First National Bank v. Hendricks

33 N.E. 110, 134 Ind. 361, 1893 Ind. LEXIS 129
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 1893
DocketNo. 15,547
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 33 N.E. 110 (First National Bank v. Hendricks) 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
First National Bank v. Hendricks, 33 N.E. 110, 134 Ind. 361, 1893 Ind. LEXIS 129 (Ind. 1893).

Opinions

Howard, J.

This was a suit to quiet title to a certain lot in the city of Indianapolis, brought against appellant by appellee, who is the widow and sole legatee of Thomas A. Plendricks, deceased.

Appellant answered by general denial, and also by cross-complaint asserting ownership of said lot, and asking to have its title quieted.

From the finding of facts by the court, we take the following statement of the case:

The First National Bank of Indianapolis, No. 55, Mary McDowell and Thomas A. Hendricks, each held a mortgage upon parts of lot 17, in square 97, in the city of Indianapolis; and the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company held a mortgage upon the whole of said lot. The said bank also held a tax and street improvement lien upon all of said property, by purchase thereof at delinquent tax sale. The bank also held a mortgage upon eighty acres of land in Shelby county, Indiana, against Delos Root and wife, owners of said lot 17, in Indianapolis, and also held a personal judgment against said Delos Root, which was a lien upon all of said land and lot.

In 1878 said bank began proceedings in the Marion Superior Court to foreclose its said mortgage, making all of the aforesaid parties, and others, defendants. After-wards said bank filed an amendment to its complaint, [363]*363asking for an adjustment and enforcement of its tax and street assessment lien on and against said lot No. 17, averring said lien to be the first and senior lien, and asking for a foreclosure and sale of the property for the payment of said tax and assessment lien. The said Thomas A. Hendricks, and other defendants, each filed answer and cross-complaint against said bank and other mortgagees, and also against the judgment creditors of said Delos Root.

The bank filed its answer to the cross-complaint of the said Thomas A. Hendricks, setting up its aforesaid judgment lien against said Delos Root, and asking that the same be protected. The cause was submitted to the court without a jury.

The said superior court found:

First. That, on the 15th day of October, 1874, the mortgage set up by the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company was executed by Delos Root upon the whole of said lot 17, of which he was then the owner, and that the lien of said mortgage was prior and superior to all liens and claims set up in the action by any of the parties, except, first, the mortgage of Thomas A. Hendricks as to the part of the lot covered thereby; second, the mortgage of Mary McDowell as to the part of said lot covered thereby; and, third, the tax and street assessment liens of the bank as to the whole of the lot. It was further found that after the execution of said mortgage to said insurance company, said Delos Root had subdivided and platted said lot 17 into seven lots, numbered from one to seven, and that the same ought to be sold separately.

Second. As to the complaint of the bank, it was found that the defendant Root executed a mortgage on the 31st day of August, 1875, to the bank, on certain parts of said lot 17, which, upon its subsequent subdivision, became [364]*364lots one and two of said subdivision, and that said mortgage was prior and superior to the liens and claims of all the defendants to said real estate, except a certain judgment lien in favor of Daniel De Camp and others, and the mortgage of the Massachusetts Life Insurance Company. It was further found that said bank had a lien upon the whole of said lot 17 for taxes and street assessments, to the amount of two thousand seven hundred and ninety-nine dollars and eighty-four cents, “which sum is a lien on all of said lot, senior and prior to that of all others." It was further found that this sum should be apportioned among the seven lots into which said lot 17 had been subdivided, and that the sum of five hundred and twenty-six dollars and forty-nine cents should be apportioned to lot number three; and that the sum so apportioned, after the payment of costs, should be first paid out of the proceeds of the sale of said lots under said decree.

Third. As to the cross-complaint of the said Thomas A. Hendricks, it was found that the defendants Root and wife executed a mortgage to him on the 1st day of January, 1876, on a part of said lot 17, which, upon the subdivision of said lot, became known as lot number three; that said mortgage was the first mortgage lien on said lot three, but that certain judgments, including one in favor of said bank, recovered December 5th, 1875, for four thousand seven hundred and forty-six dollars and eighty-three cents, were liens older and senior to that of said mortgage. It was further found that the lien of said bank “on account of taxes and assessments for street improvements paid, is the first and senior lien on said realty, in the amount heretofore found — five hundred and twenty-six dollars and forty-nine cents." It was further found that, except as aforesaid, the lien of all the other parties to said action upon said lot three was junior, and [365]*365subject to the said mortgage lieu of said Thomas A. Hendricks. It was further found that the amount due on said mortgage to Thomas A. Hendricks was seven thousand one hundred and fifty-eight dollars and thirty-two cents, and that he was entitled to a decree of foreclosure therefor against all of the defendants to his cross-complaint, subject to the prior liens on said mortgaged realty, so found as aforesaid, and to an order of sale of said premises. .

Upon these findings it was decreed:

First. That there was due to the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company fourteen thousand seven hundred and thirty-five dollars and forty-six cents.

Second. That Thomas A. Hendricks recover of said Delos Root seven thousand one hundred and fifty-eight dollars and thirty-two cents.

Third. That there were due said First National Bank, No. 55, certain specified amounts, secured by its said mortgage; and that there was also due said bank, on account of moneys paid out at said tax sales, the payment of taxes, and sales on account of nonpayment of street improvements, and the interest accrued thereon, the sum of two thousand seven hundred.and ninety-nine dollars and eighty-four cents, and that the said sum is the first and senior lien on said lots of Delos and Kate H. Root's subdivision of said lot 17; and that of said sum the amount of lien on lot three of said subdivision is five hundred and twenty-six dollars and forty-nine cents; "and said liens are hereby enforced, and said lots ordered to be sold to pay the same.”

Fourth. That as to the mortgage of the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company, the equity of redemption of all the defendants to the cross-complaint of said company should- be foreclosed, subject only to the prior [366]*366mortgage lien of Thomas A. Hendricks as to lot number three, and of Mary McDowell as to lot number seven.

Fifth. The equity of redemption of all the defendants to the complaint of the First National Bank as to the parts of said lot seventeen embraced in its mortgage, should be foreclosed, subject only to the prior mortgage lien of the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company and the judgment lien in favor of Daniel De Camp and others.

Sixth. That the equity of redemption of all the defendants to the cross-complaint of Thomas A.

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Bluebook (online)
33 N.E. 110, 134 Ind. 361, 1893 Ind. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-hendricks-ind-1893.