International Mortgage Bank v. Whitaker

255 P. 903, 44 Idaho 178, 1927 Ida. LEXIS 71
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedApril 11, 1927
DocketNo. 4511.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 255 P. 903 (International Mortgage Bank v. Whitaker) 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
International Mortgage Bank v. Whitaker, 255 P. 903, 44 Idaho 178, 1927 Ida. LEXIS 71 (Idaho 1927).

Opinion

*181 VARIAN, Commissioner.

On June 23, 1919, defendants Whitaker and wife executed their real estate mortgage to respondent bank, covering 160 acres of land, to secure their note for $15,000. The mortgage was recorded June 26, 1919. Thereafter, in the same year, Whitaker and wife conveyed 80 acres of the mortgaged tract to one E. G. Frank, who assumed and agreed to pay $7,000, with interest, of the mortgage indebtedness first mentioned.

On June 7, 1920, appellant began furnishing Frank with materials for the construction of a certain dwelling- *182 house and a chicken-house on the tract conveyed to him. The last material was delivered to Frank on September 16, 1920. On September 17th of the same year, appellant began the delivery of material to Frank for the erection of a bam upon the same property, the last delivery of which was made on November 8, 1920. On December 6, 1920, appellant filed two claims’ of lien upon the 80 acres owned by Frank; the first covered the material furnished for the house and chicken-house, and the other covered material furnished for the barn.

Under date of October 1, 1920, Frank and wife executed a mortgage to respondent bank upon his 80 acres (E. % NW.% sec. 22, twp. 11 S., R. 23 E., B. M.) to secure their note for $6,500, which mortgage was recorded on October 25, 1920. On the same date, October 1, 1920; Whitaker and wife executed a mortgage upon his remaining 80 acres to respondent bank to secure their note for $7,500. This mortgage was duly recorded on November 13, 1920.

This action was commenced on February 27, 1922, by respondent to foreclose its $15,000 mortgage. Appellant answered, admitting the execution of the note and mortgage and the transfer of the said east half of the northwest quarter to Frank, the failure of defendants to make instalment payment due October 1, 1921, or the interest due on that date, and denying the reasonableness of attorney’s fees asked for in the complaint. Appellant then set up its lien claims, asking judgment for their foreclosure, and alleged that the $15,000 mortgage had been discharged by the mortgage of Frank and wife on October 25, 1920.

The court found that prior to or during the time of the furnishing of materials to Frank by appellant for the construction of the dwelling, chicken-house and barn, appellant never notified respondent that it was so furnishing said materials, or that it intended to claim a lien upon said premises for the purchase price thereof; that respondent in no manner led or induced appellant to believe that respondent would pay for the materials used in the construction of *183 said structures, nor that respondent would waive its lien by virtue of its $15,000 mortgage in favor of appellant, and that no understanding or agreement was ever had between appellant and respondent respecting the selling and delivery of any of said materials to Frank by appellant, nor claiming by appellant of a lien therefor; that the mortgages dated October 1, 1920, executed by Frank and wife, for $6,500, and Whitaker and wife for $7,500, were made upon the request of the respective makers thereof; that said mortgages were not to take effect, become liens, valid obligations, renewals or a splitting up of the $15,000 mortgage until such mortgages were shown by abstract of title to be first and prior liens, subject to the lien of the United States Reclamation Service, upon each parcel of land described in said mortgages, nor until $100 and, in addition thereto, the costs of continuation of the abstracts recording said mortgages, and all other costs in connection therewith, had been paid; that it was agreed that the $15,000 mortgage would not be released, or discharged, of record, or otherwise, until such terms and conditions were fully performed and complied with; that through no fault or neglect of respondent said terms and conditions were never performed, paid or complied with; that the abstracts of title, when continued, did not show said mortgages to be first or prior liens upon the premises, but showed them to be subject to the liens of appellant for materials furnished as aforesaid; that said terms and conditions were never thereafter performed by Frank or Whitaker; that after the recording of said mortgages, the makers thereof, without performing or offering to perform the conditions precedent to the same going into effect, entered into negotiations with the local agent of respondent in an effort to secure $1,500 increase in the case of the $6,500 mortgage, and $500 increase in the case of the $7,500 mortgage; that said makers endeavored to obtain said increases at all times after the signing of said mortgages, until and up to the filing of appellant’s claims of lien; that said increases were not agreed' to by *184 respondent; that the $15,000 mortgage is and was to continue a valid subsisting lien, and not be released or discharged by the recordation of the $6,500 and $7,500 mortgages, respectively, which were recorded only according to the custom of respondent of having the same shown on the abstract of title when brought down to date. The court further found that at the time of the furnishing of the materials by appellant, Frank told appellant that he intended to split or segregate the $15,000 mortgage, whereby a certain portion thereof would be against his premises and a certain portion thereof against the premises owned by Whitaker; that the fact of Frank’s so advising appellant was unknown to respondent, which did not authorize said statement, nor was the same ever brought to respondent’s knowledge by Frank or' appellant. These findings are fully sustained by the evidence. The court granted foreclosure of the $15,000 mortgage and appellant’s two liens, decreeing the latter subordinate and subject to the former.

The sole question presented by this appeal relates to the validity of the $15,000 mortgage, and its priority over appellant’s said liens for material.

The lien of the $15,000 mortgage, being of record when the first material was furnished, is prior to appellant’s liens for material (Pacific States etc. Co. v. Dubois, 11 Ida. 319, 83 Pac. 513), unless it has been extinguished, or released, by the taking and recordation of the said mortgages of Frank and wife, and Whitaker and wife, to respondent, or other acts of the parties.

Appellant contends that the giving of the $6,500 and $7,500 mortgages amounted to a renewal and discharge of the $15,000 mortgage. The lien of a mortgage upon real estate may be discharged in three ways: by entry on the record acknowledging satisfaction, signed by the mortgagee; by satisfaction entered on the record by the officer having custody thereof, on presentation to him of a certificate signed by the mortgagee, etc.; or, by decree of a competent court. (C. S., secs. 6366, 6367.) Where not so discharged *185 and the debt is not extinguished, the lien upon the land remains. (Kelly v. Leachman, 3 Ida. 629, 33 Pac. 44.)

“The great weight of authority is that the renewal of the evidence of a debt does not, in the absence of an agreement between the parties, constitute in law payment of the old debt.

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Bluebook (online)
255 P. 903, 44 Idaho 178, 1927 Ida. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-mortgage-bank-v-whitaker-idaho-1927.