Houghtelin v. Diehl

277 P. 699, 47 Idaho 636, 1929 Ida. LEXIS 166
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1929
DocketNo. 5096.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 277 P. 699 (Houghtelin v. Diehl) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Houghtelin v. Diehl, 277 P. 699, 47 Idaho 636, 1929 Ida. LEXIS 166 (Idaho 1929).

Opinions

ADAIR, District Judge.

Defendant Diehl borrowed from the Hazelton State Bank $1,500, securing the loan by chattel mortgage. He later secured other additional loans, which were unsecured, aggregating a large sum. Substantial amounts were also advanced him by appellants, upon whose farm he was a tenant. The respondent bank instituted suit upon these unsecured debts, attaching the same property covered by its chattel mortgage. On the same day Diehl, having enlisted in the army and when about to entrain for service in the World War, delivered to appellants an instrument purporting to be a bill of sale of his property, describing that covered by the chattel mortgage and levied upon under the writ of attachment. On the following day the bank commenced to foreclose its mortgage. A few days later appellants paid the sheriff the amount due the bank under its chattel mortgage, including accrued costs of foreclosure, but did not pay or tender payment of the unsecured debt to the bank. Appellants then started a claim and delivery action against the sheriff, claiming ownership and right to the immediate possession of the personal property held by such officer under the attachment process. The judgment later entered in this suit was that the sheriff *639 was entitled to retain “possession of all the property described.” Judgment was duly entered in the attachment suit in favor of the respondent bank and against Diehl in the sum of $975.70, the amount of the unsecured debt.

Having failed in the claim and delivery action appellants brought the present suit, alleging that as creditors of Diehl and to protect their interest in the property they paid the chattel mortgage debt and thereby became subrogated to the rights of the respondent bank under its chattel mortgage, and praying for the foreclosure of all interest, lien and equity of redemption in and to the property covered thereby. Diehl, having been' adjudicated a bankrupt, defaulted, and the cause was tried between appellants and the respondent bank. This appeal is from a judgment entered in favor of the bank.

The trial court found, upon competent though conflicting evidence, that when the instrument designated as a bill of sale was delivered to Houghtelin by Diehl it .was for the purpose and with the understanding that Houghtelin was to manage, control and dispose of the chattels therein described, which were the mortgaged and attached property, to the best advantage, and that he would apply the proceeds received from the sale first to the payment of the debts due from Diehl to the bank, including both the secured and unsecured debts, and that the residue should be disposed of in a specified manner.

Under our view of the case the only matter for determination is the question of subrogation, which disposes of all the other controverted issues presented here.

Subrogation, in its broadest sense, is the substitution of one person for another, so that he may succeed to the rights of the creditor in relation to the debt or claim and its rights, remedies and securities. The doctrine is derived from the civil law from which it has been adopted by courts of equity. It is considered a creature of equity and is so administered as to secure real and essential justice without regard to form, and it will not be allowed where it would work an injustice to others, as where it would disturb the priorities of liens or defeat any rights *640 of others. Its principle is often extended to those who, because of their interest in the property on which debts of others are a charge, are entitled to pay such debts and be substituted to the place of the original creditor. Generally speaking it is only in eases where one advances money to pay the debt of another to protect his own rights that a court of equity substitutes him in place of the creditor as a matter of course, without any express agreement to that effect. The doctrine of subrogation is not administered as a legal right but the principle is applied to subserve the ends of justice and to do equity. It does not rest on contract and no general rule can be laid down which will afford a test in all cases for its application, and whether the doctrine is applicable to any particular case depends upon the peculiar facts and circumstances of such case.

The general rule is that a person cannot be subrogated to the rights or securities of a creditor until the claim of the. creditor against the debtor has been paid in full. (Barton v. Matthews, 141 Ark. 262, 9 A. L. R. 1594, note, p. 1596, 216 S. W. 693; 25 R. C. L. 1318; Henshaw v. Homeland Co., 177 Cal. 381, 170 Pac. 826; Finnell v. Jas. H. Goodman & Co. Bank, 156 Cal. 18, 103 Pac. 483; Askey v. Stroud (Tex. Civ. App.), 240 S. W. 339; Blitz v. Metzger, 119 Kan. 760, 241 Pac. 259; Morrison v. Citizens’ Nat. Bank, 65 N. H. 253, 23 Am. St. 39, 20 Atl. 300, 9 L. R. A. 282; Richeson v. National Bank, 96 Ark. 594, 132 S. W. 913; United States v. National Surety Co., 254 U. S. 73, 41 Sup. Ct. 29, 65 L. ed. 143; Knaffl v. Knoxville Banking & Trust Co., 133 Tenn. 655, Ann. Cas. 1917C, 1181, 182 S. W. 232; National Surety Co. v. Salt Lake County, 5 Fed. (2d) 34.)

The uniform rule deducible from the authorities is that subrogation cannot be enforced until the whole debt is paid; and until the creditor be wholly satisfied there can be no interference with his rights or his securities which might, even by bare possibility, prejudice or embarrass him in the collection of the residue of his claim.

In Blitz v. Metzger, supra, the Kansas court said, in effect, that when the debtor had other obligations to the creditor for which the creditor has the securities in question, the right *641 of subrogation does not accrue until (1) full payment of the debt is made, and (2) the principal debtor is no longer indebted to the creditor upon such securities. In Morrison v. Citizens’ Nat. Bank, supra, a case in many respects analogous to the one here, the reasoning is particularly applicable and persuasive. In that case the creditor brought suit on a note indorsed by a surety, and afterward brought another suit on a note signed by the same debtor but not indorsed. In each of the actions the same property was attached, and judgment was obtained in each ease. The surety, who had indorsed the one note, paid the judgment on which he was liable, not knowing of the second attachment, and he thereupon claimed the right to be subrogated to the creditor’s rights in the attached property, and claimed a lien thereon prior to the creditor’s second attachment lien. He was denied this relief, the court saying “that an assignment of that interest would not be equitable until he paid the debts for the payment of which the bank had obtained security by its attachments.”

In the instant ease appellants became the owners, or at least entitled to possession, of the property through the bill of sale, subject to the two prior liens of the bank thereon.

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Bluebook (online)
277 P. 699, 47 Idaho 636, 1929 Ida. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houghtelin-v-diehl-idaho-1929.