Martin v. Sprague

11 N.W. 143, 29 Minn. 53, 1882 Minn. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 6, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 11 N.W. 143 (Martin v. Sprague) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin v. Sprague, 11 N.W. 143, 29 Minn. 53, 1882 Minn. LEXIS 41 (Mich. 1882).

Opinion

Dickinson, J.

This action, being at issue upon the complaint and answer, was submitted to the court below for judgment upon an [54]*54agreed statement of the facts. The facts are as follows: In January, 1879, James L. Sprague was the owner of lots 11 and 12, in block 4, of Highland Park addition to Minneapolis. Upon lot 12 was a dwelling-house, in which Sprague and his wife, Angeline M., then and ever since resided, and that lot constituted his homestead under ihe laws of this state. It is of the value of $2,000. Lot 11 is unimproved, and is of the value of $400. In January, 1879, Sprague and his wife mortgaged the whole property to one Greene to secure the payment of the sum of $1,200. An instalment of interest falling due and not being paid, Greene proceeded to foreclose the mortgage under the power contained therein. The foreclosure sale was made on the 22nd day of November, 1879, and both lots were sold in one parcel, Greene being the purchaser, for the sum of $132.75. Greene received and placed on record the usual sheriff’s certificate of sale. On the 19th day of November, 1880, Mrs. Sprague paid to Greene the amount for which the property had been sold, with interest, and took from Greene assignments of the certificate of sale and of the mortgage, and placed the same on record in the office of the register of deeds. The money paid to Greene by Mrs. Sprague was furnished to her by her husband. In July, 1879, one Littler recovered a judgment against Sprague for $122.24, wdiich was docketed in the district court, and became a lien upon the real property of the debtor, excepting the homestead. November 18, 1880, Littler sold and assigned his judgment to the plaintiff, Martin. Martin, having complied with the requirements of the statute as to redemptions from mortgage sales by judgment creditors, on the 24th day of November, 18S0, for the purpose of making redemption, paid to the sheriff of the proper county the sum necessary to make redemption, — that is, the amount for which the property had been sold on foreclosure sale, with interest, — and received from the sheriff the statutory certificate of redemption.

Upon these facts, the rights of the parties plaintiff and defendant, in respect to the property, being in question, judgment was rendered adjudging the plaintiff to be the owner of lot 11 in fee; that defendants had no title or interest therein, and that plaintiff recover posse wion of it; that the defendants were the owners in fee of lot 12; [55]*55and that plaintiff had no interest' therein. Both parties appealed from the judgment. We are called upon to consider the legal effect of the transaction with Greene on the 19th of November, 1880, and to determine whether it should be construed as an assignment of the right held by Greene under the cei’tifieateof sale, leaving the right of redemption by a judgment creditor of the mortgagor unextinguished, or as a redemption from the sale- by one of the mortgagors, in effect annulling the sale.

Mrs. Sprague, being the wife of James L. Sprague, the owner of the land, and as such having an interest in the property, although inchoate, had a right to redeem from the foreclosure of the mortgage which she had executed with her husband. Williams v. Stewart, 25 Minn. 516. Having a right of property which she transferred by the mortgage, she had the corresponding right of discharging the encumbrances by redemption. But she was capable, too, of acquiring by purchase the interest which Greene held under his mortgage and the foreclosure sale. The plaintiff claims the transaction to have been such a purchase. The defendants contend in this court that it should be construed as a redemption, although in their answer in this action they aver that the money furnished to Mrs. Sprague by her husband was owing to her from him, and that she in good faith purchased the certificate of sale and the mortgage; that she still owns and holds the mortgage, and that it is still in force; and that it -was the purpose of these defendants that she should acquire title to the homestead. Such a purpose to acquire title to the homestead, by means of the payment to Greene, could be accomplished only by a purchase, and not by a mere redemption from Greene; for by a redemption by the mortgagor the sale would be annulled,- and the rights acquired under it extinguished. Hence, the pleading must be construed as an averment of an intention to purchase and not to redeem.

Aside from the question as to whether the defendants are concluded by the answer, the facts agreed upon,- and upon which the case was submitted to the court below, are not ificonsistent with the answer in this respect, but, on the contrary, support the allegation of purchase. The taking and recording of an assignment of the sheriff’s certificate of sale, unexplained, indicate a purchase rather than a redemption. [56]*56A redemption is ordinarily evidenced by a certificate of redemption, which is the instrument prescribed by statute to be made upon redemption from a mortgage sale. But assuming the transaction to have been such that it might be construed either as a purchase or a redemption, and that the intention of the parties should control in determining its character, and that, in the absence of proof or clear indication from the circumstances of a contrary intention, it should be presumed in equity that the parties intended that which would be most clearly for their interest, it is still considered that, in this action, in which the character and effect of the transaction come in question, the defendants should be concluded as to their intention by their own answer.

Mrs. Sprague, acquiring by purchase and assignment the right of Greene as purchaser at the foreclosure sale,'held the interest thus acquired as Greene would have held it, subject to such rights of redemption as may have existed in favor of creditors of the mortgagor having liens upon the property. The assignee stood in the place of the. assignor. She could not occupy inconsistent positions. Holding as a purchaser under the certificate off sale, she affirmed the sale as still operative, and asserted rights acquired under it. Doing so, she could not oppose the exercise of a right of redemption by creditors. So long as the sale was in force and unextinguished by redemption by the mortgagor, the right of redemption by creditors existed, until barred .by lapse of time. She could not by the same act become a purchaser asserting a title acquired by virtue of the sale, and a re-demptioner cutting off the right of redemption by creditors.

To give a right of redemption to the judgment creditor it was enough that his judgment was a lien upon one only of the two lots mortgaged, and which were sold in one parcel. The statute gives' the right of redemption to creditors having a lien “on the real estate, or some part thereof.” Gen. St. 1878, c. 81, § 16; and see Tinkcom v. Lewis, 21 Minn. 132; Willis v. Jelineck, 27 Minn. 18. The statute providing for redemption is calculated to save the property of debtors from being.sacrificed, and to enable debtors to retain their property; or, if they shall fail to do so, then to secure its application, so far as may be, to the payment of the demands of creditors. It should not [57]*57receive a narrow construction, nor one calculated to defeat these ends. The sale having been made of the whole mortgaged premises for an entire sum, redemption could only be made, under the statute, by a payment of that sum, with interest. The redemption so made operated as an assignment to the plaintiff of the right acquired under the foreclosure sale, (Gen. St. 1878, c.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

First National Bank v. Energy Fuels Corp.
618 P.2d 1115 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1980)
Peterson v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.
248 N.W. 667 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1933)
Corporation of America v. Eustace
17 P.2d 723 (California Supreme Court, 1932)
Prideaux v. Des Moines Joint-Stock Land Bank
34 F.2d 308 (D. Minnesota, 1929)
Central State Bank v. Lord
215 N.W. 716 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1927)
Walker v. Wallace
246 P. 553 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1926)
Rambeck v. La Bree
194 N.W. 643 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1923)
Orr v. Sutton
148 N.W. 1066 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1914)
Powers v. Sherry
132 N.W. 210 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1911)
Coffman v. Christenson
113 N.W. 1064 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1907)
Curtis v. Cutler
76 F. 16 (Eighth Circuit, 1896)
O'Brien v. Krenz
30 N.W. 458 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1886)
Randal v. Elder
12 Kan. 257 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1873)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 N.W. 143, 29 Minn. 53, 1882 Minn. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-sprague-minn-1882.