Home Owners Loan Corp. v. Rupe

283 N.W. 108, 225 Iowa 1044
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 30, 1938
DocketNo. 44532.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 283 N.W. 108 (Home Owners Loan Corp. v. Rupe) 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
Home Owners Loan Corp. v. Rupe, 283 N.W. 108, 225 Iowa 1044 (iowa 1938).

Opinion

Hamilton, J.

— The real estate involved in this litigation was conveyed in October 1924 to Vernon Maxwell and Bertha Maxwell. On July 12, 1928, Vernon Maxwell and Bertha Maxwell, husband and wife, executed a note in the sum of $1500 secured by mortgage on lots 5 and 6, block 15, Highland Plat No. 3, situated in Sioux City, Woodbury county, Iowa. This note and mortgage were duly assigned, on October 12, 1928, to Mabel Larson Griepenburg. On September 23, 1928, Bertha Maxwell died intestate in Sioux City, Iowa. No administration was ever had of her estate. It will thus be noticed that she died seized of one-half interest in said real estate. The mortgagors had no children except Vernon S. Maxwell, an adapted child, who at the time of this litigation was sixteen years of age. Edward F. O’Brien was the duly appointed, qualified and acting guardian of the property of said minor. On February 16, 1929, the husband, Vernon Maxwell, conveyed said property to Vincent F. Harrington in which deed the grantor is described as “a widower”. Harrington thereafter sold and conveyed said property to Fay Rupe. Under date of September 6, 1933, Rupe made application to the Sioux City, Iowa, office of the Home Owners Loan Corporation for a home loan to take up said mortgage and pay certain delinquent taxes and special assessments, all in accordance with the provision of the Home Owners Loan Act of 1933 as contained in Chapter 12, section 1461 et seq., Title 12, U. S. C. A. The usual procedure was fol *1046 lowed. Abstract of title showing the above mentioned deeds and mortgage was brought down to date and furnished by applicant and was turned over to one C. C. Yeaman for examination. This attorney duly certified that the applicant had title and that the Home Owners Loan Corporation would have a first lien on the premises. Accordingly the loan was mad e bonds of appellee in the amount of $1600, par value, with accrued interest amounting to $12.91 together with cash in the amount of $14.79 were duly turned over to Mabel Larson Griepenburg, assignee of the Maxwell mortgage, in full payment and satisfaction of the same and the mortgage was duly released June 13, 1934. Appellee also paid delinquent taxes amounting to $56.51 and special assessments totaling $38.85. The new mortgage bears date of March 15, 1934 and was recorded June 11, 1934 and purported to be a first lien upon the premises. Failing to keep up the amortization payments of principal and interest and taxes assessed against the property, appellee, on March 25, 1937, brought an action to foreclose its mortgage. The minor, Vernon S. Maxwell, by his guardian, Edward F. O’Brien, intervened setting up the fact that his mother died seized of an undivided one-half interest in said real estate and by right of succession he was the owner of an undivided one-third of said real estate; that the father, Vernon Maxwell, at the time he conveyed said real estate to Harrington was the owner of an undivided two-thirds only and had no authority to convey the interest of said minor-intervenor and asked that the new mortgage be declared of no force and effect as to the interest of said minor. To this petition of intervention, appellee filed answer setting up the facts and circumstances leading up to and including the execution of the new mortgage — the payment and satisfaction of the old mortgage, interest and taxes; that the same was paid at the special instance and request of Fay Rupe and wife with the express understanding that its mortgage would be a first lien on the real estate involved; that the interest of said minor, if any, was acquired subsequent to the making and filing for record of the original mortgage and was subject thereto and also to the taxes and special assessments above referred to; and, that plaintiff, under the facts pleaded, was entitled, under the equitable doctrine of subrogation, to have its security under its mortgage of record substituted in fact in place of that which plaintiff took up and discharged. To this answer, intervenor filed *1047 a reply disclaiming knowledge or information with reference to numerous matters and therefore denying the same; denying that said minor was bound by any agreement or understanding between appellee and the new mortgagors; alleging that any payments made by appellee were voluntary payments without the knowledge or consent of intervenor; that in failing to ascertain the condition of the title, from an examination of the abstract of title, appellee was guilty of gross negligence and not entitled to the benefits of the equitable doctrine of subrogation. There was a decree for plaintiff and intervenor has appealed.

The doctrine of subrogation is purely of equitable origin and grew out of the need, in aid of natural justice, in placing a burden where it of right ought to rest. Neither the courts nor textbook writers have attempted to place limitations upon its application.

The Chancery Court of New Jersey, in the case of Home Owners Loan Corporation v. Collins et al, 120 N. J. Eq. 266, 184 A. 621, in expounding this doctrine made use of the following language [page 622] :

“It is commonly said that subrogation is either legal or conventional; that legal subrogation exists only in favor of one who, to protect his own rights, pays the debt of another; that conventional subrogation arises only upon agreement, between the lender and the debtor or old creditor, that the lender shall be subrogated to the old lien; that otherwise, the one who advances money to pay a debt cannot be subrogated to the rights of the old creditor. Seeley v. Bacon (N. J. Ch.) 34 A. 139; Gore v. Brian (N. J. Ch.) 35 A. 897. Generally, when the person advancing the money to pay the old debt takes a new mortgage and the old lien is cancelled, there is no subrogation, because the acceptance of the new security evidences an agreement and intention by the new creditor to rely thereon rather than on the old, and because, upon the cancellation of the old lien, nothing remains to be the object of subrogation. Vaux v. Vaux, 115 N. J. Eq. 586, 172 A. 68.
“But where, through fraud or mistake, the new security turns out to be defective, there frequently arises a third kind of subrogation. It does not depend upon the subrogee having been a surety or having had an interest in the property to protect, and it does not depend upon an agreement that he would be subro *1048 gated to the rights of the old creditor. It grows rather from an agreement or understanding that he would obtain a security of a particular kind and from his failure, through fraud or mistake, to obtain such security. Our reports furnish several examples of this sort of subrogation: Barnett v. Griffith, 27 N. J. Eq. 201, where one of the mortgagors was an infant. Tradesmen’s Bldg., etc., Ass’n. v. Thompson, 32 N. J. Eq. 133, where the person who cancelled the second mortgage was not authorized to do so. Seeley v. Bacon, supra, money advanced in ignorance of mortgage lien, although a proper search would have disclosed it. Gore v. Brian, supra, lender relied on debtor’s assurance that a second mortgage, open of record, had been paid. Serial B. L. & Sav. Inst. v. Ehrhardt, 95 N. J. Eq. 607, 124 A. 56, the woman who executed the new mortgage to bar dower was not actually the wife of the mortgagor. In Jackson Trust Co. v. Gilkinson, 105 N. J. Eq. 116, 147 A.

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283 N.W. 108, 225 Iowa 1044, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-owners-loan-corp-v-rupe-iowa-1938.