Kent Feeds, Inc. v. Stanwood Feed & Grain Co.

186 N.W.2d 593, 1971 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 836
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 1, 1971
Docket54366
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 186 N.W.2d 593 (Kent Feeds, Inc. v. Stanwood Feed & Grain Co.) 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
Kent Feeds, Inc. v. Stanwood Feed & Grain Co., 186 N.W.2d 593, 1971 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 836 (iowa 1971).

Opinion

LeGRAND, Justice.

This started as a simple mortgage foreclosure action in 1964, when Kent Feeds, Inc. sued Stanwood Feed & Grain Company, Inc. on its unpaid promissory note for $3000.00 and asked foreclosure of the mortgage given to secure payment of that note. Numerous other parties having some interest in the litigation or in the real estate involved were made defendants.

Now, almost seven years later, the case drones on to determine the right of Union Trust & Savings Bank, one of the original defendants, to a lien on the real estate covered by the foreclosed mortgage by virtue of two unpaid promissory notes allegedly secured by another mortgage and the related question of the bank’s right to redeem from the special execution sale following the foreclosure decree of November 6, 1964.

The only remaining disputants are Clarence Cooperative Company, which has succeeded to the interest of Stanwood Feed & Grain Company, Inc. and Union Trust & Savings Bank. Their quarrel involves the priority of liens; or, more precisely, whether the bank has a lien on the premises entitling it to redeem from special execution sale under the provisions of chapter 628, The Code.

Although the record is replete with motions, orders, vacation of orders, and other proceedings over a period of some two *595 years, the one fact of overriding importance is that this issue was decided adversely to the bank after full hearing, following which the trial court made findings of fact on which it based the following ruling entered on March 15, 1966:

“It is the ruling of this court that the aforesaid promissory notes dated May 14, 1963 in the amount of $8290.26 and April 20, 1963 in the amount of $7817.00 do not constitute a lien by virtue of the mortgage recorded in Book 81, page 274, of the records of Cedar County, Iowa. Clerk is directed to disburse redemption funds now in his custody pursuant to law. * * * ” No appeal was taken from this ruling.

Several months later the clerk of court requested instructions from the court as to what “according to law” as used in the earlier order meant and the court by order dated September 1, 1966, specified for the clerk the amounts to be paid to various lienholders from the redemption funds.

The bank took an appeal from the September 1 order by filing a notice of appeal which in pertinent part stated as follows:

“* * * The Union Trust & Savings Bank appeals to the Supreme Court of Iowa from the final judgment entered herein on September 1, 1966 and the court’s findings of fact, conclusions of law and judgments and decrees and all other rulings and orders inhering therein and from each and every ruling adverse to the Union Trust & Savings Bank during the progress and hearing of said case, and any and all orders entered pursuant to any findings of fact, conclusions of law and judgments and decrees, * * * ”

It is apparent from this notice — and the bank so claims in its brief and argument— that the entire litigation dating back to the foreclosure decree in 1964 is sought to be made subject to review under this appeal. The Cooperative disputes this, insisting that only the provisions of the September 1 order may be reviewed.

The Cooperative filed a motion to dismiss the appeal (except as to the provisions of the September 1 order) as not being timely. That matter was ordered submitted with the appeal itself. We discuss first the effect of the appeal from the order of September 1, 1966, assuming it to have been a final order from which an appeal will lie as a matter of right. Although this is perhaps arguable, the Cooperative does not challenge it and we therefore accept it as established for the purpose of our discussion here. See Iowa Public Service Co. v. Sioux City, 254 Iowa 22, 25, 116 N.W.2d 466, 469.

That does not mean, however, that all previous rulings, orders, decrees throughout the long history of the case may be resurrected for review by this court. It means simply that the bank may appeal only from those matters which became final by the order of September 1, 1966. Rule 335, Rules of Civil Procedure, 58 I.C.A., permits an appeal only within 30 days from the entry of the order, judgment or decree. We have frequently held this to be mandatory and jurisdictional. Ironically one of our most recent pronouncements to this effect was in Union Trust & Savings Bank v. Stanwood Feed & Grain, Inc., Iowa 1968, 158 N.W.2d 1, the case in which the very two notes sought to be established here as liens were the subject of independent suit and recovery by the bank.

Our principal problem is to decide the extent of our jurisdiction under the notice of appeal from the order of September 1, 1966.

The controversy centers around the bank’s right to redeem from the sheriff’s special execution sale following the foreclosure decree of November 6, 1964. This in turn depends upon the validity of the lien it asserts by reason of a mortgage executed to secure the two notes already referred to. If that mortgage is not a lien, then the bank had no right to redeem under chapter 628, The Code. This very matter had been in dispute from early in *596 the litigation. When the foreclosure decree was entitled in 1964, the question was reserved for later determination. This subsequent determination was made against the bank after notice to the parties and after full evidentiary hearing under section 628.21, The Code. This was the effect of the order of March IS, 1966, already referred to. The reasons for that decision are unimportant to this appeal.

Prior to the conclusion of the hearing above referred to, the trial court made this statement to counsel:

“ * * * There is in the clerk’s office some $27,000.00 [paid by Clarence Cooperative Company to redeem] awaiting disbursal to the rightful parties. The court considers the sheriff’s sale is valid. * * * The court is going to consider evidence heard this date, plus any additional evidence relative to the disbursal of these proceeds, and as to who are the rightful parties and what portion of the proceeds is the rightful portion of the respective parties. The court wants this very clear for the purpose of appeal in this trial — that the court considers very much in issue as to whether the two promissory notes payable to the Union Trust in the amount of $8290.26, dated May 14, 1963, and April 20, 1963 in the amount of $7817.00 are valid liens, or part of a mortgage that are valid liens and whether that mortgage alone would entitle Union Trust to redeem. This is the court’s position at this stage of the proceedings. * * * The validity of the promissory notes is in issue as [is the question] whether they constitute a lien or * * * are part of a mortgage that constitutes a lien and whether they are payable out of the proceeds now in the clerk’s office.”

It is clear from this that the very issues determinative of the bank’s right to redeem were before the trial court and were decided by the order of March 15, 1966.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 N.W.2d 593, 1971 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kent-feeds-inc-v-stanwood-feed-grain-co-iowa-1971.