Mounce v. Wightman

243 P. 415, 29 Ariz. 567, 44 A.L.R. 754, 1926 Ariz. LEXIS 197
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1926
DocketCivil No. 2446.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 243 P. 415 (Mounce v. Wightman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mounce v. Wightman, 243 P. 415, 29 Ariz. 567, 44 A.L.R. 754, 1926 Ariz. LEXIS 197 (Ark. 1926).

Opinion

LOCKWOOD, J.

— Henry Monnce and Edith E. Monnce, his wife, hereinafter called defendants, were the owners of certain real estate in Graham and Gila comities, Arizona, and a number of cattle running on the open range in the same counties. This property was subject to various encumbrances, which were, in their order; First, a mortgage on the cattle alone in favor of the First National Bank of Globe for approximately $2,600; second, a mortgage for about $1,700 on both the cattle and the land involved in this case to one J. W. Rais; and, third, a chattel mortgage *569 on the cattle to Eliza J. Wightman, hereinafter called plaintiff, and to one Eolia Wightman, for some $35,000. This last indebtedness was also secured by a realty mortgage on the land situated in Graham county.

J. W. Eais transferred his mortgage to Sam Eais, and the latter, in January, 1924, sold it to plaintiff. On February 1st, 1924, defendants filed a declaration of homestead under the statute, embracing the land covered by the Eais mortgage, and shortly after suit was brought by plaintiff and Eolia Wightman in Graham county to foreclose the third mortgage; the First National Bank of Globe, the holder of the first mortgage, being duly made a party thereto. Defendants answered the complaint, and set up the declaration of homestead and the seaond mortgage above referred to, asking that the Wightmans be required to foreclose the latter in the action, and that it be ordered the proceeds from the sale of the mortgaged cattle be applied: First, to pay the bank; second, to satisfy the Eais mortgage, and the balance to be paid upon anything found due the Wightmans.

Upon hearing this application, the trial court entered the following order:

“The prayer of the defendants to require the plaintiffs to amend their complaint and foreclose the Eais mortgage in this action will be denied.”

Thereupon the suit went to judgment in favor of the Wightmans, and the real estate and cattle covered by their third mortgage were sold thereunder. The cattle were bid in by plaintiff for the sum of $20,000. The first mortgage of the bank was duly paid from the proceeds,' and the balance applied upon the judgment. Defendants gave notice of appeal from the order refusing to compel a foreclosure of the Eais *570 mortgage in the action, but the appeal was never perfected.

Thereafter plaintiff brought this action in the superior court of Gila county to foreclose the second, or Eais, mortgage against the real estate covered by it. Defendants, answering the complaint for foreclosure, set up, in substance, the following defense: That the Eais indebtedness had, as security for its payment, in addition to the mortgage on the real estate covered by the declaration of homestead, a second mortgage on the cattle foreclosed in the suit in Graham county, and that plaintiff had promised to exhaust the proceeds of the cattle before proceeding against the land; that the cattle brought far more than sufficient to satisfy the first mortgage of the bank; and that»it was therefore the duty of plaintiff to apply the surplus proceeds of the sale of the cattle on the next, or Eais, mortgage covering them, to its satisfaction, before any of it could be applied upon the third mortgage which had been foreclosed in Graham county by plaintiff and Eolia Wightman. Plaintiff replied, setting up a plea of res adjudicata by means of the suit in Graham county. The matter was heard before the court, which rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff for foreclosure of the mortgage on the homestead, and from the judgment an appeal was taken to this court.

In determining this case, there are but two questions for us to consider, both of law: First, was the judgment in Graham county res adjudicata as to any right of defendants to compel plaintiff to apply the proceeds of the sale of the cattle to the Eais mortgage! And, second, if it was not, did defendants have the right to compel such application! In the proceedings in Graham county the complaint did not seek the foreclosure of the Eais mortgage. Defendants attempted by motion to compel plaintiff to add *571 that issue to the complaint, and. the court refused to include it. To say that the refusal of the court to include a certain question in a suit involving another matter, which does not necessarily depend upon the one not included, is a determination of the merits of the excluded matter would certainly seem a rather unusual conclusion. Neither the mortgagor nor a senior or junior encumbrancer can compel the holder of a mortgage to foreclose it, in the absence of a statute authorizing such action; the only right of the mortgagor being to tender the amount due on the mortgage and ask that it be canceled. Kinlock v. Savage, Speer’s Eq. (S. C.) 464; White v. Lucas, 46 Iowa, 319; 27 Cyc. 1547.

Such being the case, when the superior court of Graham county refused to compel foreclosure of the Eais mortgage, it was in no sense res adjudicata as to that mortgage or as to any defense which could be made thereto.

We next come to the more serious question: Had defendants the right, when suit was actually brought, to foreclose the Eais mortgage to require plaintiff first to exhaust the security of the chattel mortgage covering the same indebtedness? It is urged by plaintiff that this is nothing more nor less than an attempt to compel a marshaling of assets, and that this is exclusively a right of a junior creditor, and not of a debtor. In our opinion, however, the claim of defendants does not rest upon the principles of marshaling, but upon the general policy of the homestead law. Under the law of Arizona, at any time before the actual sale of the property, the' owner may declare a homestead which frees it from all liens not specifically made a burden thereon, either by the act of the owner or express provisions of law. We have declared the general policy of this state in regard to *572 exemptions from execution in Wilson v. Lowry, 5 Ariz. 335, 52 Pac. 777, where we say:

“It is the well-settled policy of the courts to liberally construe those humane and beneficent provisions of the law exempting certain property from execution for the payment of debts. The state has an interest in protecting families, and especially helpless children, against pauperism, and securing to them the means of reasonable comfort and education.”

And again in Wuicich v. Solomon-Wickersham Co., 18 Ariz. 164, 157 Pac. 972:

“Homestead statutes are enacted as a matter of public policy and in the interest of humanity. One of the objects is that everything shall not be taken from the family, and it left in a state of penury and pauperism, and its members perhaps a public charge. Such, indeed, we think is the public policy announced by our statute, wherein it exempts to the head of every family residing in this state from attachment, execution, and forced sale, ‘real property . . . not to exceed in value the sum of $4,000.’ ...”

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Bluebook (online)
243 P. 415, 29 Ariz. 567, 44 A.L.R. 754, 1926 Ariz. LEXIS 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mounce-v-wightman-ariz-1926.