Nelson v. Hayes

269 N.W. 861, 222 Iowa 701
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 24, 1936
DocketNo. 43635.
StatusPublished

This text of 269 N.W. 861 (Nelson v. Hayes) 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
Nelson v. Hayes, 269 N.W. 861, 222 Iowa 701 (iowa 1936).

Opinion

*702 Donegan, J.

Prior to February 15, 1932, Mort Hayes was the owner of a farm in Taylor county, Iowa, upon which there was a mortgage in favor of Allie Nelson, Robert Marr, and Anna M. Dinges. Action was commenced by the said mortgagees against Hayes and his wife, Emma, for the foreclosure of said mortgage, and, on the 15th day of February, 1932, a judgment and decree of foreclosure was entered, and John M. Dinges was appointed receiver. Following the entry of the decree and the appointment of the receiver, Mort Hayes and Emma Hayes entered into four separate leases of the land, by which they leased the land and agreed to pay rentals thereon, each of these leases being for a separate year. The first two of these leases were made with the receiver and the last two with the purchasers and owners under the sheriff’s deed, the last of these leases being for the term of one year from and after the first day of March, 1935.

On August 26, 1935, the plaintiffs herein, Allie Nelson, Robert Marr, John M. Dinges and Charles Y. Dinges, Jr., commenced the instant action in equity against Mort Hayes and Emma Hayes to quiet title to the land, alleging their ownership» thereof in undivided shares; that the defendants have been tenants of said land since March 1932, under written leases; that they understand and believe that the defendants make some claim as owners of said land, but allege that said defendants have no right, title or interest therein as owners, their only right being that of tenants of the plaintiffs, which right as tenants will expire on March 1, 1936. Plaintiffs alleged that they would be entitled to the absolute possession of the land as against the defendants, and all persons claiming by, through, or under them, after March 1, 1936; and they asked that their title to the land be established and quieted, that their right to the full, complete and actual possession of said land be found and established ag'ainst the defendants, except as to the defendants’ right under the lease; and that the clerk of the court issue a writ of possession immediately after March 1, 1936, directing the sheriff to put the plaintiffs in actual possession of the premises. To this petition the defendants filed an answer which, while not denying any of the allegations of the petition, alleged the foreclosure action, the decree therein, the issuance of special execution and the return thereon, copies of the execution and return being attached and made a part of the answer. The answer further alleged that the return shows that the execution was receipted for by the *703 deputy sheriff, that all acts done thereunder in attempting to make a levy on the land were done by the deputy sheriff, that the indorsement made on the return reciting its receipt and levy made thereunder was made by the deputy sheriff, and that all these things were done by the deputy sheriff in his own name and not in the name of the sheriff. The defendants allege that, because of the matters thus set out, there was no valid levy made on the land, and that the sheriff’s sale and sheriff’s deed issued pursuant thereto are wholly void and did not convey or vest any right to the land in the plaintiffs. Defendants prayed that the prayer of the petition be denied, that the defendant, Mort Hayes, be declared to be the absolute owner of the said land, that said sale be declared void and without legal effect, and that the deed issued thexermder be declared void.

To this answer the plaintiffs filed a motion to dismiss, on the ground that the answer shows upon its face that the allegations of the plaintiffs’ petition are not denied, and that defendants’ whole case rests upon a confession and avoidance; that it appears upon the face of said answer that judgment and decree had been entered foreclosing the mortgage lien, that execution had issued upon said judgment, that the premises had been sold, that no redemption had been made, and that time for redemption had passed. By an amendment to their motion plaintiffs further alleged that defendants’ answer shows that the land was sold under a special execution and under an order of court directing the sheriff to sell same, and no action thereon by the sheriff was necessary under the facts shown by defendants’ answer. Upon hearing the plaintiffs’ said motion to dismiss defendants’ answer was sustained, and, defendants having elected to stand on their pleadings, decree was entered in favor of the plaintiffs. From this order of the court sustaining the motion to dismiss their answer, the defendants have appealed.

There is no dispute in the facts, and this case comes to us on appeal on questions of law only, which have been presented in statements of errors upon which the appellants rely for a reversal. Both the answer of the defendants and the plaintiffs’ motion to dismiss are far from being models of clear and concise pleading. From the statements of these pleadings, however, and from the matters considered by the trial court in its opinion and the matters which are here argued, it seems apparent that the defense set out in appellants’ answer is based primarily on the *704 thought that the return attached to the execution fails to show that the sheriff had entered thereon the date and hour when such execution was received and the date when the land was levied upon thereunder; that, because said return did not show such entries thereon, there was no valid levy upon the land; and that, there having* been no valid levy, there could be no valid sale. From these same matters it also appears that the plaintiffs’ motion to dismiss defendants’ answer was based primarily upon their contention that the return attached to the execution affirmatively showed that a sufficient levy had been made upon the land which was sold thereunder. The first two errors alleged by appellants attack the validity of the sale in the foreclosure action on the ground that no sufficient levy was made upon the land under the execution, and that there was no sufficient levy because the return on the execution shows that the sheriff did not comply with the mandatory provisions of our statutes imposing the doing of certain acts in levying on land under an execution.

The statutory provisions which it is claimed are mandatory and were not complied with are found in sections 11664 and 11668 of the Code, 1931.

■ Section 11664 provides that, “The officer to whom an execution is issued shall indorse thereon the day and hour when he received it, the levy, sale, or other act done bj^ virtue thereof, with the date thereof, * * *; which entries must be made at the time of the receipt or act done.”

Section 11668 provides that, “When an execution is delivered to an officer, he must proceed to execute it with diligence; if executed, an exact- description of the property at length, with the date of the levy, shall be indorsed upon or appended to the execution * * *.”

The return attached to the execution in this case is in part as follows:

“Return of Execution:
“STATE OF IOWA, Taylor County, SS.
“I, Phil Terry, Deputy Sheriff of said County, do hereby certify that the annexed Execution came into my hands for service on the 18 day of Feb., A. D., 1932 and on the 18 day of Feb., A.

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Bluebook (online)
269 N.W. 861, 222 Iowa 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelson-v-hayes-iowa-1936.