Luke v. First National Bank

278 N.W. 230, 224 Iowa 847
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 8, 1938
DocketNo. 44268.
StatusPublished

This text of 278 N.W. 230 (Luke v. First National Bank) 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
Luke v. First National Bank, 278 N.W. 230, 224 Iowa 847 (iowa 1938).

Opinion

MilleR, J.

On November 18, 1933, in an action in Union County, wherein appellee herein was plaintiff and appellant herein was defendant, decree was rendered in favor of the plaintiff, which decree provided for the foreclosure of a real estate mortgage upon 480 acres of land belonging to the defendant therein. Thereafter, on November 20, 1933, special execution was issued in pursuance of said decree, and on said date levy was made on the real estate involved. On December 19, 1933, the date on which sale was to be held under said execution, attorney for the plaintiff directed the sheriff of Union County to cancel the levy and return the special execution to the office of the clerk of the district court, and on said date said sheriff did cancel the levy upon said real estate, but made no notation thereof upon the execution itself, but on said date did write upon the jacket in which the execution was contained the words “cancelled sale”, and did then deliver the jacket with the special execution to the clerk of court. Thereafter on May 4, 1934, another special execution was issued under said decree in pursuance of which the sheriff did again levy upon the real estate involved, and on June 9, 1934, did thereunder sell the real estate involved to appellee herein, and following which sale sheriff’s deed has now been issued to appellee.

It is contended by appellant that at the time of the issuance of the second execution that the first execution was still in existence, that the second execution was wrongfully issued by the clerk of the district court without authority to do so, and that any sale or attempted sale by the sheriff under said second execution was void and without force and effect, and appellant in his petition asks that the sale under said second execution be set aside, declared void, and held for nought.

Intervener, in his petition of intervention, claims that during the month of January 1937, he orally purchased an undivided one-fourth interest in the real estate involved from appellant, and joins appellant in asking that the sale under said second execution be set aside, declared void, and held for nought. Following the trial, the court dismissed the petition of plaintiff and the petition of intervention, and quieted title in the real es *849 tate in defendant’s favor against the claims of plaintiff and in-tervener. From that ruling the plaintiff John B. Luke has appealed.

Section 11650 of the Code provides as follows:

“Only one execution shall be in existence at the same time.”

Section 11663 of the Code provides as follows:

‘ ‘ Every officer to- whose hands an execution may come shall give a receipt therefor, if required, stating the hour when the same was received, and shall make sufficient return thereof, together with the money collected, on or before the seventieth day from the date of its issuance. ’ ’

It is the claim of appellant that the physical delivery of the execution to the clerk of the district court did not constitute a sufficient return thereof, in accordance with the provisions of section 11663; and that as a result thereof, the first execution was still in existence at the time of the issuance of the second.

The case of Merritt v. Grover, in which was involved the question of the issuance of a second execution while the first was in existence, was before this court on two occasions, 57 Iowa 493, 10 N. W. 879, and 61 Iowa 99, 15 N. W. 860, 861. This court in the first opinion therein determined that an execution must be regarded as existing until it has been returned, and in the second opinion determined that the statute requiring only one execution to be in existence at the same time was mandatory and not simply directory. However, in neither of said opinions was the question involved as to what constituted a sufficient return.

In the case of Richardson v. Rusk, 215 Iowa 470, 475, 245 N. W. 770, 772, a situation somewhat similar to the instant ease was involved. In that case the execution had been physically delivered to the office of the clerk, but no notation relating the steps or proceedings thereunder was indorsed thereon by the sheriff. This court, in commenting thereon, states as follows:

“The only other point for consideration is whether or not the deed executed by the sheriff is valid. Many reasons are assigned by the appellee as to why said sheriff’s deed is invalid. It is not necessary, in the determination of this case, that we pass upon each reason assigned. The record shows, we think, *850 by tbe greater weight of testimony, that an execution was issued on the judgment of the defendant-appellant Rusk on the 7th day of May, 1923. The sheriff levied said execution by garnishing the tenants, but was told by one of the attorneys for Rusk to hold the execution, which he did. No return was ever made of this execution by the sheriff. It was delivered by the sheriff to attorneys for Rusk without a return, and the attorneys filed the execution in the clerk’s office and caused the clerk to make thereon a notation as follows: ‘Returned not satisfied. New execution issued November 9, 1928’.

“There is some conflict in the evidence as to when this first execution was delivered to the clerk. We are inclined to believe, under the evidence, that the record of the clerk, consisting of the filing date stamped on the execution, together with the other evidence in the case, requires us to say that while the second execution was issued on November 9, 1928, the first one did not find its way to the clerk’s office until November 19, 1928. Regardless of this fact, we are of the opinion that the filing* of the first execution in the clerk’s office, with a notation thereon made by the clerk that it was returned not satisfied, is not a compliance with the statute and does not constitute a return of the execution.

“Another execution was issued on November 9th and sent to; 'the sheriff, and a sale of the real estate in question made thereunder. Without passing upon all of the objections made to the manner of the levying of the execution and the making of this sale, we are constrained to hold that the sale made by the sheriff under the second execution was void as to the mortgagee in possession. The trial court determined that the evidence sustained the contention of the plaintiff-appellee that no return had been made of the first execution when the second one was issued, and we find abundant support in the testimony for such holding, and agree with the trial court that this fact issue must be resolved in favor of plaintiff-appellee. ”

It is to be observed that it is questionable whether the conclusion reached in the Richardson case is based upon the fact that the first execution was not in fact physically delivered to the clerk’s office until ten days after the issuance of the second execution, or upon the conclusion that the physical delivery thereof to the clerk’s office with the notation thereon made by the clerk: *851 “Returned not satisfied. New execution issued November 9, 1928”, was not a sufficient return thereof.

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Related

Equitable Life Insurance v. Ryan
239 N.W. 695 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1931)
Richardson v. Rusk
245 N.W. 770 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1932)
Merritt v. Grover
10 N.W. 879 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1881)
Merritt v. Grover
15 N.W. 860 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1883)
Mintle v. Sylvester
197 Iowa 424 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
278 N.W. 230, 224 Iowa 847, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luke-v-first-national-bank-iowa-1938.