Hakes v. North

203 N.W. 238, 199 Iowa 995
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 7, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 203 N.W. 238 (Hakes v. North) 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
Hakes v. North, 203 N.W. 238, 199 Iowa 995 (iowa 1925).

Opinion

Evans, J. —

The issue presented for our consideration was made in the court below by the respective motions of the parties. A stipulation was entered that the allegations of the various pleadings should be taken as the equivalent of affidavits, and should be received as such in support of the respective contentions of the parties on their motions. Plaintiff’s mortgage was made in March, 1919, and covered a farm of 262 acres. The mortgage was acquired by plaintiff from the mortgagee. The land was conveyed, subject to the mortgage, by the mortgagors, and the title passed through several mesne conveyances, and came to the defendant North sometime in the year 1920. In the conveyance to North, he assumed the plaintiff’s mortgage. North rented the land for the years 1921, 1922, and 1923, by successive renewals, to the defendant J. A. Johnson, who, during such period, farmed the land under said lease. The rents consisted partly of cash and partly of crop share. North pledged these rents for borrowed money, and assigned the lease to the assignor of the defendant City Safety Deposit Company, for each of such years. The plaintiff brought his foreclosure suit on November 3, 1923. The plaintiff claimed the rents for 1923, under the provisions of his mortgage, and obtained the appointment of a receiver for the purpose of collecting the same. The defendant City Safety Deposit Company claimed the rents under the pledge and assignment from North, which was made long prior to the beginning of the foreclosure suit. This is the controversy pre *997 sented for our decision. . Plaintiff’s mortgage contained the following provision: •

“It is expressly agreed and understood by the parties hereto, that upon the commencement of any suit to foreclosure this mortgage, or at any time thereafter and prior to the expiration of the time for redemption from sale of said premises on foreclosure, any court of competent jurisdiction, upon the application of the mortgagee, its successors or assigns, or the purchaser at such sale, may at once and without notice to the mortgagors, their heirs or assigns, or any person claiming under them, appoint a receiver for said premises, to take possession thereof, to enter upon, cultivate, operate, and lease the same, to collect the rents, issu,es, income and profits of such premises during the pendency of such foreclosure and until the time to redeem the same from execution sale shall have expired, and out of the same to make necessary repairs and keep the premises in proper condition and repair during such period, and to pay all taxes and assessments, accrued or accruing between the commencement of such foreclosure suit and the expiration of the time of redemption, unredeemed tax and assessment sales remaining unpaid, at or prior to the foreclosure suit to pay insurance premiums necessary to keep premises insured in accordance with the terms of this mortgage and the expense of such receivership; and, at the option of the mortgagee, its successors and assigns, to have any balance remaining applied upon the debt hereby secured.”

The plaintiff’s claims are predicated upon the foregoing.

For the purpose of this question, we think that defendant North should be deemed to be standing in the shoes of the original mortgagor, inasmuch as he expressly assumed the mortgage. We have held heretofore that such a provision in a real estate mortgage as is above set forth does not operate as a present lien upon the rents, profits, or growing crops of the mortgaged land. Such provision is a part of the remedy provided for the collection of the mortgage, and operates upon the personalty only upon and after the commencement of the foreclosure, and as a part of the procedure. First Nat. Bank v. Security Tr. & Sav. Bank, 191 Iowa 842; Farmers & Merch. State Sav. Bank v. Kriegel, 196 Iowa 833; Swan v. Mitchell, 82 Iowa 307; Paine v. *998 McElroy, 73 Iowa 81; Stetson v. Northern Inv. Co., 101 Iowa 435. See, also, note to Sullivan v. Rosson, 4 A. L. R. 1400, at 1405.

If the provision does not operate as a present lien, it necessarily follows that it does not operate as an impediment in the way of other disposition by the mortgagor, of such rents and crops, either by sale or by pledge. In the enforcement of this provision through a receiver, it is to be enforced as against the mortgagor, and to the extent of the then existing rights of the mortgagor to such rents and crops. To say that the mortgagee may assert a seniority as of the date of his mortgage, or that his rights rise higher than those of the mortgagor, and that they may be asserted as against third parties who had already acquired such rents and crops in good faith from the mortgagor at a prior time, is to say that the mortgagee had a lien upon such property all the time. If he had no lien prior to the foreclosure, then necessarily the mortgagor had a right in good faith to dispose of the same. Any other rule would compel a mortgagor to let his land lie idle. .He could not rent it, without subjecting his tenant to the risk of repudiation in harvest time. If he has a legal right to rent it, he should be deemed to have an equal- right to dispose of the proceeds of the renting. In First Nat. Bank v. Security Tr. & Sav. Bank, 191 Iowa 842, we held that the mortgagor had a right to mortgage his rent share of the crops.for a given season, and that the subsequent foreclosure of the real estate mortgage, containing a like provision as is herein shown, did not entitle it to seniority over the chattel mortgage. Neither the right of the mortgagee to a receivership, nor the power of the receiver when appointed, is wholly independent of the sound discretion of the court. In the exercise of such discretion, the court should take judicial notice that the fiscal year of the farm begins on March 1st; that, if a farm is to be rented at all, it must be rented before the first of March; that the use of the farm’ has no value unless such use be carried through to the maturity of the crop; that the crop to be grown during a given season has, in a legal sense, a potential existence from the beginning of the season, and as such is a fair subject of barter, sale, or pledge. To hold otherwise would be to convert the mortgage proviso into a chattel mortgage. It is the *999 legal privilege of any mortgagee to ask and to receive a chattel mortgage to secure his debt, if that is what he really wants; but the courts are not justified in converting a proviso of this kind into a chattel mortgage by legal implication. Mortgages' are not creatures of implication; nor should they be too readily permitted to spring suddenly from cover of unsuspected places.

If, as we have held, the mortgage proviso under consideration created no lien before foreclosure, then it necessarily follows that it could have no retroactive effect after foreclosure. Its operation must be prospective, and not retrospective. This is not saying that the mortgagee may not assail fraud and bad faith; but nothing of that kind is involved here.

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Bluebook (online)
203 N.W. 238, 199 Iowa 995, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hakes-v-north-iowa-1925.