Gimbel v. Stolte

59 Ind. 446
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 59 Ind. 446 (Gimbel v. Stolte) 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
Gimbel v. Stolte, 59 Ind. 446 (Ind. 1877).

Opinion

Worden, J.

— This was au action by the appellee, Mina Btolte, as administratrix of the estate of Frederick Jasper, deceased, against Michael Gimbel, the city of Indianapolis and Frederick Wuusch.

Judgment was rendered in favor of Indianapolis, on ■demurrer to the complaint, and, on trial and finding by the court in favor of the plaintiff, against Gimbel, for the sum of one hundred and twenty-six dollars and twenty-five cents.

The following are the material facts developed upon ■the trial of the cause:

Jasper, the plaintiff’s intestate, held a judgment .against Wunsch, which was a lien on a lot in the city of Indianapolis, then owned by Wunsch, on which judgment there was due, at the date of the finding and judgment herein, the sum above mentioned. One Stevens held a mortgage on the same lot, which was senior to Jasper’s judgment. The mortgage was foreclosed, Jasper not being made a party to the suit, and the lot was sold to Gimbel, under the decree, and he received the sheriff’s deed therefor. Afterward the lot was condemned by the city of Indianapolis for street purposes, as the property of Gimbel, and he was paid therefor by the city the sum of weight hundred dollars. Deducting the amount paid by [448]*448Gimbel for the property at the sheriff's sale, together with the amount since paid by him in discharge of liens upon the property, from the eight hundred dollars, there will be more than enough of that sum left to discharge the Jasper judgment. Wunseh is insolvent.

The question arises, whether, on these facts, the judgment below was right.

The plaintiff was entitled, as against Gimbel, to redeem the property, her intestate not having been made a party to the foreclosure suit; and, if the property were in a situation in which it could be redeemed by her, that would seem to be her only remedy.

The question arises, therefore, whether she is entitled to redeem against Indianapolis. This question must be determined by reference to the statute under which the lot was condemned by the city for street purposes.

Sections 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66 and 67 of the act of 1867 to provide for the incorporation of cities, 1 R. S. 1876, p. 267, provide for the condemnation and appropriation of real estate for street purposes, on payment of damages to the owner or owners. The amount to be paid is the value of the property appropriated less any benefits assessed to the owner, to be ascertained by commissioners in the manner provided for. ÍTotice is to be given to the owners, or agents thereof, of lots or lands upon or through which the street is proposed to be made. If the owners are unknown, or non-residents, publication is to be made. "When the report of the commissioners is filed, the common council, if it accept the terms of the same, directs the treasurer of the city to tender to the owner or owners of such real estate the damages awarded by the commissioners, deducting the amount of benefits assessed to the owner or owners; or, if not found within the county, or the award is not accepted, then the same shall be kept by the treasurer as a special deposit, subject to the order of such owner, or his heirs or representatives.

It is thus seen, that the statute contemplates proceed[449]*449ings only against owners of the property to be appropriated.

Notice is to be given only to owners, and the damages are to be paid only to owners. The damages are the full value of the property appropriated, subject only to such deductions as may be made for benefits accruing to the owner by reason of the improvement.

The question arises, whether, when a city has thus condemned real estate for street purposes, and has paid the owner therefor, it takes the property, for such purpose, discharged from the lien of previous judgments.

In the case of Watson v. The N. Y. C. R. R. Co., 47 N. Y. 157, which was identical in principle, it was held that such condemnation cut off the lien of prior judgments. "We make the following extracts from the opinion of the court in that case, as being entirely applicable to the one before us. The court said: “ The court below held that the act under which the proceedings for condemnation of the land were instituted, did not require that judgment creditors be made parties thereto. * * That under those acts the proceedings were to be taken only against the owners of the land, and that compensation was to be made only to such owners. That a judgment creditor having a mere statutory lien was in no sense an owner,, and that the title of the railroad company, when acquired under the acts, became paramount to such lien.

The provisions of the acts in question are fully referred to in the opinion delivered at general term by Masten, J., and we concur with the learned judge that they admit of no other construction than that the owners were the only necessary or proper parties to the proceeding.

**********

The terms owner or owners,’ as used in these statutes, being intended to designate the parties entitled to the compensation which is substituted for the land taken, should be held to embrace all persons having estates in [450]*450the land in possession, reversion or remainder. Parks v. City of Boston, 15 Pick. 198. All persons having proprietary interests are entitled to compensation, for the aggregate of those interests constitute the ownership or fee. It has been frequently held that tenants for years are owners within the meaning of similar statutes. Turnpike Road v. Brosi, 22 Pa. St. 29; Brown v. Powell, 25 Pa. St. 229; Baltimore and Ohio R. R. Co. v. Thompson, 10 Md. 76; Parks v. City of Boston, 15 Pick. 198. Also that a franchise issuing out of the land may be regarded as real estate, for which the owner is entitled to compensation. Enfield Toll Bridge Co. v. Hartford and N. H. R. R. Co., 17 Conn. 454.

“Rut a judgment creditor of an owner has no estate or proprietary interest in the land. He stands wholly upon ■the law., which gives him a remedy for the collection of his debt by a sale of the land under execution, in case sufficient personal property of the debtor should not be found. This remedy is not secured by contract, but is purely statutory, and in aid of it acts have been passed, from time to time, authorizing a sale of the land which the defendant owned at the time of recovery or docketing of the judgment, or at any subsequent period, and making the judgment a lien upon the land. The duration of this lien, and the mode ©f its enforcement and discharge, are subjects which appertain to the laws for the collection of dd)fcs ^

“ It is clearly within the power of the legislature to abolish the lien of all judgments at any time before rights have become vested or estates acquired under them, and, placing real estate on the same footing as personal property, to confine the remedies of the creditor to the property held by the debtor at the time of issuing the execution.

“ This would be no greater exercise of power than the abolition of the right of distress for rent, or of the lien of [451]*451the landlord on property taken in execution, or of the right of imprisoning the debtor.

“ Yet the validity of such laws has been fulty recoguized even where they affected existing claims or judgments.

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Bluebook (online)
59 Ind. 446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gimbel-v-stolte-ind-1877.