Farmers Trust & Savings Bank v. Manning

359 N.W.2d 461, 44 A.L.R. 4th 1219, 1984 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1302
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 19, 1984
Docket83-938
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 359 N.W.2d 461 (Farmers Trust & Savings Bank v. Manning) 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
Farmers Trust & Savings Bank v. Manning, 359 N.W.2d 461, 44 A.L.R. 4th 1219, 1984 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1302 (iowa 1984).

Opinion

HARRIS, Justice.

This quiet title action was brought by a bank following a mortgage foreclosure proceeding. It is our second review in the matter. See Farmers Trust and Savings Bank v. Manning, 311 N.W.2d 285 (Iowa 1981). This appeal involves a constitutional challenge to an Iowa statute which provides that mortgagors waive their statutory equity of redemption by appealing a judgment of foreclosure. It also challenges the trial court’s scheme for untangling and settling the conflicting claims and rights of the parties. We affirm.

As was mentioned in the previous appeal, defendants are husband and wife who raised and marketed poultry. In connection with that venture, they borrowed money from plaintiff bank. Two of the eight notes in controversy were signed by both defendants (Ralph and Florence). Six were signed by Ralph alone.

The first note was jointly executed and was secured by a real estate mortgage on two tracts owned by Ralph and Florence as tenants-in-common. The second note was also jointly executed and was secured by another mortgage, this one on a 79-acre tract which Ralph and Florence also owned as tenants-in-common. The second mortgage contained an open-end, or dragnet, provision which would secure an additional $31,000 if Ralph and Florence borrowed it.

The next four notes were executed by Ralph alone and were thought by both Ralph and the bank to be secured under the dragnet provision in the mortgage securing the second note. The last two notes were executed by Ralph alone and were secured by a security agreement given by Ralph on 10,000 pullets.

Each of the notes Ralph executed alone had a one year maturity date. One of them matured and Ralph was unable to pay. The bank then invoked the acceleration clause and declared all notes due. The trial court entered judgments against Ralph and Florence jointly on the two notes they both signed and against Ralph separately on the notes he alone signed. After Ralph and Florence brought the first appeal, but before it was decided, the bank pursued a foreclosure sale of all three tracts of land.

The bank, being the only bidder, entered successful bids on all three tracts and used the judgments as consideration. Judgment on the first note served as consideration for the first two tracts, which had been mortgaged to secure that note. On the third tract the bank bid in the judgment on the second, jointly executed, note (secured by a mortgage on tract 3), and also judgments on the six notes Ralph alone signed.

We later filed our opinion in the first appeal. We affirmed the two judgments based on the jointly executed notes. We however affirmed on only one of the six notes Ralph signed alone, the one secured by the mortgage on poultry. We reversed on the other five. We held that none of the notes Ralph alone signed were secured by *463 the mortgage on tract 3. 311 N.W.2d at 292.

The foreclosure on the third tract thus remains very much in dispute. Of the $160,894.80 1 in judgments bid as consideration, $59,310.09 was reversed on appeal, and an additional $14,858.48 was found to be secured by 10,000 pullets not the real estate mortgage. On the basis of sheriffs deeds the bank took, and retains, possession of all three tracts.

Ordinarily a sheriffs deed is not issued for one year following the foreclosure sale. 2 See Iowa Code § 626.98 (1981). In this case, the bank’s attorney persuaded the sheriff to issue the deed soon after the first appeal was taken. This was done on the basis of Code section 628.4, which provides:

No party who has taken an appeal from the ... district court, or stayed execution on the judgment, shall be entitled to redeem.

More than a year after we decided the first appeal the bank brought this quiet title action, asking ratification of the sheriffs deeds. The petition affirmatively addressed two potential problems. It first spoke to the partial failure of consideration, resulting from our decision in the first appeal. The bank asserted there remains enough consideration to justify issuing the deeds. Secondly, the petition noted that the sheriffs deeds were issued within the one year redemption period specified by Iowa Code section 628.3 and justified their issuance within that period on the basis of Iowa Code section 628.4, previously quoted, which provides that an appeal waives the right to redeem.

On the first two tracts, the trial court quieted title in favor of the bank. The bank and the Mannings were found to share interests in the third tract. Because the third was mortgaged to secure one of the jointly executed notes (judgment amount: $86,726.23), the trial court determined that the bank had a paramount interest in the tract in that amount. 3 The Man-nings were found to hold any remaining interests. The trial court then fashioned a partition remedy to untangle the divided interests in the third tract.

I. In their constitutional challenge to section 628.4, the Mannings point out that the right to redeem has long been a recognized property right. Wissmath Packing Co. v. Mississippi River Power Co., 179 Iowa 1309, 1326, 162 N.W. 846, 851 (1917). They then argue that the section deprives them of this recognized property right. Their challenge rests on both due process and equal protection grounds.

Without doubt, the right to enjoy property is constitutionally protected. Lynch v. Household Finance Corp., 405 U.S. 538, 552, 92 S.Ct. 1113, 1122, 31 L.Ed.2d 424, 435 (1972). We nevertheless think Iowa’s statutory scheme is constitutional.

The right to appeal and the right to redeem are, alike, statutory and not constitutional. Iowa Dept, of Revenue v. Iowa Merit Employ. Comm’n, 243 N.W.2d 610, 614 (1976) (“[Ajppellate review is purely statutory and subject to strict construction.”); Van der Burg v. Bailey, 207 Iowa 797, 799, 223 N.W. 515, 516 (1929) (“The right of appeal is not an inherent or constitutional right. The legislature may give or take it away, at its pleasure.”); Northwestern Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Hansen, 205 Iowa 789, 794, 218 N.W. 502, 505 (1928) (“ ‘There is no general right of redemption from judicial sales; but when such right exists, it is by statute, and the right extends only to cases coming within the statute, ... and must be exercised in pur *464 suance of the statute — otherwise it will be ineffective.’ ”).

The challenged statute has been a part of the Iowa Code since 1873. The statutory right to redeem, now section 628.-3, dates from the Code of 1851. Some light on the present challenge is cast by a review of our cases during the decades when the right to redeem existed, but before it was waived by an appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
359 N.W.2d 461, 44 A.L.R. 4th 1219, 1984 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-trust-savings-bank-v-manning-iowa-1984.