First Trust Joint Stock Land Bank v. Ogle

221 N.W. 537, 208 Iowa 15
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 23, 1928
DocketNo. 39137.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 221 N.W. 537 (First Trust Joint Stock Land Bank v. Ogle) 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 Trust Joint Stock Land Bank v. Ogle, 221 N.W. 537, 208 Iowa 15 (iowa 1928).

Opinion

*16 Kindig, J.

There is presented here the question as to whether or not the First Trust Joint Stock Land Bank, appellant, or Frances Ogle, one of the appellees, is entitled to the rents accruing on the farm involved in the case at bar after the issuance of a sheriff’s deed therefor to the former.

Those rents grew out of a receivership proceeding incident to the foreclosure of a real estate mortgage. That instrument of security, covering 629.77 acres of land in iWarren County, was executed on April 10, 1923, by the appellee Harry Ogle, then a widower, in favor of appellant, the First Trust Joint Stock Land Bank, to secure a note of $25,000. Afterwards, this realty, subject to the incumbrance, was conveyed to the appellee Frances Ogle. Default resulted through the nonpayment of the note, and on August 23, 1926, the appellant, as plaintiff, instituted an action to foreclose the mortgage against the appellees, as defendants. In harmony with the prayer of the petition in that cause, the district court, on September 21st of the same year, rendered a judgment of foreclosure, and as a part thereof provided for the appointment of a receiver to take charge of the premises for the year beginning March 1, 1927, in order to lease the same and collect the rents and profits therefrom. Such allowance of the receivership under the decree was not to become effective until after the foreclosure sale, and then only in the event that there was a deficiency judgment remaining.

As a result of that sale, there was a deficiency of $500, and, in harmony with the court’s order before mentioned, one C. R. McCoy was named such officer, and he duly qualified. A lease for the realty was made by the receiver to W. O. and Ida L. Lester, the term of which commenced March 1, 1927, and ended February 28, 1928. Two installments of rent were provided, the one for $450 and the other $1,900, payable respectively on the first days of October and December, 1927. No redemption was made by those entitled thereto, and accordingly, on November 1st of that year, the Warren County sheriff duly executed and delivered to the appellant a deed for the acreage. This was approximately four months before the expiration of the lease and one month prior to the maturity of the $1,900 installment of rent.

The receiver, believing that his administration was ended, after the issuance of the sheriff’s deed, filed his final report November 4th, showing: First, expenditures made for seed wheat *17 and taxes in the aggregate sum of $608,92; second, the assignment of the lease to the appellant, subject to the payment of said expenditures; third, satisfaction of his own compensation; and fourth, an agreement with appellant to release the deficiency judgment when the final report was approved. To this, objections were filed by Frances Ogle, based upon the theory that she was the fee owner during the redemption period, and that, after the payment of the $500 deficiency judgment, together with the receivership costs and expenditures, the remaining rent belonged to her.

At this juncture, it is enlightening to review the legal principles applicable.

I. Conveyance of land passes all right, title, and interest of the grantor therein, including the unacerued rent of an attaching unexpired lease. Nelson v. Tracy, 184 Iowa 1118; Clark v. Strohbeen, 190 Iowa 989; Hall v. Hall, 150 Iowa 277; Johnson v. Siedel, 178 Iowa 244. We said, in Johnson v. Siedel, supra:

“The authorities seem to hold that, without a special provision in the lease or by statute, rents are not apportioned in respect to time, so that the person who owns the reversion on the date the rent becomes due, is entitled to the entire rental matured that day. ’ ’

II. Likewise, this doctrine of the law applies with equal force to a transfer of the premises under a sheriff’s deed at execution sale. Goldstein v. Mundon, 202 Iowa 381; Clark v. Strohbeen, supra. Appropriate language in Goldstein v. Mundon, supra, is to the following effect:

“Under his sheriff’s deed, the plaintiff succeeded instanter to all the rights of his grantor in said real estate. In so far as such grantor had become a landlord, and was entitled to unaccrued rents, such unaccrued rents passed at once to the plaintiff. If any rental share of crops was due such grantor, as landlord, such rental share inured at once to the benefit of the plaintiff, and he became entitled to receive the same from the tenants, in lieu of his grantor; and this is so regardless of whether the crops were matured or unmatured. ”

III. An exception to this general rule arises in those instances where the grant contains a reservation, or there is some *18 other simultaneous contract entered into, having similar effect. Clark v. Strohbeen, Nelson v. Tracy, and Hall v. Hall, supra. Hall v. Hall, supra, contains this phraseology:

“It is a well-settled rule that unaccrued rent passes to the purchaser unless it is reserved. * * * As we have said, the deed made no reservation, but it was shown by the testimony of the witnesses for both parties that at the sale the possession of the premises was reserved until the 1st of March following. This testimony was received without objection, and it is now too late for the appellant to contend that it was incompetent. ’ ’

IV. So, in the case at bar, appellee Frances Ogle seeks to justify the judgment of the district court upon the theory that appellant, on February 21, 1927, waived its right to the rent through the execution of a written instrument jointly with her. Contained in that docuinent, which was filed in the receivership proceedings, is the following subject-matter:

“Come now the plaintiff [appellant] and the defendants [appellees] * * * and respectfully state to the court that the receiver heretofore appointed, to wit, C. B. McCoy, has entered into a tentative lease of the mortgaged premises to W. O. Lester and Ida J. Lester for a period from March 1, 1927, to and including February 28, 1928, which is beyond the statutory period of redemption.
“And said parties hereto signify their approval of said lease, consenting to the same and waiving any claim or right to the possession of said premises prior to March 1, 1928. It being the intention to ratify said lease and extend to said lessees the right of said possession under said lease until said expiration date, to wit, February 28, 1928. ’ ’

Affixed thereto are the signatures of both the appellant and appellee Frances Ogle. Whatever relinquishment was thereby accomplished bound the one as much as the other. Appellee Frances Ogle here bases her argument upon the proposition that the criterion to determine the ownership of the rent is the right of possession to the real estate. Her reliance is made chiefly on Hall v. Hall, supra, wherein it is stated:

“But it is equally well established by the authorities that *19

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221 N.W. 537, 208 Iowa 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-trust-joint-stock-land-bank-v-ogle-iowa-1928.