Ingalls v. Cooke
This text of 21 Iowa 560 (Ingalls v. Cooke) 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.
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Funck v. Creswell, 5 Iowa, 62, unless the facts round by the court below take it out of the rule therein laid down.
The defendant insists that the facts are such as to have that effect. Is this so ?
In the first place, we suppose that the covenant of warranty contained in the mortgage from plaintiff and brother to defendant and brother is limited in its legal effect to the condition of the title prior to and at the date of the [562]*562mortgage, and that, by no legal intendment, can it be made to extend to and cover incumbrances accruing subsequent thereto, except it be in virtue of some express stipulation to that effect. Hutchins v. Moody, 30 Ver., 657; Jackson v. Sapamon, 29 Penn., 109. In this case there was no such agreement. The tax in question, which rested as an incumbrance on the land at the date of the foreclosure, accrued, it is true, whilst the relation of mortgagor and mortgagee existed between the parties, and was a charge upon the land paramount in its nature to the mortgage lien, and at that time was due from and payable by the mortgagor to the State and county. But he failed to respond to this obligation, and the tax remained a charge upon the land at the date of the foreclosure and the sale thereunder. It was quite competent for the mortgagee to have paid the tax, and, in his petition of foreclosure, to have had the same added to his mortgage claim, and its payment provided for out of the mortgaged premises; but this was neglected.
In legal contemplation, however, the mortgagee had constructive notice of the existence of the tax then unpaid, and in buying at the'foreclosure sale, took, the property subject to the right of the State to make the amount out of the land, and subject to the chance that this might be done. That is, as' the tax was to contain a lien on the property in his hands, it may be supposed, as the prior lien is a tax, and nothing to the contrary appearing, that he regulated his bid and purchased thereof with reference to that fact. Now, if the mortgagee, who was the purchaser in this case at the foreclosure sale, should pay this tax to free his property from the incumbrances, would a right of action exist in his favor against the mortgagor for the same? We answer that it would, perhaps, if the mortgage itself contained a covenant of warranty that covered it, and the tax was assessed prior to its date.
[563]*563But, in this ease, although the mortgage contained such a covenant, the tax accrued subsequent to its date, and, therefore, as we have seen, the covenant cannot be said to be broken. Nor, under the circumstances of this case, are we prepared to hold that the purchaser, at the foreclosure sale, independent of a covenant to that effect, could, upon general principles of law, if he had paid the tax himself after such purchase, recover the same by suit against the mortgagor; because,'as we have before suggested, it may be presumed, nothing to the contrary appearing, that he purchased with reference to this paramount tax lien, and the same entered into and formed a part of the consideration of the purchase.
Affirmed.
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