McKenzie v. Evans

29 P.2d 657, 96 Mont. 1, 1934 Mont. LEXIS 16
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1934
DocketNo. 7,151.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 29 P.2d 657 (McKenzie v. Evans) 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
McKenzie v. Evans, 29 P.2d 657, 96 Mont. 1, 1934 Mont. LEXIS 16 (Mo. 1934).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE ANDERSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff brought this action to foreclose a real estate mortgage. In his complaint he alleged the execution and delivery of ten promissory notes dated July 28, 1916, by the defendants Evans, husband and wife, to the defendant Anderson; each of these notes was for the sum of $920, one of them maturing on the twenty-sixth day of July of each of the years 1917 to 1926, both inclusive; that five of the notes, maturing in the years 1920, 1922, 1923, 1924 and 1925, were indorsed in blank by the payee and after an intermediate transfer became the property of the plaintiff. Various payments of interest on these five notes are alleged, the dates and amounts thereof not being here important. Plaintiff further alleged that the defendant Stough was the owner of one or more of the ten notes; the execution, delivery and recording of a real estate mortgage to secure the ten notes; the assignment in writing to the plaintiff *4 of “that portion of said mortgage represented and evidenced by said five notes.”

Plaintiff alleged tbe giving of a mortgage for $13,000 on the same real estate included in the Anderson mortgage on March 7, 1916, to the defendant E. J. Lander & Co., its recor-dation on June 2, 1916, and, on information and belief, its nonpayment; that the defendants Evans have failed to pay the taxes for the years 1921, 1922, 1923, 1924 and 1925, and a portion of the taxes for the years 1926 and 1927; that the lien of these taxes was superior to the lien of the defendant Lander & Company’s first mortgage; and that plaintiff, to protect his lien on the real estate, paid these taxes to protect and preserve the land from tax sale and tax deed. Some of these payments were alleged to have been made after the taxes were delinquent; others were made after the taxes were due but before any penalty could attach. It is alleged that plaintiff was subrogated to all the rights and interests of the state and county in and to the premises under and by virtue of the payment of the taxes, which sums so paid have not been repaid to plaintiff, and that such taxes, together with interest at eight per cent., became liens in favor of plaintiff against the real estate, which liens are paramount and superior to the lien of the first mortgage owned by the defendant Lander & Company, and that this lien for taxes paid is superior to the liens and interests of all the defendants.

The defendant E. J. Lander & Company answered, admitting many allegations of the complaint not here necessary to be noticed, but denying that plaintiff was subrogated to the rights of the state and county by reason of the payment of the taxes, and denying that plaintiff secured any lien on the mortgaged lands and premises by virtue of the payment of the taxes paramount and superior to the lien of its first mortgage.

Defendant affirmatively alleged that any cause of action for the repayment of taxes made on the various dates as alleged was barred by the provisions of subdivision 3 of section 9031, subdivision 1, of section 9032, and subdivision 1 of section 9030, Revised Codes 1921, as to the payments made prior to the *5 period of limitation prescribed by these various subdivisions. Defendant further alleged that a second mortgage was executed and delivered to it bearing the same date as its first mortgage; that the second mortgage was foreclosed by it in a judicial proceeding in which the plaintiff herein was one of counsel for the plaintiff in the proceedings, and to which his predecessor in interest was a party; that it proceeded to sale and the defendant Lander & Company became the purchaser at the sale occurring on August 26, 1922; that on October 29, 1923, the defendant company assigned the sheriff’s certificate of sale to one Andrew Gilruth, which transaction was negotiated and consummated by plaintiff as the agent of Gilruth, and that by reason of the foreclosure proceedings the rights of plaintiff under the third mortgage were lost and plaintiff estopped from asserting any rights thereunder.

Plaintiff by reply denied the affirmative allegations of the answer and alleged affirmatively that the time for redemption under the second mortgage foreclosure was extended to October 26, 1923, and that on October 16, 1923, plaintiff on behalf of the mortgagors Evans redeemed the property from the foreclosure sale by taking an assignment of the certificate of sale by plaintiff in trust for the mortgagor Evans; that Evans remained in possession up to and including the year 1930, during all of which time the crops grown each year were mortgaged to defendant Lander & Company to secure payments due on its first mortgage.

The cause was tried before the court sitting without a jury. Plaintiff was the only witness. He produced letters passing between himself and Lander & Company, with reference to making a redemption from the foreclosure sale under the second mortgage. These negotiations commenced on May 31, 1923. Plaintiff, as a result of this correspondence, procured an extension of time for a period of sixty days in addition to the statutory period of redemption within which the property might be redeemed, and a reduction in the amount of interest on the purchase price necessary to be paid, from twelve to eight per cent. In the course of this correspondence plaintiff *6 advised Lander & Company that he proposed to redeem the property for the mortgagor Evans. After the extension had been agreed upon, Lander & Company, in their letter of September 24, 1923, questioned the advisability of the redemption being made, and directed plaintiff’s attention to the fact that interest on their first mortgage was past due and a considerable amount of delinquent taxes was then unpaid, and further stated that unless a considerable payment was made on the taxes and the interest on its first mortgage, a foreclosure of it would be brought the next fall and they would require a mortgage on the crops the ensuing year as additional security for past due items. On October 18 following plaintiff wrote the defendant to send their vice-president at Great Falls, Montana, an assignment of the sheriff’s certificate of sale in blank. This was transmitted and the agreed amount paid by plaintiff, who caused the name of Gilruth to be inserted in the assignment as assignee.

No sheriff’s deed has ever been issued to the premises. Plaintiff advanced his own money to purchase the sheriff’s certificate. Gilruth had no interest in the transaction, and was a brother-in-law of plaintiff. The mortgagor Evans at various times repaid to plaintiff the entire sum of money advanced by him to procure the assignment of the certificate of sale from the defendant. On December 1, 1926, plaintiff entered into a written agreement with Evans, wherein he agreed to sell and convey the mortgaged premises to Evans upon performance of the contract by the latter. In this contract Evans agreed to pay the first mortgage to Lander & Company, and to pay the indebtedness then owing, and all money thereafter advanced by plaintiff to him. The contract contained numerous other provisions relative to the farming operations to be conducted during the ensuing years. Evans agreed to pay the taxes on the premises; two-thirds of the crop was to be delivered each year to plaintiff; the title to all crops was to be in the plaintiff until division.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 P.2d 657, 96 Mont. 1, 1934 Mont. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckenzie-v-evans-mont-1934.