Grimes v. Kelloway

216 N.W. 963, 204 Iowa 1220
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 17, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 216 N.W. 963 (Grimes v. Kelloway) 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
Grimes v. Kelloway, 216 N.W. 963, 204 Iowa 1220 (iowa 1927).

Opinion

Kindig, J.

A review of the historical facts is first impor *1222 tant. On the 28th day of -February, 1920, defendants Roy W. Kelloway and Otis A. Kelloway made and delivered to the defendant'Robert Smith a certain promissory note for the sum of $12,000, bearing interest from March 1, 1920, at the rate of 5 per cent per annum, due March 1, 1925. To secure the payment of the "negotiable instrument, the makers thereof, as grantors, executed a mortgage on certain real estate in Greene County, containing approximately 52% acres. About the 21st day of July, 1921, Robert Smith .transferred the written promise to pay, by indorsement in blank, to' L. B. Bartholomew, Taylor Grimes, and-L. M. Grimes, plaintiffs, and appellees, and at the same time, in-writing, assigned to them the “mortgage.” After-wards, on March 31, 1920, the Kelloways conveyed the burdened farm by 'deéd to Jabez A. Keys and Katie Keys, wherein the grantees assumed and agreed to pay the incumbrance. Then the Keys, who were husband and wife, sold the premises involved to F. P. Cudahy and Frank Tiffany, defendants and appellees, and in the deed accepted, these, grantees also “assumed and ..agreed to pay” the indebtedness. Finally, on April 7, 1923, Cudahy and Tiffany disposed of the acreage to John W. Irving, defendant and appellant. ’ In 'that instrument of conveyance also, the. grantee ‘ ‘ assumed and agreed to pay the mortgage. ’ ’’ Contained in the original security agreement is the following:,

“It is also agreed that in case of default in any respect so that this -mortgage can be' foreclosed, the rents and profits of said premises, as well before as after sale on execution, are hereby pledged to the payment of the moneys secured hereby, and that on the commencement-of an action to foreclose this mortgage, the plaintiff therein shall be entitled to the appoint- • ment of a receiver with the usual powers to take and hold such rents and profits for the benefit qf the plaintiff, and subject to the order of the court.”

There was “default,” and on March 19, 1925, this suit was instituted to procure judgment against. Roy W. Kelloway,; Otis A. Kelloway, Robert Smith, Jabez A. Keys, Katie Keys, F. P. Cudahy, Frank Tiffany, and John W. Irving, the foreclosure of the “mortgage,” and the “appointment of a.receiver.” ■ Supplemental to this, on April 14, 1925, the appellees, by amendment, asked for the issuance of a writ of attachment. Trial was had and personal “judgment” was granted against John W. Irving, *1223 F.-P. Cudahy, Frank Tiffany, Roy W.! Kelloway, Otis A.-Kelloway, and Robert Smith, the “mortgage’’ foreclosed, the temporary; “receivership ” made permanent, and the-'adjudicated amount made a lien upon appellant’s separate land previously levied upon'under the “writ of attachment:”

The errors relied upon for reversal will now be considered.

■ I. ■ Appellant complains that he should not be held, because he did not undertake the fulfillment of" said legal obligation to be-discharged-by others: With this contention we are constrained ■to disagree. In the- compact whereby appellant •procured the right to obtain the premises; there appears, in reference to the liability in question, ■the following language: ■ '

‘ ‘ One first mortgage of ■ $12,000.00 to Robert Smith, due March 1, 1925, which grantee assumes and agrees to pay,'with interest from March'1, 1923;”" ■ '

• " And accordingly, in the resulting “deed” from Cudahy and Tiffany there is the sentence:- ■ ■ " : 1

• - “ Except a first mortgage of ' $12-000.00' to Robert Smith, due March 1, 1925, * * * which grantee assumes and agrees to pay, with interest from March T,' 1923.”

Those stipulations make appellant the principal debtor; as between the maker and subsequent assumers of the “obligation.”' Boice v. Coffeen, 158 Iowa 705; Bennett Sav. Bank v. Smith, 171 Iowa 405; Beeson v. Green, 103 Iowa 406. Beeson v. Green, supra, declares:

■ ‘ ‘ That the deed was accepted is hot questioned, nor could it be, under such circumstances. The defendants had made' all the use of the instrument for which it was designed'. It had served the purpose of transferring title #' *-■*. They insist, however, * * * -that they never agreed to' pay the mortgage.' But' the agreement to -pay is in' writing. - By accepting the deed they obligated ‘ themselves as effectually as though they had signed it;.-” - -• ■- ' : ..... ;

II. Argument- is sought to be predicated upon the proposition that the ‘ ‘ assumption and agreement to pay ’ ’ was personal •to Tiffany-and Cudahy, and not for the-benefit-of the holder of the “mortgage,”'because of the peculiar4language cohtained in the ‘-‘deed.-’’ That-is‘to say, immediately succeeding the description of the real property is inserted the clause in question, and it *1224 is’insisted that, as thus constructed, the purport of the text is. not to exclude the “.mortgage” from the warranty against “incumbrance,” but rather amounts. to. a reduction of .the real estate itself to .the, extent of the “mortgage.”' ....

This claim is not well.founded. Returning to the “contract of purchase, ’ ’ it will, be discovered there is no ambiguity, but, on the other, hand, the intention is there very plain and clear that appellant was to “assume and pay” the amount of the “mortgage”, to whomever it may be due. Moreover, a study of the entire “deed”.will convince beyond a peradventure of a doubt that its provisions under criticism are in harmony with said ' ‘ agreement, ’ ’ and when correctly interpreted, mean that Cudahy and Tiffany did not “warrant” the title against the “mortgage,” and that appellant “assumed and .agreed to pay” the same. ■.

III. Directed against the procedure relating to the attach- • ment is a demand for reversal because jurisdiction is lacking. Insistence on the absence thereof is based, first, upon the insufficiency of the grounds for “attachment,” and second, the misjoinder of it with other remedies in this “foreclosure” .proceeding. It is not necessary to pass upon this phase of the controversy, because the .subject now has become moot.

General “judgment” was entered against appellant, automatically becoming a lien upon all his real estate, including that covered by the “attachment.” As no intervening creditors are concerned, and complications relating to priorities are not present, the outcome must be the same, whether the specific property is held under the “attachment” or “judgment lien.”

iy. - Urgent objection is proclaimed against the “appointment of the. receiver.” Such protest rests upon the alleged premises that: First, insolvency of all the obligors has not been .shown; and second, the rights of Cudahy and Tiffany cannot rise higher than those of the .“holder of the mortgage” in this respect. True, there is in the record no evidence concerning .the financial responsibility of the Kelloways and Smith, but the controversy, at this juncture is between Cudahy and Tiffany on the one hand .and appellant on the other. These appellees (Cudahy and Tiffany) filed a petition of intervention in the *1225

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Bluebook (online)
216 N.W. 963, 204 Iowa 1220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grimes-v-kelloway-iowa-1927.