Haggerty v. Byrne

75 Ind. 499
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1881
DocketNo. 8217
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 75 Ind. 499 (Haggerty v. Byrne) 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
Haggerty v. Byrne, 75 Ind. 499 (Ind. 1881).

Opinion

Bicknell, C. C.

This was a suit by the appellee John Byrne against the appellant and his wife and Thomas Parsons, upon two promissory notes, made by the appellant and [500]*500secured by mortgages executed by the appellant and his wife. Thomas Parsons was made a defendant as a junior judgment creditor of the appellant. The complaint demanded judgment upon the notes and foreclosure of the mortgages. By the death of the appellant’s wife, the suit as to her was abated. The appellant filed a cross complaint, in two paragraphs, to each of which the appellee demurred, “for the reason that the same did not contain facts sufficient to constitute a cross complaint.” Said demurrers were sustained by the court, and the appellant excepted. He refused to answer further. The appellee Thomas Parsons filed an answer, and the cause was submitted to the court for trial. The court found for the appellee, and rendered judgment in his favor for the amount of the notes and interest, and for the foreclosure of the mortgages.

The errors assigned by the appellant are, that the court erred in sustaining said demurrers. The first pai’agraph of the cross complaint admits the execution and the maturity of the mortgages, and alleges that, after their execution, the appellant was duly declared a bankrupt, and that all of his estate became vested in his assignee in bankruptcy ; that his wife was then living, and that she thereby became the owner of one undivided third of the mortgaged land: that, while she was such owner, said assignee in bankruptcy, by the order of the court which declared the bankruptcy, conveyed to the appellee all the right, title and interest in said mortgaged lands, vested in him as such assignee : that such order was procured by the appellee ; that afterward the appellant’s wife died seized of said undivided one-third of said lands, which, by her death, became vested in the appellant; that the value of the said two-thirds so conveyed to said appellee by said assignee was greater than the debt secured by said mortgages, and that said conveyance was made for the nominal consideration of one dollar, and was really made to appellee as such mortgagee; that appellant is still seized of [501]*501the estate thus vested in him upon his wife’s death, and that one of the objects of appellee’s suit is to foreclose as to such estate. Wherefore appellant prays that said mortgages, as to said undivided one-third, be declared satisfied, and that his title thereto be quieted, and that his said interest be set off and assigned to him, and for all other proper relief.

The second paragraph of the cross complaint differs from the first, in alleging that the order to convey the mortgaged land to the appellee was procured by the appellee “and by said assignee,” and in averring the execution of another mortgage, by the appellant to the appellee, upon a part of the same land embraced in one of the mortgages sued on, and that said third mortgage is not due, and that said conveyance, by the assignee in bankruptcy to the appellee, was made in payment of all of said mortgages, severally, and upon ■no other consideration, and that the value of said two-thirds, so conveyed to the appellee, exceeds the amount of the incumbrances thereon respectively, and that, by said conveyance, said mortgages have all been paid to the extent of the value of two-thirds of said lots respectively, and that they ought to be declared satisfied, or, if not fully paid, they ought to be declared satisfied to the extent of the ■value of the two-thirds so conveyed. In this paragraph appellant makes the mortgages sued on a part of his cross complaint, referring to them as they appear on certain lines and pages of the complaint, and he annexes a copy of said mortgage not yet due, and prays that an account be taken, and that, if the value of the interest so conveyed to the appellee by the assignee in bankruptcy be equal to or greater than the mortgage debts, then said mortgages, as to him and said undivided one-third, be declared satisfied, and that, if the value of said interest be not sufficient to pay said mortgages, then said mortgages, as to appellant’s said undivided one-third of the lands, be foreclosed as to such deficiency only. This paragraph concludes with a prayer that said un[502]*502divided one-third “be partitioned” and set oft to the appellant, and for all other proper relief.

The act of March 11th, 1875, 1 R. S. 1876, p. 554, provides that, in all cases of judicial sales of real, property, in which a married woman 'has an inchoate interest by virtue of her marriage, and such inchoate interest is not directed by the judgment to be sold, or barred by such sale, such interest shall become absolute and vest in the wife, in the same manner and to the same extent as such inchoate interest now becomes absolute upon the death of the husband, whenever, by virtue of such sale, the legal title of the husband shall become vested in the purchaser thereof. Sec. 1. The same act, in section 3, provides that, upon the death, during-the marriage, of a wife holding such real estate, it shall descend to her surviving husband.

In Roberts v. Shroyer, 68 Ind. 64, it was held that the conveyance of the -bankrupt’s property to the assignee by the register is a judicial sale within the meaning of said act of March 11th, 1875, and that the inchoate interest of the wife,, in the lands of her bankrupt husband, becomes absolute, and is vested in the wife immediately upon the'conveyance to the assignee ; but it is also held that, where a wife joins in a mortgage, she has no inchoate interest in the land that can be asserted against the mortgage. Kissel v. Eaton, 64 Ind. 248 ; Jackman v. Fowling, 69 Ind. 188. Under the act of March 11th, 1875, the wife undoubtedly takes as a purchaser, and if she dies seized, during the marriage, the land descends to her husband as her heir. May v. Fletcher, 40 Ind. 575. He inherits it, to hold just as she held it, subject to the mortgage. The wife of the. appellant, having-joined in the mortgages, afterward, by operation of law became the owner in fee, in her own right, of an undivided one-third of the mortgaged land ; but the conveyance of the-land by the assignee in bankruptcy to the mortgagee did not, in equity, operate as a satisfaction of the mortgage. Although, [503]*503as a general rule, when the mortgagee acquires the fee simple of the mortgaged land the mortgage is thereby merged in the fee, yet, in equity, the mortgage will always be kept alive, if the mortgagee desires it and if it be necessary to protect any of his interests, unless he agreed or intended to abandon it. In this case, if the mortgaged lands had been deemed to be of more value than the mortgaged debts, they could not have been conveyed by the assignee in bankruptcy to the appellee. The theory of that conveyance was that the lands would not more than satisfy the mortgages. In such a case, the acceptance of the conveyance by the mortgagee does not show an intention in him that the mortgage shall be merged in the fee.

When the wife, by virtue of her statutory connubial rights, acquired one-third of the land in fee, she took it subject to the mortgage, in which she had joined. The fact that, by operation of law, her inchoate interest was changed into a consummate interest, did not satisfy the mortgage as to her one-third of the land. Under the act of March 11th, 1875, supra, she took one-third absolutely as if her husband were dead, but it was not discharged from the mortgage. In Graves v. Braden, 62 Ind.

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Bluebook (online)
75 Ind. 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haggerty-v-byrne-ind-1881.