First Trust Joint Stock Land Bank v. Thomas

274 N.W. 11, 223 Iowa 1018
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 15, 1937
DocketNo. 43864.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 274 N.W. 11 (First Trust Joint Stock Land Bank v. Thomas) 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. Thomas, 274 N.W. 11, 223 Iowa 1018 (iowa 1937).

Opinions

Parsons, J.'

This cause was commenced March 27, 1935, by the First Trust Joint Stock Land Bank of Chicago, plaintiff, for foreclosure of a mortgage given by John E. Tuey and wife in August 1925, on 197% acres of land in Mills County, Iowa, to secure the payment of a note for $5,000.

The petition alleged that Tuey and wife had conveyed the land to Arthur B. Thomas, November 29, 1926, and that Thomas *1020 specifically assumed and agreed to pay the mortgage on said land. The petition also alleged the defendant C. H. Dashner, by referee’s deed, in accordance with the decree in partition, took sole title to above-described real estate, and by the terms of said deed assumed and agreed to pay the real estate mortgage and note of the plaintiff.

On April 6, 1935, the defendant Dashner filed a motion for continuance, stating in said motion that he was in possession of the real estate as the owner, and came into possession August 20, 1934, by referee’s deed; and that he was not in default. This was probably for the purpose of continuance under the moratorium acts.

Plaintiff thereupon filed an amendment to his petition setting forth that about August 20,1934, referee’s report of sale to C. H. Dashner and order approving same were filed in the court in Equity case No. 13588, and at said time two installments payable under the plaintiff’s real estate mortgage were past due and delinquent, and that in September, 1934, the plaintiff, with the knowledge of and' relying upon the assumption of and agreement to pay its said real estate, as contained in the referee’s report of sale and deed, did forego and put off the foreclosure proceeding, and did not commence this suit until the following year, although three installments with interest were past due and unpaid, and did thereby lose its lien upon the 1934 crops grown upon the real estate described in the petition, and suffered the accumulation of additional unpaid real estate taxes that had become a lien on said real estate, and experienced a material deterioration and reduction in the value of its security; that said Dashner in this case filed his motion for continuance, alleging that he was in possession of the real estate as owner thereof, and came into such possession about August 20, 1934, by referee’s deed; that the defendant Dashner is now estopped from denying that he accepted the terms of said referee’s report of sale dated July 28, 1934, and referee’s deed, and that the decree of the court in case No. 13588 entered of record about May 29, 1934, approving report of the referee in said case, entered and filed for record with the clerk of the court on or about August 20, 1934, were final and no appeal was taken therefrom, and that any attempt or supposed correction thereof had or done more than a year after the' entry and filing thereof with the clerk of the court is without authority of law and beyond the jurisdiction of *1021 the court or a judge thereof, and was utterly void and of no force or effect upon the record; and prayed as in the original petition.

The result of this action was that on March 9, 1936, decree was entered foreclosing the mortgage as against the real estate and all of the defendants, with personal judgment against Arthur B. Thomas; the question of personal liability of Dashner being especially reserved by the court, the decree reciting:

“Jurisdiction is retained to determine personal liability of defendant C. H. Dashner, and as to question of such liability this cause stands continued and is made without prejudice to any of the rights of the defendant, C. H. Dashner, on the question of personal liability as a subsequent grantee.”

Thereafter, upon special execution, said real estate was sold by the sheriff, leaving a deficiency judgment against the defendant Thomas in the sum of $1,300, with interest at 8 per cent per annum from April 18, 1936. Dashner filed an answer alleging simply,

“This answering defendant denies that in the contract between him and the referee in partition, from whom he purchased said real estate, that he ever assumed or agreed to pay any part of the mortgage of the plaintiff on the premises described in plaintiff’s petition, and alleges that he took the same only subject to said mortgage and without any assumption of liability on his part to pay the same. ’ ’

The record further shows that the action in partition was brought by C. H. Dashner, defendant herein, as plaintiff, against A. B. Thomas et al., and prayed for decree confirming title to said land to be in Dashner and Thomas, share and share alike; that said decree ordered the real estate appraised and sold, either at public or private sale, but if at private sale at not less than the appraised price to the best and highest bidder; that after said sale, the proceeds thereof, after paying the mortgage indebtedness and expenses and costs of the action, including the statutory attorney’s fees for plaintiff’s attorneys, be divided equally between said parties, after paying a reasonable fee for the referees for services rendered, after being fixed by the court. In an amendment to the petition it set forth the beginning of this action, and alleged that in February, 1933, the plaintiff, C. *1022 H. Dashner commenced an action in Mills County, Iowa, court, entitled C. H. Dashner, plaintiff, v. A. B. Thomas, defendant, being case No. 13318, and in said action it was determined that Dashner had a lien against said premises in the sum of $550, with interest at 6 per cent from and after May 9, 1933.

The decree in case No. 13588 was put in evidence. In that the court found that A. B. Thomas was indebted to C. H. Dashner, defendant herein, in the sum of $550, as of May 9, 1933, with interest at 6 per cent per annum from said date, and that in the event said real estate was sold there should be deducted from the share due A. B. Thomas the said sum of $550 with interest at 6 per cent per annum from May 9, 1933; and directed that the referees proceed to determine whether said land could be divided in kind among the parties thereto, and in the event it could not be divided, it should be sold and the proceeds divided, after deducting the mortgage indebtedness, and the costs of the action, including attorneys’ fees, equally between the said Dashner and Thomas. It confirmed the title in the plaintiff C. H. Dashner and defendant A. B. Thomas, and ordered the appointment of referees to determine whether the real estate could be equitably divided between the parties, and if it could not be so divided that it be sold at private or public sale, but if at private sale, to the highest bidder therefor, and at not less than the appraised price; but if at public sale, to the best and highest bidder, after giving published notice as required by law for the sale of like property, on sale under execution. The referees were made appraisers in the case, and fixed the value of the premises at $5,400. Said referees subsequently reported the sale of the real estate, that same had been sold to C. H. Dashner for $6,600, payable as follows: (1) By assuming the mortgage with delinquent interest thereon and delinquent taxes on'said real estate, totaling approximately $5,000; (2) by a receipt of his share of approximately $800; (3) by the receipt to defendant A. B. Thomas of $550, note, with interest to date; and (4) by paying the costs in said action.

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Bluebook (online)
274 N.W. 11, 223 Iowa 1018, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-trust-joint-stock-land-bank-v-thomas-iowa-1937.