa 76, 1947 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 308 (iowa 1947).

Opinion

Hale, J.-

The parties to this action are nonresidents of this state and are brother and sister. The defendant, Adah E. Bawden, owned certain real and personal property in this state, inherited from an aunt, subject to levy and'sale. Plaintiff in 1945 commenced action against the defendant in the district court of Cerro Gordo county on an Illinois judgment, aided by *78 attachment of defendant’s Iowa property, for the purpose of enforcing and realizing on such Illinois judgment.

On January 11, 1922, defendant, Adah E. Bawden, by a written assignment, did “sell, assign, transfer, and set over to the First National Bank in Warren, of Warren, Illinois, all of my right, title and interest” in the bond from her brother, described hereinafter. This assignment was to secure notes to that bank in something over $6,300. These notes were afterward put in judgment by the bank, on November 12, 1931. This judgment was assigned to the plaintiff by the liquidating agent of said bank on May 29, 1941. It was revived by the plaintiff against the defendant June 22, 1942, in the Illinois court. The assignment of the judgment to Dobler was, in part, “the First National Bank in Warren, Illinois, does hereby sell, transfer, assign, and set over to Manley T. H. Dobler ’ ’ a judgment which is described. “In witness whereof the First National Bank in Warren, Illinois, has caused its corporate seal to be hereto affixed and has caused its name to be signed to these presents by A. B. Meyer, its Liquidating Agent, this 29th day of May A. D. 1941.” The acknowledgment of the assignment states that the execution of the instrument and the affixing of the corporate seal was “pursuant to authority, given by the stockholders of said corporation” and “as the free and voluntary act and deed of said corporation.” Later in the same year, on November 6, .1941, the plaintiff started suit in Jo Daviess county, Illinois, to revive the judgment. Defendant, Adah E. Bawden, appeared and answered the complaint in the Illinois court and denied the bank had assigned the judgment. Trial was had and the court found that the original judgment had been assigned to plaintiff and judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant for $10,047.80. This is the foreign judgment sued on by the plaintiff in the present action.

Adah E. Bawden, defendant in this action, pleaded herein as a defense to plaintiff’s, judgment the special statute of limitations, section 615.1, Code of 1946 .(section 11033.1, Code of 1939»), and filed a counterclaim against the plaintiff on a contract between the parties dealing with the settlement of their mother’s estate. This was a written agreement, signed in 1916, between plaintiff and defendant, which provided that Manley T. H. *79 Dobler, the plaintiff herein, was to have the entire estate of his mother, Ellen Dobler, and was to pay $6,500 to defendant, Adah E. Bawden, out of that estate sixty days after the death of the mother. There were other payments provided for, and the agreement provided for the giving of a bond by plaintiff to defendant, with sureties, in the penal sum of $6,500 to secure payment of the $6,500 above mentioned. This was the bond later assigned to the National Bank in Warren, Illinois.

The matters in issue are: 1. Claim by plaintiff against defendant on the Illinois judgment. 2. CounterclainFby defendant against plaintiff on the $6,500 bond given by him to her to secure his debt on the contract executed in 1916. 3. Claim by plaintiff against defendant on a half interest in eighty acres alleged by him to have been appropriated and sold, but belonging to the deceased mother’s estate.

The case came on for trial September 17, 1945, in the district court of Cerro Gordo county, and on February 20, 1946, the court entered its ruling and judgment, computing the amounts as follows: Sustaining the plaintiff’s petition on the Illinois judgment to the amount of $11,887.19. From that amount was deducted the indebtedness from plaintiff to the defendant of $8,667.78, leaving a balance still due plaintiff from defendant of $3,219.41, for which amount judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff. This indebtedness of the plaintiff to the defendant consisted of $6,500 owing on the 1916 contract, less $1,500, the value of a half interest in eighty acres appropriated and transferred by Mrs. Bawden as of March 18, 1933, which would leave a balance of principal still unpaid to the defendant of $5,000, with interest at five per cent per annum since June 18, 1931, which totals the above amount of $8,667.78. From this finding and judgment of the court both parties appeal.

I. Defendant having' first appealed we will denominate her appellant and her appeal will be first considered. She asserts that the claim of the plaintiff, Dobler, on the Illinois judgment was barred by the provisions of section 615.1, Code of 1946 (section 11033.1, Code of 1939), and that the court was in error in not so holding.

*80 Section 615.1 is as follows:

“From and after January 1, 1934, no judgment in an action for the foreclosure of a real estate mortgage or deed of trust or in any action on a claim for rent or judgment assigned by a receiver of a closed bank or rendered upon credits assigned by the receiver of a closed bank when the assignee is not a trustee for depositors or creditors of the bank the Reconstruction Finance Corporation or any other federal governmental agency to which the bank or the receiver is or may be indebted shall be enforced and no execution issued thereon and no force or vitality given thereto for any purpose other than as a setoff or counterclaim after the expiration of a period of two years from the entry thereof.” (Forty-fifth General Assembly, chapter 178.)

The Illinois judgment was rendered November 12, 1931, and renewed June 22, 1942, and since the plaintiff commenced his action in Iowa on March 5, 1945, more than two years had expired between the rendition of the second judgment and the beginning of the suit. With the assignment of the judgment to the plaintiff by the liquidating agent of the bank was also assigned the bond which he had given defendant in 1916 with sureties in the amount of $6,500. If the special statute of limitations applies, then there can be no recovery on plaintiff’s Illinois judgment. But does the statute of limitations apply to this form of judgment? The statute under consideration refers to a judgment assigned by a receiver of a closed bank.

The bank was in process of liquidation and the person making the assignment of the original judgment for the bank was not designated as a receiver, and in fact was not such, but he was what is denominated a “liquidating agent.” In the assignment heretofore set out it will be noticed that such assignment is by the bank, under its corporate seal, by A. B. Meyer, its liquidating agent. It is also to be noted that in the acknowledgment the execution of the instrument was pursuant to authority of the stockholders of said corporation. The bank which transferred the judgment against Adah E. Bawden was a national bank and governed by the statutes relating to such banks: 12 U. S. C., section 181, R. S., section 5220, provides for the voluntary dissolution and the appointment of a liquidat *81

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Bluebook (online)
25 N.W.2d 866, 238 Iowa 76, 1947 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dobler-v-bawden-iowa-1947.