Long v. W. P. Devereux Co.

286 P. 402, 87 Mont. 198, 1930 Mont. LEXIS 55
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 26, 1930
DocketNo. 6,578.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 286 P. 402 (Long v. W. P. Devereux Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Long v. W. P. Devereux Co., 286 P. 402, 87 Mont. 198, 1930 Mont. LEXIS 55 (Mo. 1930).

Opinion

*203 MR. JUSTICE AN6STMAN

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action in conversion to recover as damages the reasonable value of certain wheat. The cause was tried to the court without a jury, resulting in judgment in favor of plaintiff, from which defendants and intervener, Edgar State Bank, appealed.

The record discloses that the wheat in controversy was grown in the year 1927 upon lands belonging to plaintiff but which she had mortgaged in May, 1922, to the intervener, and represents a portion of the landlord’s share of the rental for that year. The mortgage contained this clause: “It is agreed that if the mortgagor or maker or makers of this obligation secured by this indenture shall fail to pay the principal or any interest as the same becomes due, or any taxes or assessments or insurance as required, or otherwise fail to comply with any or all of the conditions of the mortgage, then all of said debt secured hereby shall become due and collectible, and all rents and profits of said property shall then immediately accrue to the benefit of the said mortgagee; and this mortgage may be foreclosed for the full amount. $ ÍÍ * ! >

In December, 1925, action was commenced to foreclose the mortgage. During the year 1927 the land was occupied by John Hansen as a tenant of plaintiff under a lease executed on July 15, 1926. The lease was similar to the one before this court in Wells-Dickey Co. v. Embody, 82 Mont. 150, 266 Pac. 869, and stipulated that title to the crop was to remain in plaintiff and upon fulfillment of the contract Hansen was *204 entitled to three-fourths of the crop and the plaintiff to one-fourth. The lease was prepared by the cashier of the intervener bank, who testified that he informed plaintiff at the time it was made that the bank claimed the crop for the year 1927, but this was denied by plaintiff. On September 12, 1927, the Edgar State Bank served notice on Hansen of the commencement of the foreclosure action and that it claimed all the rents and profits from the land for the year 1927. Hansen harvested the crop in August and delivered the landlord’s share to the defendant elevator company at Edgar pursuant to the provisions of the lease. Defendant Markuson, who operated the elevator, refused to pay plaintiff for the wheat, claiming the Edgar State Bank had attached it. No writ c-f attachment had in fact been issued. The Edgar State Bank, upon furnishing the elevator company with an indemnity bond, sold the wheat and applied the proceeds upon the mortgage indebtedness. After the crop was harvested, and on October 25, 1927, decree of foreclosure was entered in which it was ordered that the land be sold and that the purchaser at the foreclosure sale be let into possession of the mortgaged premises, “together with all rent thereon.” The land was sold and the proceeds applied on the mortgage indebtedness, leaving a portion of the indebtedness still unsatisfied.

On February 19, 1924, plaintiff had filed her petition in bankruptcy in the district court of the United States for the district of Montana, and was on that date adjudged a bankrupt. The mortgage indebtedness owing to the Edgar State Bank was listed in the schedules in bankruptcy. The trustee in bankruptcy disclaimed all right, title and claim to the mortgaged property and remitted the Edgar State Bank to its remedies under the mortgage. On June 30, 1925, plaintiff was, by order of the United States district court in the bankruptcy proceedings, discharged from all her indebtedness “excepting such debts as are by law excepted from the operation of a discharge in bankruptcy.”

*205 Defendants and intervener assert that intervener was and is the owner of the wheat by virtue of the clause in its real estate mortgage which, they contend, pledges as additional security the rents and profits of the land. Plaintiff contends that she is the owner of the wheat by reason of her ownership of the land on which it was grown and by reason of the renunciation of any claim thereto on the part of the trustee in bankruptcy.

Whenever the trustee in bankruptcy elects not to take property of the bankrupt, such property remains in the bankrupt. (Loveland on Bankruptcy, 774; Sparhawk v. Yerkes, 142 U. S. 1, 35 L. Ed. 915, 12 Sup Ct. Rep. 104; Collier on Bankruptcy, 13th ed., 1738, 1739.) The trustee in bankruptcy having elected not to claim any interest in the property in controversy here, the bankrupt is entitled to it unless the facts warrant a finding that it belongs to intervener.

The mortgage in question here did not create a lien on the rents and profits, but simply conferred a right upon the mortgagee to impose a lien as additional security for the payment of the mortgage debt. (Morton v. Union Central Life Ins. Co., 80 Mont. 593, 261 Pac. 278; Wells-Dickey Co. v. Embody, supra.)

In this state a mortgage does not entitle the mortgagee to the possession of the mortgaged property unless expressly so stipulated in the mortgage, (sec. 8252, Rev. Codes 1921; Sharp Bros., Inc., v. Bartlett, 76 Mont. 415, 248 Pac. 199.) The mortgage in question here did not authorize the mortgagee, either before or after default on the part of the mortgagor, to take possession of the land except by and through foreclosure proceedings. Intervener was not entitled to possession of the land covered by the mortgage until the property was sold to it in the foreclosure proceedings. This was not done until June, 1928. A mortgagee has no greater right to the rents than to the land. (Freeman v. Campbell, 109 Cal. 360, 42 Pac. 35; Pacific Fruit Exchange v. Schropfer, 99 Cal. App. 692, 279 Pac. 170.)

*206 In Sharp Bros., Inc., v. Bartlett, supra, the mortgage contained a clause very similar to the one involved here, and the mortgagee in that case not only served notice on the tenant that it claimed the rentals, but also undertook to make a new lease with the tenant. This court held that the attempted lease was a nullity, since the mortgagee had no right to the possession of the premises, the foreclosure proceedings not having been completed until after the attempted lease was executed. Here there was no lease made by the mortgagee with the tenant Hansen, and none could have been made by it, since it did not have the right of possession of the lands. Notice was given by it to the tenant of its claim to the rents. The notice was ineffectual as a means of acquiring an interest in the crop. (Kester v. Amon, 81 Mont. 1, 261 Pac. 288.) In this state a tenant may not attorn to a stranger except with the consent of the landlord or in consequence of a judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction. (Sec. 7718, Rev. Codes 1921.)

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Bluebook (online)
286 P. 402, 87 Mont. 198, 1930 Mont. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-w-p-devereux-co-mont-1930.