Keefe v. Cropper

196 Iowa 1179
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 15, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 196 Iowa 1179 (Keefe v. Cropper) 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
Keefe v. Cropper, 196 Iowa 1179 (iowa 1922).

Opinion

De Giukf, J.

The material facts in this case are not in dispute. The action was originally instituted to foreclose a real estate mortgage, but by amendment to the petition it is alleged that the mortgage is a purchase-money mort- , ,. ., ,. „ gage to secure the unpaid portion ox the consi¿era£[on a;n¿ prayS that the title and interest of the mortgagee be adjudged superior to the title and interest claimed by appellant Potter, whose title as an alleged subsequent purchaser for value, is predicated upon a judgment lien and purchase by execution sale thereunder.

The chronology of the various transactions involved will make understandable the legal question presented. (1) On January 9, 1917, one Briggs secured a judgment in Black Hawk County, Iowa, against the defendant-purchaser, Fred S. Cropper. (2) On April 24, 1917, plaintiff, Peter J. Keefe, of Benson County, North Dakota, executed and delivered a warranty deed with full covenants to certain real estate situated in Black Hawk County, Iowa, to the said Fred S. Cropper. (3) On April 27, 1917, Cropper executed and delivered to Keefe a mortgage on said real estate to pay the unpaid purchase price thereof. (4) On May 3, 1917, the real estate mortgage was duly recorded. (5) On May 9, 1917, the warranty deed was duly recorded. (6) On June 17, 1917, the real estate was sold on execution by virtue of the judgment lien held by Briggs against defendant Cropper. (7) On September 29, 1917, the certificate of sale was duly issued to Briggs, the purchaser at the execution sale, who assigned same to one H. L. Jones. (8) On September 30, 1918, no redemption having been made, a sheriff’s deed was duly executed, conveying said real estate to Jones. (9) By mesne conveyances from Jones the title to said real estate came to the appellant Potter, and each purchaser in the chain of title paid value. Cropper also conveyed title, and by mesne conveyances, his title eventually came to Potter.

The case is not without some difficulty, but by an analysis [1181]*1181of the legal principles involved, we believe a conclusion may be reached, consonant Avith logic and laAv.

Our first inquiry may Avell be directed to the underlying principle of a purchase-money mortgage and the essence of its priority. A purchase-money mortgage is AAdrat the term implies, ai~d is predicated on the theory that upon the simultaneous execution of the deed and inortgage the title to the laud does not for a single moment rest in the purchaser, but merely passes through his hands and without stopping, vests in the mortgagee. It folIoavs, therefore, that no lien of any character can attach to the title of the mortgagee and that the title and interest has preference over previous judgments against the purchaser-mortgagor. Laidley v. Aikin, 80 Iowa 112; Kaiser v. Lembeck, 55 Iowa 244; Stewart v. Smith, 36 Minn. 82.

The intent to create the mortgage at the time the mortgagor takes the legal title is the element that carries the priority, and AA’hen it exists the mortgage in the eyes of equity is a pur-chasemoney mortgage. In the instant case there Avas such an agreement. Cropper testified that that Avas the agreement, and there is no contention on the part of appellant to the contrary. Cropper secured the legal title to the real estate in question through his deed from the grantor Keefe, but there existed in the grantor at that time the equitable right to have the mortgage executed.

It Avill be remembered that the mortgage in question Avas executed three days subsequently to the transfer of -the legal title, and that the deed does not refer directly or indirectly to a contemplated mortgage or to any other reserved right or equity; nor does the mortgage itself contain a recital that it is in fact a purchase-money mortgage. As between the original parties such recitals are immaterial, since in the eyes of equity the lien did exist.

With the rights of a title purchaser Avho pays value without notice, either actual or constructive, of the outstanding secret-equity a different rule must prevail. The mortgage can be defeated only by one acquiring a legal title and an equal equity without notice of the existence of the other equity. A person acquires his equal equity by paying valuable consideration, if he [1182]*1182has no notice of the prior equity. The appellant Potter can have no greater legal right than the judgment-debtor Cropper had in the real estate, and no greater equitable rights than the judgment debtor had unless Potter, or someone from whom he holds, acquired legal title and paid value therefor without notice of the outstanding equitable right. The fact that the purchaser at the execution sale was a judgment creditor, and not a third person, makes no difference. A purchaser at an execution sale has the same protection against outstanding equities as any other purchaser.

What did the execution purchaser buy that was subsequently sold to appellant Potter? He bought exactly the same rights as if he had taken by bargain and sale from Cropper, but took in addition the rights of the judgment lien holder on April 24th. The execution purchaser and any subsequent purchaser from him acquired the right to defeat all outstanding equities of which the purchaser had no notice.

We are committed to the doctrine that a purchaser at an execution sale takes free from the outstanding equities of which he had no notice and will take the land' discharged of every claim or title whether arising under an unrecorded instrument or a mere equity of which he had no notice at the time of the purchase. Gower v. Doheney, 33 Iowa 36; Weaver v. Carpenter, 42 Iowa 343.

Under this view a purchaser at a sheriff’s sale stands in relation to the recording statute as though he were a purchaser at the same date from the judgment-debtor himself. A sheriff’s deed is a statutory conveyance and stands upon the same basis as a conveyance by the owner.

There is but one controlling question in this ease. Did the appellant Potter take with notice of any outstanding equity in the appellee Keefe by reason of the recorded instruments? Was the appellant Potter derelict in the duty of making inquiry that rests on the reasonably prudent person under similar circumstances ?

There can be no dispute that the record of the mortgage was notice of the existence of the mortgage to all of the purchasers. Consequently there were no purchasers without notice unless the [1183]*1183fact that they did not know that the mortgage was given for purchase money makes each a purchaser for value without notice.

Did the recorded mortgage put the' purchaser on inquiry? If a person is put on inquiry he is bound to investigate. In law he knows all that he could ascertain by an inquiry. An execution purchaser is put on inquiry by an instrument properly indexed and recorded by the recitals or matters therein that would put a reasonable person upon inquiry and he is bound to take notice of all facts that he might have learned by pursuing the path thus indicated. Thomas v. Kennedy, 24 Iowa 397; Loser v. Plainfield Sav. Bank, 149 Iowa 672.

The contention of appellant is that the execution purchaser “is charged by the record with notice of rights created by the instruments as recorded, and not with notice arising from facts surrounding the instruments which were not recorded.”

Potter was charged with knowing- what the records of Black Hawk County disclosed and also those facts of inquiry to which the record directed his attention. See

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Bluebook (online)
196 Iowa 1179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keefe-v-cropper-iowa-1922.