Johnson County v. O'Connor

4 N.W.2d 419, 231 Iowa 1333
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 16, 1942
DocketNo. 45953.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 4 N.W.2d 419 (Johnson County v. O'Connor) 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
Johnson County v. O'Connor, 4 N.W.2d 419, 231 Iowa 1333 (iowa 1942).

Opinion

Hale, J.

The mortgage in question was on an outlet in Iowa City, ami was executed by Frances A. Freeman on January 8, 1913, to secure her note in the principal sum of $600, and was made and delivered to Johnson County for the use and benefit of the school fund. Interest was 5 per cent, payable annually, and the note matured on January 8, 1918. Interest was paid to and including the year 1933. Frances A. Freeman died testate March 3, 1936, and Edward L. 0 ’Connor was appointed executor of her estate and has been so acting ever since. No claim was filed against the estate on this note and mortgage. The will directed the executor to sell all of decedent’s real and personal property and to pay the proceeds thereof to her children in accordance with her specific bequests. On May 20, 1938, the executor entered into a real-estate contract of sale for the premises described in the mortgage to one D. J. Gatens. The school-fund mortgage *1334 was not shown on the abstract of title. The testatrix, Frances A. Freeman, was 87 years old at the time of her death, and was unable to transact any business for a year or more prior to her death. Her only surviving children were Florence O’Connor, Ray Freeman, and Elmer Freeman. Elmer Freeman was living in Iowa City and died on October 13, 1940. None of these children is shown to have known of the existence of this school-fund note and mortgage until June or July 1939. On June 29, 1938, a probate deed, duly approved by the court, was executed by Edward L. O’Connor to the purchaser D. J. Gatens, and there was paid thereon by D. J. Gatens the sum of $655. The proceeds of the sale were distributed to the beneficiaries under the will in July 1938, under order of court. The estate is still open and is solvent. Suit on the mortgage in controversy was commenced on April 25,1940. The defense was that the mortgage lien ceased to exist on January 8,1933, which was 20 years after its execution and more than 10 years after its maturity, under the provisions of section 11028 of the Code, and also because of the provisions of sections 10990-gl to 10990-g3, Code of 1935. On June 27, 1941, judgment and decree established the plaintiff’s lien and awarded the plaintiff judgment in rem against the property in the sum of $810.99 with interest, but no personal judgment was rendered against any of the defendants. From this judgment and decree of the court, defendants appeal.

The foregoing are the facts set out by the defendants and as to which plaintiff states there is no controversy. There are, however, some additional facts. Mrs. Freeman’s daughter Mae died about a year before her mother died, leaving as her sole heir her mother. This daughter had been employed in the county auditor’s office for about 20 years prior to 1935. Some of the entries showing payment of interest on the Freeman mortgage Avere in the handwriting of Mae Freeman, and it would seem that she had been paying interest on the mortgage and necessarily understood that it had not been paid.

Before considering the objections of the defendants to the decree of the district judge, we may note some of the Code pro-Adsions relative to the statute of limitations. The general Code section as to limitations is section 11007, of which paragraph 6 is as follows:

*1335 “Written contracts — judgments of courts not of record — ■ recovery of real property. Those founded on written contracts, or on judgments of any courts except those provided for in the next subsection, and those brought for the recovery of real property, within ten years.”

The special statute of limitations upon which plaintiffs rely is section 4495, Code of 1939. In its present form it has been substantially the same since the Acts of the Ninth General Assembly (1862), chapter 148, section 13:

“Statute of limitation. Lapse of time shall in no case be a bar to any action to recover any part of the school fund, nor shall it prevent the introduction of evidence in such an action, any provision in this code to the contrary notwithstanding. ’ ’

Code section 11028, in part, is as follows:

‘ ‘ Foreclosure of ancient mortgages. No action shall be maintained to foreclose or enforce any real estate mortgage, bond for deed, trust deed, or contract for the sale or conveyance of real estate, after twenty years from the date thereof, as shown by the record of such instrument, unless the record of such instrument shows that less than ten years have elapsed since the date of maturity of the indebtedness or part thereof, secured thereby ;V: * ) f

The rest of the section refers to extensions of the maturity of the instrument, and date of maturity when different than as appears by the record of the instrument in the form of extension agreements which are not involved in the present action. Sections 10990-gl, 10990-g2, and 10990-g3, Code of 1935 (now sections 10990.1, 10990.2, and 10990.3, Code of 1939), merely permit the state to be made a party in any suit or action which is now pending or which may be brought in any district court in Iowa, and refer to the method of service in such actions, and state that the state should have the same standing as other defendants in the same action. These provisions merely render it possible in an action in court conveniently to allow the rights of the state as to real estate to be determined. No right of the state is settled by these Code provisions, or surrendered, except the sovereign privilege not to be sued.

*1336 It is assigned as error, the holding of the court that the mortgage lien is still a valid and existing lien. Defendants argue that section 11028, which became a law a long time after section 4495, should prevail over section 4495, as it is also a special limitation. We cannot agree with the defendants as to this contention. However sweeping in its provisions section 11028 maybe, we cannot think that it will operate as a repeal of section 4495. Certainly there is no express repeal, and we cannot say that there was a repeal by implication when 1he earlier section has the provision, “any provision in this code to the contrary notwithstanding.” The design of this later statute, section 11028, was undoubtedly to prevent the provisions of the general limitations statute in regard to minors and insane persons, who are excepted from the general limitations statute, to interfere with or to cause flaws to embarrass and injure future owners of real estate. And the effect of Newgirg v. Black, 174 Iowa 636, 645, 156 N. W. 708, 711, was to limit these possible claimants under the provisions of ancient documents affecting the ancient interests of land. It is true that section 11028 is a special limitation, and it is also true that the special limitations prevail over a general limitation, but section 4495 is also a special limitation referring only to one particular kind of mortgage, the school-fund mortgage. The holding of Newgirg v. Black indicates clearly what the purpose of section 11028 was: •

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Bluebook (online)
4 N.W.2d 419, 231 Iowa 1333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-county-v-oconnor-iowa-1942.