Evansville Gas-Light Co. v. State ex rel. Reitz

73 Ind. 219
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1881
DocketNo. 7928
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 73 Ind. 219 (Evansville Gas-Light Co. v. State ex rel. Reitz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evansville Gas-Light Co. v. State ex rel. Reitz, 73 Ind. 219 (Ind. 1881).

Opinion

Elliott, J.

— The State, by the auditor of Vanderburghcounty as relator, prosecuted this suit against the appellant and Francis J. Reitz, and obtained judgment against the former, but not against the latter. The object of the action was to revive a decree of foreclosure upon two school-fund mortgages, which had been taken against James G. Jones and' wife.

A special finding of facts was made by the court, at the-request of parties, which is as follows :

“1st. That the decree of foreclosure and order of sale-set out in the complaint; whereby it was, on May 12th, 1862, adjudged that there was due from said James G. Jones, to the State of Indiana, the sum of four hundred and fifty-seven dollars, upon the mortgages mentioned in said decree,, is still in full force and wholly unsatisfied.
“2d. That said James G. Jones departed this life on or about the 15th day of April, 1872.
[220]*220“3d. That no execution has been issued upon said decree since May the 17th, 1862, and which was returned on the 4th day of June, 1862, no replevin bail having been entered.
“4th. That lot 23, block 171, was, on the 7th day ^f December, 1871, conveyed to defendant F. J. Reitz, by said James G. Jones and Rosanna, his wife.
“5th. That on the 3d day of November, 1865, said Jones and wife conveyed said lot 29, in block 129, Lamasco City, to said defendant, The Evansville Gas-Light Company.
“6th. That said Jones had no title in said lot 12, block 135, when the same was conveyed by him to the plaintiff.
“7th. That said decree of foreclosure was rendered upon two several mortgages, one dated April 14th, 1855, upon said lot 23, block 171, and the other dated the 5th day of August, 1859, upon said lot No. 29, block 129, both to secure the same sum.
“8th. That the other defendants besidesaid gas company nnd said Reitz have no interest in the property mentioned in the complaint (lots 23 and 29).”

Upon these facts conclusions of law were stated as follows :

“1st. That the plaintiff is entitled to have execution for the satisfaction of said decree, together with interest thereon, from the rendition thereof, and the costs thereon taxed, to be satisfied only by the sale of said lot 29, block 129.
“2d. That, as to the issue between the said defendant gas ■company and said Reitz, the equity is in favor of, said Reitz, and the court finds for said Reitz, and that upon said issue he is entitled to recover his costs.
“ 3d. That, as to the issue between the said defendant Reitz •and the plaintiff, the court finds in favor of said Reitz.
“4th. That said mortgage upon said lot 23, block 171, having been executed more than twenty years, said decree, as to said lot, is barred, and can not be enforced.
“5th. That as to all the other defendants, excepting said [221]*221.gas company and F. J. Reitz, said complaint ought to be dismissed.”

The decree of foreclosure which this proceeding sought to revive was, as appears from the special finding, rendered on the 12th day of May, 1862, and this action was not instituted until the 10th day of November, 1877, more than sixteen years afterward. The appellant insists that the lieu of the decree ceased at the expiration' of ten years from the date of its rendition. The argument is that the mortgage was merged in the judgment, and that, as the statute limits the lien of a judgment to a period of ten'years from its date, with the expiration of that period terminated the lien of the decree sought to be revived.

Appellant’s chief reliance is upon section 527 of the code, which provides,inte? alia, that all final judgments for the recovery of money or costs shall be a lien upon real estate for ten years after the rendition thereof, and no longer. 2 R. S. 1876, p. 233. The statute in terms applies only to judgments for the recovery of money, and does not apply to ■a decree of foreclosure establishing a specific mortgage lien upon real estate, and we do not think it should, by construction, be so extended as to apply to such decrees of foreclosure. Section 642 of the code is also relied upon by the appellant. If the appellant is correct in asserting that the judgment merges both the lien of the mortgage and the cause of action evidenced by it, and that the lien of the judgment takes the place of that of the mortgage, then, under the provisions of either statute, it is entitled to a reversal.

If the decree of foreclosure, which the, State obtained against Jones and wife, is to be treated as an ordinary judgment, then it must be held that the lien was lost long before this action was instituted. The controlling question, therefore, is, whether a decree of foreclosure is to be treated as [222]*222:an ordinary judgment; for, if it is to be so regarded, then tbe appellant is clearly right.

If the judgment merged the mortgage lien, then the mortgage lien was extinguished. It will not do to assume, as a matter of course, that there was a merger, for there are many cases in which, in order to prevent injustice, courts will not allow merger to take place, although all the essential elements of a technical merger combine in the particular ,-case. Mergers are not favored. As Chief Justice Parker ■tersely said, in Gibson v. Crehore, 3 Pick. 475, “Mergers are odious in equity."

Nor is it clear that, where a mortgage is foreclosed, the decree “swallows” the lien of the mortgage. There are at least two very strong reasons why this can not on principle <b¿ so Eirst, the mortgage lien is a specific one, the judgment a general one, and the lien of the former is, therefore, the superior one. The difference between mortgage and judgment liens is clearly drawn by Worden, J., in Gimbel v. Stolte, 59 Ind. 446. Second, the lien of the mortgage is superior in duration to that of the judgment. In these two essential particulars, the mortgage lien is the greater, and it would seem almost a contradiction of terms to declare that the inferior lien can swallow the greater. The whole theory ■of merger is that the greater estate or thing takes into itself the less, and- this can not be so where there are essential particulars in which the one alleged to be the inferior is really the superior. It can hardly be possible that even an imaginary legal entity can be conceived as capable of absorbing into itself another thing greatly larger in two very essential and prominent features.

The merger of a judgment takes up the mortgage as a -cause of action, but not as a lien. There is a broad distinction between a merger of a cause of action and the merger -of a lien. It is owing to error in confusing the merger of the cause of action with the merger of a lien, that some of [223]*223the courts have been led into the erroneous holding, that a judgment extinguishes the mortgage lien.

A suit of foreclosure is a remedy for the enforcement of ■a mortgage lien, and it ought not to be abridged by holding that the decree cuts down, rather than enlarges, the lien.

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Bluebook (online)
73 Ind. 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evansville-gas-light-co-v-state-ex-rel-reitz-ind-1881.