Equitable Life Insurance v. Condon

10 N.W.2d 78, 233 Iowa 567
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 15, 1943
DocketNo. 46176.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 10 N.W.2d 78 (Equitable Life Insurance v. Condon) 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 Insurance v. Condon, 10 N.W.2d 78, 233 Iowa 567 (iowa 1943).

Opinion

Hale, J.

This is an action to quiet title. On August 17, 1925, William J. Condon executed to the plaintiff a note for $24,000 and a mortgage securing the same on 240 acres of land in flections 8 and 9, Township 89, Range 30, Webster County. Afterward, on November 22, 1927, William Condon, a widow'er, executed a warranty deed to his daughter, Genevieve Condon, defendant herein, for 80 acres of this 240-acre tract, which deed made no reference to a mortgage or encumbrance and was recorded November 23, 1927.

On August 19, 1931, plaintiff instituted an action of foreclosure on said 240 acres and on September 29, 1931, decree was rendered, there being appearance for some of the defendants by counsel and no appearance for the defendant, Genevieve Condon. The court recited in the decree:

“* * * and the court, after inspection of the original notices now on file in this cause, finds that each and all of the defendants to this action have been duly and legally served by personal service of said original notice * *

*569 Judgment was rendered for $28,455.24, execution issued,. and on November 10, 1931, the whole 240 acres was sold to the plaintiff herein for the sum of $27,586.71, leaving $1,500 of the judgment unsatisfied. The sheriff’s return of service of the original notice does not show service of any kind upon Genevieve Condon, although the evidence shows that the sheriff was instructed to serve all the parties named in the original notice, of whom Genevieve Condon was one.

The defendant was not in Webster county in August 1931, but during frequent absences she continued to claim Webster county as her home. Defendant after the foreclosure never asserted any rights of possession to the SO acres, paid any taxes, or made any claim thereto until shortly before the institution of this suit; plaintiff since the foreclosure has paid all taxes, insurance, etc., and made improvements on the 240 acres. It was not until plaintiff contracted to sell the said 240 acres that the condition of the record as to service of notice was discovered. Defendant refused to execute a quitclaim deed and this action was then begun against her. Plaintiff asked that it be declared the owner of the 240 acres and defendant be barred and es-topped from having or claiming any right in the land or any part thereof; that any right of redemption still held by defendant, the existence of which was not admitted, be foreclosed unless redemption be made of the entire premises for the sums set out in the petition within thirty days from date of final decree; for further equitable relief and for costs.

To the petition of plaintiff defendant filed answer consisting of a general denial, a claim to ownership of the 80 acres, and of possession thereof until November 1931, when possession of the premises was illegally taken from her by appointment of a receiver, without notice; that the sheriff’s deed was illegal and void; denying that plaintiff had any title or legal claim; alleging the fact of no notice of any kind to her; and pleading the statute of limitations of ten years expired November 1, 1940, at- which time the mortgage ceased to be a lien. She also pleaded the two-year statute, of limitations on the judgment and .pleaded generally that the proceedings in the foreclosure were entirely void as to this defendant, and asked that the title to the 80 acres *570 be quieted in her. In an amendment to the answer defendant alleged the enforcement of the judgment she claims to be void to be in violation of the Constitution of the United States [Fourteenth Amendment, section 1] and the Constitution of the State of Iowa [Article I, section 9] under the due-process clause. In its reply plaintiff admitted the deed from William J. Con-don to defendant but denied delivery thereof, and denied that the mortgage was barred by the statute of limitations.

On trial the court, on November 25, 1941, rendered a decree finding the defendant’s claim inferior to plaintiff’s rights as to the 80 acres and ordering that, unless redemption was made by the defendant within one year from the determination of the necessary amount required for redemption, said defendant would be barred from any claim of right, title, or interest in the premises, and the title quieted in plaintiff; authorizing the redemption by the defendant of the- 80 acres separately, and allocating against the same such proportion of $27,586.71, being the amount bid for the entire premises in November 1931, as the value of said 80-acre tract bears to the entire 240 acres. The decree further provided that the relative value of the 80-acre tract to the 240 acres would be determined by the court if the parties did not agree, fixed the interest at five per cent, and directed allowance for the amount paid by plaintiff for taxes and other expenditures, and setting off against such items the amount of rental received by the plaintiff, the balance being the amount required to redeem. The decree also provided that if the parties did not stipulate within ten days the court would set the cause down for further hearing to determine the amount and enter a supplemental decree fixing it.

To this decree exceptions were duly entered, and the parties having failed to agree, further hearing was had on February 5, 1942, at which additional evidence was táken, mostly as to the value of the rental and the amount of expenditures and receipts. On February 26, 1942, decree was entered fixing the amount required for the defendant, Genevieve Condon, to redeem at $6,074.30, with interest at five per cent from the date of decree to the date of payment, and granting one j^ear for such redemption; providing that if defendant made-such redemption, title to the premises would be quieted in her, but if *571 she failed to redeem within the time specified, title would stand quieted in the plaintiff.

Each party excepted and the defendant served notice of appeal upon the plaintiff from the final judgment entered February 26, 1942, and from the interlocutory decree filed November 25, 1941, and from each and every ruling adverse to the defendant.

The plaintiff, on June 8, 1942, served and filed its notice of appeal, appealing from “so much of the decree which was filed on November 25, 1941, and the decree filed February 26, 1942, as permits the defendant to redeem the 80 acres claimed by her without in such redemption paying the full amount of the mortgage, with interest at eight per cent, and costs, as is left unpaid after the application of the net rentals of the premises (over and above the taxes and expenses of operation), and the amount for which the quarter section not claimed by the defendant * * # was sold. ’ ’

Each party claims an interest in the real estate, as may be done under section 12285 providing for the bringing of the action to quiet title. The form of action is such as was'sustained by this court in the case of Equitable L. Assur. Soc. v. Asmus, 230 Iowa 1062, 300 N. W. 318.

Since both parties appeal they' will be designated herein as piaintiff and defendant.

I.

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10 N.W.2d 78, 233 Iowa 567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/equitable-life-insurance-v-condon-iowa-1943.