Hoogestraat v. Danner

228 N.W. 632, 209 Iowa 672
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 21, 1930
DocketNo. 39763.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 228 N.W. 632 (Hoogestraat v. Danner) 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
Hoogestraat v. Danner, 228 N.W. 632, 209 Iowa 672 (iowa 1930).

Opinion

De G-eafe, J.

On November 23, 1926, and for some time prior thereto, one John F. Hoogestraat was seized in fee simple of a certain parcel of Carroll County, Iowa, real estate, whieh was subject to a recorded mortgage of $19,000, owned by Andrew Fischer, former owner of said land. Hoogestraat (Wei-bers’s grantee) and Weibers (Fischer’s grantee) were assump-tors of said mortgage. There is a provision in the-mortgage pledging “the rents and profits of said premises and crops grown or growing thereon until the "notes hereby secured are paid in full, as well before as after sale on execution.” On the date above mentioned, November 23, 1926, the title holder, John F. Hoogestraat, in writing leased the land under cultivation to Joe Danner (appellee herein) on a crop-share basis, together with $9.00 per acre cash for all hay and pasture land, and the sum of $150 (evidenced by Danner’s promissory note) for rent of the house and farmyard. The tenure of the lease was from the 1st day of March, 1927, to the first day of March, 1928. Danner took possession of the land under said lease about March 1, 1927, and continued in possession thereof under the original lease until an arrangement and new contract were made *674 by Danner with the receiver, whereby be continued farming operations to the end of the tenure and terms as specified in the original lease.

On March 24, 1927, John F. Hoogestraat assigned .in writing said lease, and indorsed said rent note of $150, without recourse, to his brother, Fred F. Hoogestraat, plaintiff in this action. Fred knew nothing of this assignment of the lease until he received it through the mail. The defendant Danner herein and the receiver alleged in their respective answers to the petition of the assignee that the said assignment was fraudulent, and was without consideration. The trial court was justified, under the evidence, in finding these averments to be true.

On April 5, 1927, the mortgage holder, Fischer, without actual or constructive notice of the claim of the assignee, Fred F. Hoogestraat, commenced an action to foreclose the mortgage in question, and prayed for the appointment of a receiver. In this foreclosure action, Weibers (Fischer’s assuming grantee), John F. Hoogestraat (then title holder and assumptor of the mortgage), and Danner (tenant) were made parties defendant.

The title holder, Hoogestraat, as defendant in the foreclosure action, did not in any manner make known to any party in interest the fact of his assignment of the lease to his brother Fred, nor did he at any time or in any manner seek to protect his tenant, Danner, in the undisturbed possession of the premises, upon the commencement of said action, or after the receiver was appointed. This was also a pleaded matter in the answer filed.

On June 2, 1927, a decree was entered on the default of all the defendants, resulting in a personal judgment on the promissory note against Weibers and John F. Hoogestraat for $20,288.91, with costs, abstract fees, and attorney’s fees, and the foreclosure of the mortgage. The decree further ordered and adjudged:

“And it is determined by the evidence that said real estate is not of such value to pay plaintiff’s said debt in full, and that the said defendants Weibers and Hoogestraat are insolvent. And it is therefore ordered that Henry Terlisner be, and he is hereby, appointed receiver to take charge of said premises and to collect the rents and profits therefrom, from the time of the commencement of this action to the end of the period of re *675 demption under sheriff’s sale, and to apply the same, after paying the expenses of said receivership, to the extinguishment of plaintiff’s said debt.”

There was no appeal from this decree, and it was a verity when the instant action was commenced.

The plaintiff herein (assignee) had notice, prior to the commencement of the foreclosure action, of the recitals of said mortgage, and also knew that the foreclosure action was about to be commenced, and a few days later, knew that it had been commenced. The landlord’s assignee (plaintiff herein) did not seek by petition of intervention to have his rights protected or adjudicated in the foreclosure action, although he was fully cognizant of the foreclosure action and the relief therein prayed. Under the agreement between the tenant, Danner, and the receiver, Danner did, as approved by the court, as the tenant of the receiver, remain in possession of the land, harvested the crops, and did turn over to the receiver, under said agreement, all the rental representing the landlord’s share on said land, the sum of $691.70, which included the value of the oats, corn, cash rent, and the rent note. Both Danner and the receiver viewed the decree entered in the foreclosure action as an eviction of Danner, as tenant, and, immediately prior to the new contract of lease, Danner was looking for another farm to rent, and would have left the premises in question, were it not for the new arrangement and contract with the receiver, authorized under the terms of the decree in foreclosure.

In the first instance, the assignee commenced his action against the tenant, Danner, only. The receiver appointed by the court in the foreclosure action was brought in by Danner by cross-petition. The receiver, Terlisner, pleaded in his answer that he was holding the rent money “subject to the order of the court in said foreclosure action,” and also pleaded, as receiver*, that he was entitled to the rent. With these record facts as the basis to determine the issue involved, did the trial court correctly rule the case! Who is entitled to the rent now in the possession of the receiver? The receiver is but an officer of the court. He cannot keep it. He stood ready to file his report when the instant action was commenced. The question presented is in the nature of an accounting in the receivership proceedings, and is not material in a law action of this character.

*676 In passing,- it may be stated that the. issues- arising by virtue of the defensive matter alleged in the answers-of both the defendant Danner and the interpleaded receiver were determined by the trial court, who acted, under stipulation of the parties, as the jury in this cause. It follows, therefore, that, unless the trial court erred in the application of the law to the facts, the judgment entered must be affirmed. We are but incidentally concerned with the well settled rule in this state that a clause in a mortgage pledging rents and profits and providing for a receiver creates no lien upon the rents, and profits until the commencement of an action to foreclose, coupled with a prayer for the appointment of a receiver. See Young v. Stewart, 201 Iowa 301; Rodgers v. Oliver, 200 Iowa 869; Hakes v. North, 199 Iowa 995; Hatcher v. Forbes, 202 Iowa 64.

It may be pointed out that the written assignment by John Hoogestraat to his brother Fred was not acknowledged, and consequently was not eligible for record. It may also be said that the court was fully justified in finding, under the evidence, that the written lease, although recorded, did not constitute constructive notice to anyone. The jurat was impeached. The mortgagee, Fischer, therefore, when he commenced his foreclosure action, had no reason to make the assignee of the lease a party to the foreclosure suit.

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Bluebook (online)
228 N.W. 632, 209 Iowa 672, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoogestraat-v-danner-iowa-1930.