Ebinger v. Wahrer

238 N.W. 587, 213 Iowa 84
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 27, 1931
DocketNo. 40916.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 238 N.W. 587 (Ebinger v. Wahrer) 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
Ebinger v. Wahrer, 238 N.W. 587, 213 Iowa 84 (iowa 1931).

Opinion

Albert, J.

The execution sale involved is one growing out of the case of Des Moines Marble & Mantle Co. v. McConn, 210 Iowa 266, which opinion was filed November 21, 1929, and a rehearing denied April 16, 1930. The decree in the first case was entered on June 26, 1928. Appeal therein was perfected on August 24, 1928. Special execution was issued on that decree on the 7th day of January, 1929, and the sheriff sold the property under said execution on February 25, 1929.

On February 21, 1930, Waldo Ebinger filed his petition in equity in the present case, seeking a decree setting aside said execution sale and declaring the same null and void; that the certificate of sale issued by the sheriff be cancelled and the sheriff be enjoined from executing and delivering the sheriff’s deed thereunder.

Many of the facts in this case correspond with those in the Des Moines Marble & Mantle Company case, and need not be here repeated. For the purposes of this case, a summary of the facts is all that is necessary.

In March, 1923, H. D. and Marie L. McConn, husband and wife, were the owners of certain property involved in this litigation, known as the Orpheum Theater in Fort Madison, Iowa. On the 10th day of March, 1923, they entered into a contract with Waldo Ebinger for the sale of said property for a con *86 sideration. of $25,000, $5,000 of the purchase price being paid in cash and the balance in deferred payments. Ebinger proceeded to improve and remodel said property, but having failed to pay for the labor and material therefor, numerous mechanic’s liens were filed against the property. In the original action of the Des Moines Marble & Mantle Company, the McConns, Waldo Ebinger and wife, the mechanic’s lien holders and certain other parties were either made parties or intervened, and the matter having been fully submitted to the court, a decree was entered foreclosing said mechanic’s liens and holding, among other things, that the mechanic’s liens were superior to the vendors’ lien. Second, that the Ebingers had no homestead rights in the property; and third, appointing a receiver for the rents and profits, and providing for the distribution in a specified way.

Prom that decree Ebinger and wife alone appealed, and in the opinion of this court, above referred to, the action of the district court in making said holdings was affirmed.

The relief prayed for in the present action by Ebinger was denied by the lower court; hence this appeal.

The opinion in the Des Moines Marble & Mantle Company case set at rest for all time three things: 1st. That the mechanic’s liens were superior to the vendors’ lien. 2nd. That Ebinger and wife had no homestead rights in the property in question. 3rd. That the district court in that case was right in the appointment of a receiver.

While the appellant now seeks to question some or all of these questions, they are all settled adversely to him and are-res adjudicata, and we give them no attention in the disposition of this case.

After the commencement of the original action and before decree therein, H. D. and M. D. McConn died, and Julia Wahrer and E. C. McConn, their heirs, succeeded to their interest in said property, and as such were substituted as parties defendant 'in the original action.

The appellant first asserts that the special execution was void because it failed to conform to the provisions of section 11659, Code, 1927, in that the decree provided the property should be sold free and clear of all right, title, interest, liens or claims of Waldo L. Ebinger, Julia Wahrer and E. C. McConn and the special execution contained no such provision.

*87 2nd. That the special execution did not follow the decree as it was therein ordered that the property be sold free from any equity of redemption, save only the right of redemption provided by statute.

3rd. That Waldo Ebinger, at the time of the issuance of such execution had taken an appeal and thereby lost his right of redemption, and that said writ of execution contained no provision that the property be sold free and clear of the right of redemption of Waldo Ebinger.

4th. That the levy was void because the sheriff failed to' indorse on said writ of special execution the fact of having levied on said real estate and the date thereof, at the time when the act was done, in violation of section 11664, Code, 1927.

5th. That the notice of said sale, as posted by the sheriff, failed to provide that -said real estate would be sold free and clear of the right, title, interest, liens or claims of the defendants, Waldo Ebinger, Julia Wahrer and E. .C. McConn in violation of sections 11722 and 11723, Code, 1927.

6th. A similar attack is made on said notices because they did not state that the property would be sold free of the right of redemption save only the rights of redemption provided by statute, and that Ebinger, prior to the posting of notices, took an appeal and thereby lost his right of redemption, and the notices did not so state, contrary to and in violation of the two latter sections of the statute above referred to. These last two assaults are also made against the notice published in the newspaper by the sheriff of said execution sale, and the same attacks are made upon the sheriff’s sale notice served on Waldo Ebinger, the defendant.

It is further contended that the execution sale and sheriff’s deed thereunder were illegal and void (which sheriff’s deed was issued and delivered after the commencement of this action) inasmuch as the price for which the property was sold was grossly inadequate and fraudulent against the rights of the appellant.

It is further charged that the sheriff failed to perform his duty in that he did not postpone the sale upon his failure to receive an adequate bid for the real estate, contrary to section 11729, Code, 1927.

It is further claimed that the sheriff’s deed executed to the said Julia Wahrer is illegal and void in that the said Julia *88 Wahrer, E. C. McConn and H. E. Travillo conspired together to defraud Waldo Ebinger out of his right, title and interest hi said property, including the rents, issues and profits of the réal estate after decree during his statutory right of possession under section 11774, Code, 1927.

The above constitutes the substance of the contention of the appellant and his reasons why he claims a reversal.

The original decree in the consolidated cases, after ordering foreclosure of the mechanic’s liens and special execution for the sale of the property, proceeded:

“And that said property be sold free and clear from the claim of homestead of the defendants, Waldo Ebinger and Nora Ebinger, and free and clear from the right, title, interest, liens or claims of the defendants, Waldo Ebinger, Julia Wahrer and E. C. McConn. It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that from and after the sale on such execution, the equity of redemption or other right or interest of the defendants, Waldo Ebinger, Julia Wahrer and E. C. McConn, in and to the property so sold, save only the right of redemption provided by statute, be forever barred and closed.”

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Bluebook (online)
238 N.W. 587, 213 Iowa 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ebinger-v-wahrer-iowa-1931.