Equitable Life Assurance Society v. Hastings

273 N.W. 908, 223 Iowa 808
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 15, 1937
DocketNo. 43748.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 273 N.W. 908 (Equitable Life Assurance Society v. Hastings) 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
Equitable Life Assurance Society v. Hastings, 273 N.W. 908, 223 Iowa 808 (iowa 1937).

Opinion

Donegan, J.-

On July 19, 1929, Frank H. Hastings and Sadie Hastings, his wife, executed a mortgage upon 145 acres of land in Adair County, Iowa, to Collins Mortgage Company, to secure their promissory note for $9,700, due December 1, 1934, with interest at 5 per cent per annum. The granting clause of this mortgage, in addition to the real estate, conveyed all the rents, issues, use and profits of said land, and the crops raised thereon until the debt secured by said mortgage shall be paid. This mortgage was recorded as a real estate mortgage, was also duly indexed in the index to the chattel mortgage records, and was thereafter assigned by the Collins Mortgage Company to The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States, a corporation, which is the plaintiff in this case.

On October 15, 1935, the mortgagors and title holders of the land, Frank H. Hastings and Sadie Hastings, for the recited consideration of $1.00 and other valuable consideration, executed a deed of the said land to C. H. Williamson. This deed stated that it is “ subject to encumbrances of record and taxes but the grantee does not assume or agree to pay any of said encumbrances or in any way become personally liable for the payment of any of said indebtedness.” On the same day said Williamson executed a lease of the land for the term March 1, 1936, to November 25, 1936, and thereafter as long as the first party *810 has right of possession and up to March 1, 1937, to Lloyd Mitchell for the stated rental of $900, and Mitchell executed a promissory note to C. H. Williamson for $900 due November 25, 1936. On October 16, 1935, C. H. Williamson executed an assignment of said lease and rent note to Adair County Bank.

The principal of the note and mortgage became due December 1, 1934, and on February 11, 1936, the plaintiff instituted this action for the foreclosure of the mortgage. The defendants were Frank H. Hastings and wife, Sadie Hastings, the makers of the note and mortgage; C. ■ H. Williamson, the grantee in the deed from Hastings, and Lucy E. Williamson, his wife; Lloyd Mitchell, the lessee in lease from Williamson and maker of the rent note, and Mabel Mitchell, his wife; Adair County Bank, the assignee of the lease and rent note from Williamson; and Adair County, Iowa. The petition contained the usual recitals and asked for the foreclosure of the mortgage and for the appointment of a receiver to collect the rents and profits. Adair County Bank, the assignee of the lease and rent note, filed a petition of intervention alleging the assignment of the lease and rent note to it by Williamson; that they were purchased in good faith for a valuable consideration and without notice of any claim of plaintiff; that at that time no suit was pending affecting the bitie to the real estate; and intervenor asked that the prayer for the appointment of a receiver be denied, that plaintiff be decreed to have no interest in the real estate or the rents therefrom except such as were inferior to the interest of intervenor under the said lease, and that the rights and interests of intervenor be established and confirmed against all claims of the plaintiff. The defendant, Lloyd Mitchell, filed answer alleging the execution of the lease by C. H. Williamson to him, and the execution by him of a note for $900, and asked that his rights be protected. The defendants, C. H. Williamson and Lucy E. Williamson, filed answer alleging the purchase of the said land by deed, the execution of the lease covering the land to Mitchell for a rental of $900, the assignment of the lease and rent note to Adair County Bank, and asked that any claim against them be denied and that the application for the appointment of a receiver be denied. The plaintiff filed an answer to the petition of intervention of Adair County Bank and filed replies to the answers of Williamson and Mitchell. Trial was had to the court and, no pleadings having *811 been filed or appearance made by the defendants, Frank H. Hastings and Sadie Hastings, a default was entered against them. On tbe 25th day of March, 1936, the court entered a decree finding that the defendants, Frank H. Hastings and Sadie Hastings, were indebted to the plaintiff on the note and mort: gage sued on in the sum of $11,892.65, with $38.40 costs and $158.93 attorney’s fees, and that any right, title or interest of defendants to the real estate under foreclosure and to the rents, issues and profits thereof, was junior and inferior to the right, title and interest of plaintiff under the mortgage. Judgment was rendered against said defendant makers of the note and mortgage for said sum, and it was decreed that the same be a lien on the mortgaged real estate from the date of the execution of the mortgage, and it was ordered that the mortgaged land be sold and that a receiver be appointed to take charge of the real estate and collect the rents and profits thereof. From such decree the defendants, C. H. Williamson and wife, Lucy E. Williamson, Lloyd Mitchell and wife, Mabel Mitchell, and Adair County Bank appeal. No appeal was taken by defendants, Frank H. Hastings or Sadie Hastings, his wife, the makers of the note and mortgage, and this appeal does not raise any question as to the correctness of that part of the decree entering-judgment against the said defendants and foreclosing the mortgage and ordering the sale of the real estate described therein. The complaint of the appellants herein is to that part of the decree finding that any right, title or interest of the appellants to the rents, issues and profits of the land is junior and inferior to the right, title and interest of the plaintiff to such rents, issues and profits under the mortgage, and to the appointment of a receiver to take immediate possession of the premises and to lease the same for the period commencing March 1, 1936, and ending February 28, 1937, and to collect all rents accruing subsequent to the commencement of the foreclosure action.

In this case we have a mortgage of real estate also conveying the rents, issues, uses and profits of the mortgaged land, and the crops raised thereon, which was recorded as a real estate mortgage and indexed in the chattel mortgage index. Under our holdings this mortgage was a mortgage on the land described therein, and it was also a valid chattel mortgage on the rents, issues, uses and profits of the land and the crops raised thereon. No question is raised as to the scope or effect *812 of this mortgage, insofar as it was a mortgage on the real estate. The only question here in controversy is in reference to the existence and extent of a lien on the rents, issues, use and profits of the land and the crops raised thereon, growing out of the chattel mortgage provisions.

In the recent case of Equitable Life Insurance Company v. Brown et al., 220 Iowa 585, 590, 262 N. W. 124, 127, appellants claimed there was a distinction between the use of the word “crops” and the words “rents, issues, uses and profits”; that the so-called “chattel mortgage clause” in real estate mortgages is effective only as to crops; and that rents, issues, uses, profits and income of real estate, being incorporeal rights, are not such personal property as it subject to a chattel mortgage.

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Related

Mutual Benefit Life Insurance v. Netsch
7 N.W.2d 14 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1942)
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291 N.W. 536 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
273 N.W. 908, 223 Iowa 808, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/equitable-life-assurance-society-v-hastings-iowa-1937.