Newman v. De Lorimer
This text of 19 Iowa 244 (Newman v. De Lorimer) 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.
Opinion
“In the absence of stipulations to the contrary, the mortgagor of real estate retains the legal title and right of possession thereof.” (Rev., § 2207.)
Mortgages must be foreclosed by civil action (Revision, § 3660), and deeds of trust may be treated like mortgages, and foreclosed by action in the District Court. (Revision, § 3673.)
[246]*246The plaintiff cannot proceed concurrently at law on the note or bond, and in equity to foreclose, but must elect which course he will pursue. (Rev. § 3663.)
The modern idea of a mortgage as being not an estate in the land, but simply a specific lien or charge on land to secure a debt, which is the main and principal thing, is fully recognized and carried out by our statute.
Nor can a mortgagee, as above stated, proceed at the same time at law on the note, and in equity to foreclose, as he might have done at common law. It is our opinion, that section 2740 of the Revision respecting limitations of actions, as to all actions therein mentioned and provided for, applies equally whether the action be brought at law or in equity, e. g. a suit in equity upon a “written contract” is barred by ten years, equally as if the action were one at law upon a like instrument. We are well aware that it is held in many of the States, that the creditor may pursue his remedy upon the mortgage, though the debt be barred by the statute of limitations (Hilliard on Mortg., ch. 27, [247]*247ancl authorities cited by appellant’s counsel.) But the contrary has been sometimes adjudged as the better rule, (Harris v. Mills, 28 Ill., 44.)
Under our statute, however, the decision of the present case is plain. The mortgagee or creditor has no right of entry. Ten years is the limitation, equally as to actions on written contracts, and actions for the recovery of real property. There is no separate covenant in the deed of trust to pay the debt; and if there was, the ten years limitation would apply to it the same as the note.
In most of the States twenty years are necessary to bar the mortgagee, by lapse of-time, of his right to foreclose; and this period, says Chancellor Kent (4 Com., 189) “ is taken by analogy to the period of limitation at law, for tolling the entry of the true owner.”
We have expressed the opinion above, that in a suit like the present, our statute of limitations directly applies.
The presumption of payment of the note would, under our statute, arise in ten years instead of twenty; and the possession-of the mortgagor for that period, “after breach of the condition, without any payment of interest, or any admission of the debt, will,” to quote the language of Mr. Story (Com., § 1928 b, supra), “ generally be deemed to bar and extinguish the right to file a bill for a foreclosure.”
Payment is presumed, in the view we áre now considering the case, in ten years. Admit, for the argument, that this presumption may be repelled. It is the duty of the [248]*248plaintiff to state the circumstances upon ■which he relies to destroy the presumption. (See Rev., §§ 2691, 2692.) No such circumstances are alleged in the petition, and, therefore, the court did not err in holding that the right to á foreclosure was, prima facie, extinguished or lost by lapse of time. See Johnson v. Hopkins, ante.
Affirmed.
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19 Iowa 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newman-v-de-lorimer-iowa-1865.