Newgirg v. Black

174 Iowa 636
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 11, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 174 Iowa 636 (Newgirg v. Black) 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
Newgirg v. Black, 174 Iowa 636 (iowa 1916).

Opinion

Preston, J.

1. Limitation OF ACTIONS : mortgages: twenty-year-old mortgages : non-residence of mortgagor: effect. The facts as related in the petition and admitted in the answer, were: That plaintiff is the owner of the record title of Lot 1, Block 52, Boone, Iowa. On Nov, 5, 1890, Anna P. Sherman, the then owner of the west half of said lot, executed to James W. Black her certain mortgage thereon by its terms due Nov. 5, 1893, which mortgage was filed of record the same day. That said mortgage has not been released of record. That [639]*639James W. Black has long been deceased, and that all rights in said mortgage become the property of the appellants, William C. Black and Mae Troutvetter, the sole heirs of James W. Black. For the purposes of the demurrer, it must be admitted that the mortgage is unpaid, and the mortgagor has been a nonresident of the state since the execution thereof.

Appellants have assigned as error:

1. That the court erred in sustaining the demurrer, on the ground that the mortgage was barred, since the non-residence of the mortgagors prevented the running of the statute.

2. That the court erred in sustaining the demurrer on the ground that the mortgage of appellants was barred under the provisions of Chapter 161, Laws of the 34th General Assembly.

1. The appellant contends that Sections 3447 to 3458, inclusive, contain the general law of the state relating to limitation of actions. In Section 3447, Code Sup., 1913, it provides at the beginning that:

“Actions may be brought within the times herein limited, respectively, after their causes accrue, and not afterwards, except when otherwise specially declared.”

In the chapter on the limitation of actions, it is further provided by Section 3451, Code, 1897, that:

“The time during which a defendant is a nonresident of the state shall not be included in computing any of the periods of limitation above described.”

Appellants cite the following authorities under the foregoing sections, to the point that, as long as the debt survives by reason of the nonresidence of the maker, a mortgage given to secure the debt also survives and is enforcible. Clinton County v. Cox, 37 Iowa 570; Jenks v. Shaw, 99 Iowa 604; Shearer v. Mills, 35 Iowa 499. And to the point that priority of a mortgage is preserved during nonresidence of a defendant, and that an admission of a debt after it is barred will restore the mortgage lien and its priority, they cite: First [640]*640Nat. Bank v. Woodman, 93 Iowa 668; Kerndt v. Porterfield, 56 Iowa 412. The reason given in some of the cases for this is that the mortgage is merely an incident to the debt, and it has been held that, where the mortgagor becomes a nonresident of the state and the statute is not complete against him, the mortgage remains enforcible against the property, even in the hands of a purchaser. Robertson v. Stuhlmiller, 93 Iowa 326. These cases were decided, all of them, before there was any amendment to these statutes by0 the 31st, 34th and 35th general assemblies. The first amendment to the statutes of limitation, in regard to the rights of action and limitation of action for the foreclosure of mortgages, was by the Acts of the Thirty-first General Assembly, Chapter .152, when it was provided that no action shall be brought to foreclose any real estate mortgage which was executed prior to January 1, 1885, unless the same be brought within one year from the taking effect of the act. This act found its way into the Code Supplement of 1907 as Section 3447-c.

The 34th general assembly repealed that section, 3447-c, and enacted in lieu thereof Chapter 161, Laws of the Thirty-fourth General Assembly, which is as follows:

“No action shall be maintained to foreclose or enforce any real estate mortgage, bond for deed, trust deed or contract for the sale or conveyance of real estate, after twenty years from the date thereof, as shown by the record of such instrument, unless the record of such instrument shows that less than ten years have elapsed since the date of maturity of the indebtedness or part, thereof, secured thereby, or since the right of action has accrued thereon, or unless the record shows an extension of the maturity of the instrument or of the debt or a part thereof, and that the time of such extension has not yet expired. The date of maturity, when different than as appears by the record of the instrument, and the date of maturity of any extension of said indebtedness or part thereof, may be shown at any time prior to the expiration of the above periods of limitation by the holder of the debt or the owner [641]*641or assignee of the instrument filing an extension agreement, duly acknowledged as the original instrument was required to be acknowledged, in the office of the recorder where the instrument is recorded, or by noting on the margin of the record of such instrument in the recorder’s office an extension of the maturity of the instrument or of the debt secured,.or any part thereof. Bach notation to be witnessed by the recorder and entered upon the index of mortgages in the name of the mortgagor and mortgagee; provided that the holder or assignee of any such instrument, or the holder of any debt or part thereof, secured by any instrument, shall have until July 4, 1912, in which to file such extension agreement or to note the marginal extension as to any instrument executed prior to the taking effect of this act and coming within the provisions hereof. This act shall in no case revive the rights or claims barred by section three thousand four hundred, forty-seven-c of the supplement to the code, 1907.”

This act was slightly amended by Chapter 283 of the Laws of the Thirty-fifth General Assembly by striking out the last nine words (“the time of such extension has not yet expired”) of .the first sentence of the section and inserting others, so as to read, when amended:

“And that ten years from the.expiration of the time of such extension have not yet expired.”

This last amendment took effect on July 4, 1913, or about two months before plaintiff’s petition was filed in this action. We do not understand that counsel for either side claim anything for the change made by the 35th general .assembly, because, in the instant case, there is no claim of any extension.

Plaintiff’s petition was filed August 26, 1913, and.it is conceded that the law of the state in regard to limitations for the foreclosure of mortgages was under the statutes before referred to, as amended and changed by. the. 31st and 34th general assemblies. It is argued by appellants that the law, at the time of the filing of the .petition, was as stated in [642]*642Section 3447, Code of 1897, and Chapter 161 of the 34th General Assembly. Section 3447, with the different amendments, is now found as Section 3447 of the Code Supplement of 1913.

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Bluebook (online)
174 Iowa 636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newgirg-v-black-iowa-1916.