Hannah v. Dorrell

73 Ind. 465
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1881
DocketNo. 7548
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 73 Ind. 465 (Hannah v. Dorrell) 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
Hannah v. Dorrell, 73 Ind. 465 (Ind. 1881).

Opinion

Newcomb, C.

— This was, originally, an action to foreclose a mortgage on real estate, given by the appellants to one Daniel Dorrell, who assigned the same, with the mortgage [466]*466notes, to the appellee. The notes were eleven in number, running from one to eleven years, and but one of them was due. They were given for the purchase-money of the land mortgaged. At the time of the sale and conveyance of the land to' Milton Hannah, there were two mortgages upon it, one to the State of Indiana, for the benefit of the school fund, which figures in the subsequent proceedings as “the school fund mortgage.” This incumbrance amounted to $400. The other mortgage was owing to Mary Scranton, who was made a defendant in the action, and, on her cross complaint, her mortgage was foreclosed.

Hannah and wife filed a cross complaint, in which they alleged that Daniel Dorrell conveyed the lands in question to Milton Hannah, the maker of the notes, with full covenants of warranty, and agreed and promised to pay off the incumbrances thereon. Also, that when Daniel Dorrell assigned the notes to the plaintiff, the latter promised him, in writing, to pay said incumbrances ; that the $400 mortgage to the State was due; that Mary Scranton had filed her cross complaint, praying the foreclosure of her mortgage, and that Daniel Dorrell.was insolvent. Prayer, that all said incumbrances be taken into consideration ; that, when said lands should be sold, the proceeds should be applied, first, to the payment of the mortgage to the State, secondly, to all other liens, in the order of their priority; that, for the payment of such prior liens, Milton Hannah might receive a credit •and set-off against his note and mortgage; that the notes first maturing, to the amount of said payments, be declared paid and satisfied, and that he be relieved from further payment until the remainder, or a part of his subsequent notes, ■should become due. A copy of the agreement between William and Daniel Dorrell was filed with the cross complaint. It provided that William should pay the Scranton mortgage, and some other incumbrances, but was silent as to the school fund mortgage.

[467]*467After unsuccessfully demurring to this cross complaint, The appellee answered it by a general denial. The issues were submitted to the court for trial. There’was a finding for the plaintiff, showing that there was then due on the notes and mortgage of Milton Hannah $223, and that further sums would become due on the first day of March of each year, To and including the year 1887. The court also found that the mortgage of Mary Scranton was a prior lien, amounting to $643.33; that the $400 school fund mortgage was also a lien on the mortgaged premises, which incumbrances the plaintiff, as assignee of Daniel Dorrell, was, “by his agreement introduced in evidence, to assume and pay.”

The portion of the decree defining the rights and obligations of the parties, touching said incumbrances, was as follows : “It is therefore ordered and adjudged by the court, that, if the plaintiff, William Dorrell, shall pay and discharge said liens, according to the terms of said agreement, then he .shall have his order of sale against said lands for the several amounts heretofore found in his favor, as each shall become, due ; but if said plaintiff, Doi’rell, shall fail to pay and remove said incumbrances, then, if the defendant Hannah shall pay The same, or if the lands shall be holden therefor, the said amounts are declared a credit on the notes and mortgage, sued on by said plaintiff, Dorrell, in favor of said Hannah, and said plaintiff, Dorrell, shall not have his execution or order of sale herein until said liens shall be paid off by him, or until a sufficient number of the notes of said Hannah shall have matured to equal the said sum of six hundred and forty-eight and dollars, due said Mary Scranton, and said sum of four hundred dollars, due the State of Indiana, with the interest thereon to the time of their satisfaction.”

The decree was silent as to the divisibility or non-divisibility of the mortgaged premises.

There was no motion for a new trial, no objection by either party to the decree, nor any motion to modify it.

[468]*468At the next succeeding term of the court, the plaintiff presented a written motion, stating, among other things, that the court in its decree omitted to find and enter of record whether the mortgaged premises were or were not susceptible of division; and that the court, “by inadvertence and mistake,” ordered that the $400 mortgage to the school fund should be deducted from the amount due the plaintiff on the notes held by him, when in fact said Hannah, by his contract in the purchase of said lands, agreed to pay the-same, in addition to the notes held by plaintiff. The prayer of the motion was that the omission named be supplied ; that the plaintiff might receive the whole amount due him, without any deduction on account of the mortgage to the school fund, and that the decree be so modified that it could be collected and enforced by plaintiff. The original defendants appeared to the motion, and Milton Hannah moved to strikeout so much of plaintiff’s motion as applied to the previous finding of the court touching the school fund mortgage. This motion was overruled, and he excepted.

The court then heard oral evidence as to the divisibility of the land, and also concerning the contract between Daniel Dorrell and Hannah, at the time the latter purchased the land, to the effect that Hannah was to pay the school fund mortgage, and that the amount thereof was deducted from the purchase-money.

To the introduction of the evidence relative to said contract the defendants objected, on the ground that that issue had been tried and determined at the previous term, and that judgment had been rendered in accordance with the finding. This objection was overruled and the defendants excepted.

The court then found and adjudged that the mortgaged premises could not be sold in parcels without injury to the interests of the parties, and modified its former decree as prayed for in the plaintiff’s motion.

[469]*469Was it competent for the court on motion to so change its judgment rendered at a former term? The power of courts to amend their records at a term subsequent was discussed and settled in Makepeace v. Lukens, 27 Ind. 435, and in Uland v. Carter, 34 Ind. 344; Miller v. Royce, 60 Ind. 189 ; Schoonover v. Reed, 65 Ind. 313; Reily v. Burton, 71 Ind. 118. The rule announced in these cases, and in the authorities on which it is based, is thus stated in Uland v. Carter: “Amendments are allowed only when the caséis within the reach of some statute, or where there is something to amend by, that is, where there is some memorial paper, or other minute of the transaction in the case, from which-what actually took place in the prior proceeding can be clearly ascertained and known.” The court below was clearly authorized by statute to entertain the motion and hear evidence as to the divisibility of the land mortgaged. The prior judgment showed that there were instalments of the mortgage debt thereafter to become due. In such cases section ■638 of the code requires the court, “after final judgment,” •.to “ascertain whether the property can be sold in parcels,” <ete. This duty was omitted at the term at which judgment was rendered.

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Bluebook (online)
73 Ind. 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hannah-v-dorrell-ind-1881.