Federal Land Bank v. Wilmarth

252 N.W. 507, 218 Iowa 339
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 6, 1934
DocketNo. 42236.
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 252 N.W. 507 (Federal Land Bank v. Wilmarth) 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
Federal Land Bank v. Wilmarth, 252 N.W. 507, 218 Iowa 339 (iowa 1934).

Opinions

Kindig, J.

This action, as said in the preliminary statement, was brought by the plaintiff-appellee, the Federal Land Bank of Omaha, a corporation, to obtain, first, judgment on a promissory note; and, second, the foreclosure of a real estate mortgage. The note for $20,000 was signed on March 7, 1924, by the defendants-appellants Myron E. Wilmarth and Effie P. Wilmarth, husband and wife. Myron E. Wilmarth is an attorney at law, practicing his profession at Corning, Iowa. Said note, together with interest at the rate of 5y2 per cent per annum, payable semi-annually, was payable to the appellee at its office in Omaha, Nebraska, according to an amortization plan. All payments of principal and interest on the note, according to the amortization plan, not made when due, were to bear interest from such due date to the date of payment at the rate of 8 per cent per annum. To secure the note, the appellants Myron E. and Effie P. Wilmarth executed to the appellee, at the time the note was made, a mortgage on certain real estate in Adams county.

Harry Wilmarth, a defendant-appellant, is the son of the appellants Myron E. and Effie P. Wilmarth. He was made a party to the present proceedings because of a certain assignment of rents accruing on the mortgaged premises. It is claimed by the appellant Harry Wilmarth that he is entitled to those rents.

Several installments of principal and interest, according to the amortization plan, were paid by the makers of the note and mortgage. According to the record, however, the appellants failed to pay the following installments on the note: First, the one due October *342 1, 1931, for $650; and, second, the one due April 1, 1932, for $650. Also the appellants failed to pay the 1930 taxes on the land, amounting to $126.65, which became delinquent and were paid by the appellee. Likewise, the appellants neglected to pay an insurance premium for $78 covering certain buildings on the mortgaged real estate. This insurance premium also was paid by the appellee. By authority of the provisions in the note and mortgage, the appellee declared the entire mortgage indebtedness due and unpaid because of the appellants’ delinquency in paying the obligations above named. The declaration of forfeiture was made by the appellee through the commencement of foreclosure proceedings on October 28, 1932. In that foreclosure suit, the appellee asked judgment against the appellants Myron E. and Effie P. Wilmarth for the sum of $20,204.55, together with interest at the rate of 8 per cent per annum from August 1, 1932.

A defense to that foreclosure suit was made by the appellant Effie P. Wilmarth on the theory that she, in fact, was not a maker of the note. Her defense was sustained by the district court, and the appellee has not appealed. So far as the claims to the rent made by the appellant Harry Wilmarth are concerned, there is no controversy on this appeal. Consequently Effie P. Wilmarth and Harry Wilmarth appear to have little, if any, interest in the appeal. Myron E. Wilmarth, the appellant, on the other hand, seems to be the one principally involved on the appeal so far as the appellants are concerned. Hereafter, therefore, when we refer to the appellant, our reference will be to Myron E. Wilmarth. His defense is manifold.

At the outset, this appellant, in answering the appellee’s petition, objected to the payment of 8 per cent interest on the indebtedness. According to his theory, the amount of interest above 5y¿ per cent amounts to a mere penalty under the circumstances, and therefore will not be enforced in equity. Next, the appellant answered that he was not liable to the appellee for attorney fees on that portion of the debt, the due date of which was accelerated by the commencement of the suit, because the appellant had no knowledge or information of the appellee’s intention to thus accelerate the debt, and therefore he had no opportunity to pay the same. Again in his answer, the appellant alleged that equity will not foreclose the mortgage at this time because of the abnormal deflation of farm values, and the monetary stringencies now existing. An emergency exists, the appellant declares, and, because of its severity, equity *343 will not enforce the note and mortgage and compel him to pay more than the present adjusted value of the moneys loaned on a previous date. Furthermore, the appellant in his answer stated that there was appropriated to the appellee by congress funds with which to refinance the appellant and others, and therefore the appellee is estopped from foreclosing the mortgage at this time. And, finally, the appellant asked that the foreclosure cause be continued until the 1st day of March, 1935, under the Iowa moratorium statute.

These defenses thus set forth in the answer were overruled by the district court, a judgment was entered on the note against the appellant, and the mortgage on the real estate was foreclosed as prayed. From that judgment, the appellant appeals.

I. As before explained, the note in question under the amortization plan bears interest at the rate of 5per cent per annum, payable semi-annually. In addition to the foregoing provision in the note, and supplemental thereto, is the following: “All payments not made when due shall bear interest from the due date to the date of payment at eight per cent per annum.” Throughout the note and mortgage, the 8 per cent interest after the maturity of a payment due, is mentioned by way of repetition and perhaps for clarity, but in each instance it is plain that the parties to the note and mortgage intended the above-quoted provision relating to the 8 per cent interest to stand without modification. This provision for the 8 per cent interest upon the contingencies mentioned amounts to a penalty, the appellant argues, and therefore cannot be enforced in equity. Such penalty arises, the appellant says, both with and without the acceleration of the due date provided for in the note and mortgage, as before explained. So far as the acceleration clause is concerned, there is no penalty. For many years, borrowers and lenders in Iowa have provided in their notes and mortgages for the option of acceleration on the failure to pay taxes, insurance, interest, or principal when due.

As said in Swearingen v. Lahner and Platt, 93 Iowa 147, reading on pages 150 and 151, 61 N. W. 431, 433, 26 L. R. A. 765, 57 Am. St. Rep. 261:

“Stipulations such as are found in these notes and in the mortgage under consideration are not regarded, in the nature of a penalty or forfeiture, and, for that reason, viewed with disfavor by the courts, but as agreements for bringing the notes to an earlier *344 maturity than expressed upon their face, and are to be construed and the intention of the parties ascertained by the same rules as other contracts. * So it has been held that, after the happening of the contingency which matures the note, the mortgagee cannot be compelled to accept the interest due and yield his claim for the whole amount. * * Courts of equity have no power to relieve against the default and its consequences.” (Italics supplied.)

To the same effect, see Moore v. Crandall, 146 Iowa 25, 124 N. W. 812, 140 Am. St. Rep. 276; Stern v. Rainier et al., 193 Iowa 665, 187 N. W. 442; Coffin v. Younker et al., 196 Iowa 1021, 195 N. W. 591; Collins v.

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Bluebook (online)
252 N.W. 507, 218 Iowa 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/federal-land-bank-v-wilmarth-iowa-1934.