Missoula Trust & Savings Bank v. Boos

77 P.2d 385, 106 Mont. 294, 1938 Mont. LEXIS 19
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1938
DocketNo. 7,760.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 77 P.2d 385 (Missoula Trust & Savings Bank v. Boos) 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
Missoula Trust & Savings Bank v. Boos, 77 P.2d 385, 106 Mont. 294, 1938 Mont. LEXIS 19 (Mo. 1938).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE ANDERSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

R. R. Jones and wife on September 28, 1911, executed and delivered a note for $1,075, maturing two years after date. A real estate mortgage was executed and delivered by them, of even date, to secure the payment of the note. Theresia Boos thereafter purchased the note. The interest was paid up to September 26, 1935, but no payments were made on the principal sum. Mrs. Jones died and thereafter her husband died on April 2, 1936. Theresia Boos filed a petition as a creditor of the estate of R. R. Jones, deceased, on July 3, 1936, requesting the appointment of Herbert W. Steiger as administrator of the *296 estate, and lie was appointed on July 14, 1936. He qualified by giving a bond in the sum of $100, and letters were issued to him on July 15, 1936.

Theresia Boos filed action for the foreclosure of the mortgage, naming the administrator and the plaintiff herein as defendants. As to the interest of the plaintiff herein, it was alleged in the complaint that it “claims some interest or lien upon said property but the same, if any, is inferior and subsequent to the claim of this plaintiff.” The prayer of the complaint was for a judgment for the principal, interest, attorneys’ fees, cost of suit, foreclosure of the mortgage, and all other proper relief. The administrator admitted service of process in the action on the date of its filing, and the plaintiff was served the following day. No appearance in the action was made by either defendant. Decree was entered on August 18, 1936. The property was sold on September 9 thereafter for the full amount of the judgment and all costs. The day preceding this sale plaintiff commenced this action against Theresia Boos and the administrator, seeking to set aside the decree of foreclosure upon the ground that it was procured through extrinsic constructive fraud as against this plaintiff, as a general creditor of the estate, and on behalf of all other creditors similarly situated. After issue was joined a trial was had before the court, resulting in findings, conclusions, and judgment in favor of the plaintiff. The appeal is from the judgment.

No affidavit of renewal of the mortgage had been filed within eight years and sixty days after the maturity of the debt secured by the mortgage, in the office of the county clerk and recorder as required by section 8267, Revised Codes; nor was there any renewal or extension agreement filed or recorded within the provisions of section 8264. Plaintiff was a general creditor of the estate, possessing no lien against the property described in the mortgage. The failure to file the renewal affidavit within the provisions of section 8267 occurred long before the section was amended in its present form in 1933; hence, what we are about to state is said with reference to that section *297 prior to its amendment, and is not to be understood as a construction of the section as it now exists.

The debt here was not barred by the general statute of limitations as between the mortgagor and the mortgagee. If the debt be kept alive, the mortgage is good even after the expiration of the eight years from the maturity of the note (Leffek v. Luedeman, 95 Mont. 457, 27 Pac. (2d) 511, 514, 91 A. L. R. 286, and cases therein cited), and one who accepts a conveyance of the mortgaged property from the mortgagor while the mortgage is good and valid is subject to the same rule. (Hillsdale College v. Thompson, 99 Mont. 400, 44 Pac. (2d) 753, and cases there cited.) But the mortgage, even though the debt is alive, is invalid where there was no compliance with section 8264 or 8267 as against a creditor who is in a position to assert the invalidity of the mortgage, or others who are similarly situated.

It is the theory of plaintiff’s case that, as a general creditor, it was in no position to assert the invalidity of the mortgage, for it could not fasten a lien on the mortgaged property, and since the estate was insolvent it was the right and duty of the administrator to assert the invalidity of the mortgage, and in the circumstances of the case the failure of the administrator to set up the defense was constructively in fraud of its rights. Hence it is urged that the judgment was obtained as a result of constructive fraud, and therefore the plaintiff is entitled to relief from the judgment in the foreclosure proceeding.

It is said that the proof fails to establish the insolvency of the estate. Plaintiff filed a claim against the estate for $22,-747.91. The defendant Boos signed the petition for the appointment of an administrator, wherein she recited that the property of the estate consisted of an undivided one-half interest in and to forty acres of land, which is the same land as was described in her mortgage and which did not exceed in value $1,075. In filing the application for the appointment of an administrator, defendant Boos was duty bound by statute to state the value and character of the property of the estate. (Sec. 10074, Rev. Codes.) Evidence appears in the record that a contract for the sale and purchase of a placer mining claim *298 or claims was outstanding, wherein the purchaser agreed to pay $4,500, which was held by the bank as collateral security to its indebtedness; also a block of mining stock is likewise so held. Nothing is found in the record giving the slightest intimation as to the value of this stock. No notice to creditors was ever given. Counsel who, on cross-examination, elicited the proof as to the land contract and the mining stock, had been the attorney for the deceased in his lifetime. He prepared the petition for the appointment of the administrator. He was the attorney for the plaintiff in the foreclosure proceeding and at one time had been the attorney for the bank. He made no effort to offer any proof which would indicate the value, if any, of this mining stock. A fair conclusion from the evidence is that the estate was prima facie insolvent.

One seeking relief in equity from a judgment procured through constructive extrinsic fraud need only show that he has a prima facie meritorious defense. (Stocking v. Charles Beard Co., 102 Mont. 65, 55 Pac. (2d) 949; Bullard v. Zimmerman, 82 Mont. 434, 268 Pac. 512; Id., 88 Mont. 271, 292 Pac. 730; Kirby v. Hoeh, 94 Mont. 218, 21 Pac. (2d) 732.)

In Leffek v. Luedeman, supra, we said: “It is the contention of the plaintiff that, under the rule announced in the foregoing decisions of this court, section 8267 is without application in this case, as the administrator stands in no different position from that in which the mortgagor would have found himself, had he been the party defendant. The defendant contends that, the estate being insolvent, the administrator is the representative of the creditors and, as such, stands in the same position as a creditor who has secured a lien on the premises by process after the lapse of time specified in section 8267, and therefore in a position to attack the validity of the mortgage. As a general rule an administrator acquires no better title than the decedent had.

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Bluebook (online)
77 P.2d 385, 106 Mont. 294, 1938 Mont. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missoula-trust-savings-bank-v-boos-mont-1938.