First Joint Stock Land Bank v. Armstrong

262 N.W. 815, 220 Iowa 416
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 15, 1935
DocketNo. 43005.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 262 N.W. 815 (First Joint Stock Land Bank v. Armstrong) 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
First Joint Stock Land Bank v. Armstrong, 262 N.W. 815, 220 Iowa 416 (iowa 1935).

Opinion

Powers, J.

Both mortgages in this case cover the same land. It is not claimed that either contained in the granting clause a chattel mortgage provision. Both mortgages contained, remote from the granting clause, a pledge of the rents, issues, and profits to the payment of the mortgage debt and a stipulation that in event of foreclosure a receiver might be appointed to collect such rents, issues, and profits and apply them on the mortgage debt. The holder of the second mortgage filed a petition to foreclose and prayed for the appointment of a receiver in 1931. The holder of the first mortgage commenced such an action on his mortgage in March, 1934. The priority of their respective claims to the rents, income, and profits of the mortgaged premises for 1934 are involved. It is well settled in this state by a long line of cases that a pledge of rents and profits remote from the granting clause does not, in itself, create any lien upon such rents and profits. Owen v. Fink, 218 Iowa 412, 255 N. W. 459; Andrew v. Home Savings Bank, 215 Iowa 401, 246 N. W. 48; Sheakley v. Mechler, 199 Iowa 1390, 203 N. W. *418 929. It is equally well settled that such a clause does become effective and creates a chattel mortgage lien when the payments on the mortgage are in default and action is brought to foreclose and for the appointment of a receiver. Andrew v. Haag, 215 Iowa 282, 245 N. W. 436; Equitable Life Ins. Co. v. Read, 215 Iowa 700, 246 N. W. 779. It follows that where there are two mortgages covering the same property and containing such a clause, the one which first starts action to foreclose obtains the first lien. Andrew v. Haag, supra. These general propositions do not seem to be seriously in dispute between the parties, nor to have been ignored by the trial court.

The trial court found that they were not applicable to this situation, however, for two reasons: First, because the provisions of chapter 181 of the Acts of the 45th General Assembly (§12383-e1, C., ’35) changed the rule and made the lien of pledges of rents and profits in real estate mortgages covering the same land of the same priority as the lien of the mortgages on the real estate in which they are contained; and, second, that the lien of such provision in the second mortgage in the case at bar became junior to such provision in the first mortgage by reason of the fact that there was incorporated in the second mortgage a provision that it was, “subject to a first mortgage to the First Trust Joint Stock Land Bank of $10,000.00”. The correctness of the court’s ruling on these two propositions is the battleground of this appeal.

I. If chapter 181 of the Acts of the 45th General Assembly (§12383-e1, C., ’35) is applicable in this situation, it has the effect of making the pledge of the rents and profits in the second mortgage junior to the pledge of the rents and profits in the first mortgage. See Section 1, chapter 181, Acts of the 45th General Assembly. That act became effective on March 2, 1933. It provides, in terms, that it shall not affect pending litigation. Section 4. Long before it became effective and on December 5, 1931, L. A. Andrew, who was the predecessor of D. W. Bates, as receiver for the Agency Savings Bank, had commenced an action to foreclose the second mortgage in this case and for the appointment of a receiver to collect the rents and profits, and such action was pending when chapter 181, Acts of the 45th General Assembly, became effective. Appellee’s contention is that the pendency of that action was not “pending litigation” within the meaning of the saving clause in the Act of the 45th Gen *419 eral Assembly, because appellee was not a party to that action. But the only necessary party to the action brought by the holder of the second mortgage was Armstrong, who gave the mortgage and who owned and lived upon the land covered by the mortgage at the time the action was instituted. There was no need of making appellee, the holder of the first mortgage, a party at the time the action was commenced. Where an action has been commenced and all parties necessary at the time of its institution are made parties thereto, it is difficult to see why it is not pending litigation. If we say now that chapter 181 applies in this case, and that by reason thereof the plaintiff in that action has lost a right which he had when his action had been commenced, we would be holding that the act of the legislature took away from a plaintiff in a pending case something which he had when the act was passed. Such a holding would necessarily be a holding that pending litigation was affected by the act. That is the very thing forbidden by the terms of the act itself. It is obvious, therefore, that we cannot so apply the act as to take away from a plaintiff in an action pending when the act was passed a right which he had acquired by the institution of such action without violating the provisions of the act that it shall not apply to pending litigation. It is equally obvious that to hold that the saving clause of the act applies only to pending litigation between the holders of mortgages covering the same land would be to write into the saving clause of the act something which is not there.

Counsel .for appellee argues, however, and the trial court seems to have been intrigued by the idea, that by the application of the act of the 45th General Assembly nothing would be taken away from appellant; that he did not acquire a lien on the crops or income for the year 1934, by his action started in 1931, and did not have such a lien in 1933, when the legislative act was passed; that he could not have such a lien because the crops for 1934 were not then in existence. The argument necessarily assumes that the holder of a real estate mortgage containing a pledge of the rents’and profits who has started action to foreclose and to have a receiver appointed has no greater claim to future rents and profits than the holder of such a mortgage who has not started action to foreclose. Therein lies its fallacy.

It is true that there can be no lien upon crops not in exist *420 ence. It is equally true, however, that a mere pledge of rents and profits in a real estate mortgage does not create any right to rents and profits whatever. Such a clause is construed with the defeasance clause and has no life breathed into it until there has been default, and action to foreclose and have a receiver appointed has been commenced. It is well settled, however, that when the holder commences such an action, as the holder of the second mortgage did in this case, that such a pledge then comes to life and begins to speak and is a lien from that date, not only upon the crops in being, but those to be grown thereafter until the expiration of the period of redemption. Of course, as to crops and rents not yet in existence, there can be no actual lien, but there is a definite right created. That right may not be easy of definition or description, but its existence has been repeatedly recognized by this court. It has been called a potential lien, an equitable lien, and lien on property having a potential existence. But whatever it be called, and whatever be the philosophical process by which it is carried over from the time it is created until it attache's to crops in being, there is no mistaking the fact that during that interval the structure of the lien is there as to future crops. Nothing remains but for the crops to grow into it.

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Bluebook (online)
262 N.W. 815, 220 Iowa 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-joint-stock-land-bank-v-armstrong-iowa-1935.