Estate of Leinbach v. Leinbach

486 N.E.2d 2, 1985 Ind. App. LEXIS 2981
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 3, 1985
DocketConsolidated Cause 3-1084A267
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 486 N.E.2d 2 (Estate of Leinbach v. Leinbach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Leinbach v. Leinbach, 486 N.E.2d 2, 1985 Ind. App. LEXIS 2981 (Ind. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

GARRARD, Judge.

In 1979 Earl and Joan Leinbach borrowed $50,000 from the Hamlet State Bank and executed and delivered to the bank their promissory note and a mortgage on certain real estate which they owned as tenants by the entireties. When Earl Lein-bach died the bank filed a claim in his estate asserting the loan was due and unpaid in the outstanding balance of $47,-903.84. In addition the widow filed a claim in the estate asserting that she was entitled to contribution for one half the amount *3 of this debt and making certain other claims not in issue here. Subsequently, the trial court found that the estate was lable to the bank and ordered that the estate pay one half the debt and that it remain liable for the other one half in the event that the widow did not pay it and the security was insufficient to satisfy it. The court then noted in the widow's claim her claim for contribution on this note was moot. This appeal followed.

At the outset we note that the widow has raised the contention that the appeal as to her claim does not involve an appealable judgment since the other contentions in her claim are undecided. She is correct in this assertion but we will retain jurisdiction to pass upon the adjudicated issues pursuant to Indiana Rules of Procedure, Appellate Rule 4(E).

The estate urges that the rule permitting contribution between an estate and a surviving spouse in this kind of situation either has been changed by the legislature or ought to be changed by this court. It argues that the estate should only be see-ondarily liable on such debts.

We first observe that perhaps a considerable amount of the alleged confusion in this area stems from a failure by the critic to bear in mind the distinct choices accorded by the law concerning joint and several obligations and debts which are secured by both a note and a mortgage.

It may well be that the mine run case to collect upon such indebtedness involves a foreclosure of the mortgage. If so we might offer the conjecture that in the vast majority of instances foreclosure of the mortgage represents the best real alternative to collect the debt. In any event, it is clearly the Indiana rule that in the absence of a contractual commitment to the contrary the creditor may, if he chooses, simply sue on the note, secure a personal judgment and effect collection against other assets of the debtor. See, e.g., Mitchell v. Ringle (1898), 151 Ind. 16, 50 N.E. 30. Of course, in order to pursue personal lia bility against the estate of a deceased debt- or, the statute requiring a claim filed in the decedent's estate must be complied with. See IC 29-1-14-1 et seq.

The question was posed in the trial court as to why, as long as the creditor gets paid, it should be able to "control the ultimate distribution of the estate's assets" by electing to file or by foregoing the filing of a claim in the estate. We believe that posing the question in this form obscures the primary significance of the act. Apart from the separate consideration of whether at the time for action the real estate constitutes ample security for the debt, the answer to the question is this: because that is what the parties themselves agreed to. More precisely, it is because the law permits the creditor on a joint and several obligation to seek recovery from any or all of those liable. That is the meaning of joint and several liability.

On the other hand, as between the debtors themselves equity will permit one who has paid the debt to recover from the other the portion he should have borne. Judd v. Small (1886), 107 Ind. 398, 8 N.E. 284.

Thus, in the context of a husband and wife giving a promissory note secured by a mortgage on tenancy by the entirety real estate, the Indiana courts held as early as 1919 that where the estate paid the entire balance of the debt, it was entitled to claim contribution from the widow for half the payment. Magenheimer v. Councilman, Gdn. (1919), 76 Ind.App. 583, 125 N.E. 77.

In McLochlin v. Miller (1966), 139 Ind.App. 443, 217 N.E.2d 50 the court was asked to consider the vitality of this rule of contribution under circumstances where the widow paid the joint and several note by executing and delivering a new note which was accepted by the bank and then filed a claim in the estate for one half the debt. Judge Wickens, writing for the court, concluded that Magenhkeimer represented the better rule; that it offers the stability of an accepted rule of property, and that formulating a durable rule upon the basis of any isolated set of facts ap *4 peared impossible. The court allowed contribution.

The estate asks that we again reconsider the rule. It urges that IC 29-1-17-9 should be interpreted as disclosing a legislative intent disapproving MceLocklin. We disagree. That statute provides:

"When any real or personal property subject to a mortgage, pledge or other lien is specifically devised, the devisee shall take such property so devised subject to such mortgage unless the will provides expressly or by necessary implication that such mortgage be otherwise paid. If a mortgagee receives payment on a claim based upon the obligation secured by such mortgage, the devise which was subject to such mortgage shall be charged with the reimbursement to the estate of the amount of such payment for the benefit of the distributees entitled thereto."

By its own terms the statute's application is limited to property that passes by specific devise. It simply has no bearing on a situation involving the death of one tenant by the entireties or of one of two or more joint owners with right of survivor ship. That, however, is not the only reason the statute is inapposite. The statute speaks to the devolution of encumbered property, not to the incidents of a decedent's joint and several obligation to another. It is this joint and several nature of the obligation that gives rise to the right of contribution. MclLocklin, supra.

The decision in Matter of the Estate of Smith (1979), 180 Ind.App. 198, 388 N.E.2d 287 merely reflects this distinction. It should not, as appellant asserts, cause confusion: In Smith the decedent had purchased a residence and given a note and mortgage before he married. Upon his marriage he caused the real estate to be conveyed to himself and his wife as tenants by the entireties. Then he died. For whatever reason the mortgagee failed to file a claim in the husband's estate based upon the note and the right to participate in the personal assets of the estate was thereby lost. Since the widow was not a personal obligor on the debt, she had no personal liability thereon. On the other hand, at least since Beach v. Bell (1894), 139 Ind. 167, 38 N.E. 819, our courts have interpreted the various claims statutes as permitting a mortgagee or other lienholder to forego filing a claim and instead look to the security interest held to satisfy the debt. Thus, Smith simply held the bank could still pursue its mortgage if the debt were not paid. 1 The case involved no question of contribution.

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Bluebook (online)
486 N.E.2d 2, 1985 Ind. App. LEXIS 2981, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-leinbach-v-leinbach-indctapp-1985.