Pamperin v. Scanlan

9 N.W. 868, 28 Minn. 345, 1881 Minn. LEXIS 262
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedOctober 4, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 9 N.W. 868 (Pamperin v. Scanlan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pamperin v. Scanlan, 9 N.W. 868, 28 Minn. 345, 1881 Minn. LEXIS 262 (Mich. 1881).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

Action of ejectment. The defendant denies plaintiff’s title, and alleges title in himself. The cause was tried by the court without a jury, and the facts found are substantially as follows:

In June, 1876, Ward, Hobart and Kevin, then the owners of the-premises, executed a mortgage thereon to Calista F. Sawyer. In December, 1877, Hobart and Ward, then the owners of an undivided half of the premises, executed a mortgage thereon to defendant. In May, 1878, Kevin, then the owner of the other undivided half of the-premises, executed a mortgage thereon to one O’Hara, who, on the-14th of May, 1880, assigned to defendant. All of these instruments were duly recorded on or about the dates of their execution.. Default having been made in the first or Sawyer mortgage, Mrs. Sawyer foreclosed by advertisement, and bid in the premises at the: mortgage sale, July 2, 1879, for $2,217, the amount of the mortgage. On February 14, 1880, Scanlan purchased of Mrs. Sawyer her certificate of sale, and obtained from her an assignment thereof, which was recorded February 18, 1880. The mortgagors never redeemed.. Defendant never filed any notice of intention to redeem as mortgagor,, nor presented to Mrs. Sawyer any affidavit or other evidence of his right to redeem, and never did redeem, unless purchasing the certificate of sale from Mrs. Sawyer, as aforesaid, amounted to a redemption.

The foregoing facts constitute the .basis of defendant’s claim of title.

On April 2, 1879, subsequent to the execution of all three of the. mortgages already referred to, plaintiff obtained a judgment against-Kevin, which, being docketed, became a lien upon the premises in controversy, subsequent to the liens of the prior mortgages. Within [347]*347twelve months after the sale of the premises on the Sawyer mortgage, to wit, on the 28th of May, 1880, plaintiff duly filed notice of his intention, as judgment creditor, to redeem the premises from that sale. No redemption having been made by the mortgagors, or their assigns, within the twelve months, the plaintiff, within five days after the expiration of that time, produced to the sheriff of the county the proper evidences of his right to redeem, and paid to him for that purpose $2,466.19, the amount for which the premises were sold on the Sawyer mortgage, with interest and sheriff’s fees. The sheriff thereupon executed to him a certificate of redemption, which was duly recorded. These facts constitute the basis of plaintiff’s claim of title.

The plaintiff’s contention is that, notwithstanding the fact that defendant had purchased Mrs. Sawyer’s certificate of sale, yet this did not amount to a redemption; that if he wished to protect his subsequent mortgages on the premises, by virtue of his statutory right of redemption, it was necessary for him to file, within twelve months after sale, notice of his intention to redeem, and after the expiration of that time to redeem as subsequent mortgagee; that having failed to do so, plaintiff became, as it were, senior creditor, and had a right to redeem by paying simply the amount for which the premises were sold and interest. On the other hand, defendant’s contention is that he was not bound to redeem, and hence was not required to file any notice of intention to do so; that there was no necessity for his redeeming, and that his relations to the property were such that he was not a redemptioner within the meaning of the statute; that, in order to redeem, it was necessary for plaintiff, under the statute, to pay not only the amount for which the premises were sold, but also the amount of the two subsequent mortgages held by defendant, which were liens on the premises prior to that of plaintiff’s judgment; and that therefore plaintiff’s attempted redemption was insufficient and void.

The question here presented for our decision calls for a construction of our statute regulating the redemption of - mortgaged premises after foreclosure sale. The provisions of this statute are so very imperfect, and in some respects so very obscure, that the task of construing them is one of great difficulty. Indeed, we do not think it possible to place a construction upon some of the provisions of this [348]*348statute that will not be subject to grave objections, and result in some serious practical difficulties. When called upon to construe so imperfect a statute, the best course for a court to pursue is to consider its general aim or purpose, and the plan adopted to carry that purpose into effect, and then adopt the construction that will in practice most nearly accomplish the object intended. And, first, it may be remarked that, while it is to be presumed that in framing this statute the analogies of former equity rules on the subject of the right of redemption would to a certain extent be followed, yet this right of redemption after foreclosure sale is purely a creature of statute, and therefore, if a party would avail himself of this right, hfe must follow the statute strictly and bring himself fully within its provisions. Again, the right of redemption given to lien creditors does not commence till after the mortgagor’s right of redemption has terminated, and the title of the holder of the certificate of sale has become, as against the mortgagor, perfect and absolute. Gen. St. 1878, c. 81, § 16.

The end or aim had in view in the provisions of this section 16, giving lien creditors the right of redemption in case the mortgagor fails to redeem, was, in our opinion, to make the land bring its utmost value, by means of what might be termed an auction sale among creditors, preserving to each his right according to the seniority of his lien. The aim is to conduct this sale for the benefit of both the creditors and the debtors, the creditors being interested in realizing out of the property as much as possible towards payment of their claims, and the debtor being interested in having as much as possible of his debts paid out of it. The mode of conducting this sale, so far as it has been plainly prescribed by the statute, must be followed whether it be reasonable or unreasonable, unless the parties who have the right to insist upon performance choose to dispense with it. When the statute is doubtful, that construction should be adopted which will protect the interests of the mortgagor, and secure the rights of all the creditors according to the seniority of their liens, and keep up the auction until the best price has been obtained. People v. Fleming, 4 Denio, 137. The statute provides that this competitive sale among creditors, under the form of successive redemptions, [349]*349shall be conducted as follows: First, all bidders or proposed redemptioners must register by filing notice of their intention to redeem within one year after the sale; second, they must present to the party from whom they redeem evidence of their right to do so, and an affidavit showing the amount claimed as due on the lien under which they claim the right of redemption; third, a certificate of redemption must be made and recorded within ten days, which shall, among other things, state the amount paid by the redemptioner, upon what claim the redemption was made, and, if a lien, the amount claimed to be due thereon. These provisions are designed not merely for the information of the party from whom the redemption is made, but also, and perhaps mainly, for the information and security of every creditor having a lien, and who may desire to redeem. The object is to inform them who their competitors will be, when their time for redemption will begin and end, and how much they will be called on to pay in order to redeem. People v.

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Bluebook (online)
9 N.W. 868, 28 Minn. 345, 1881 Minn. LEXIS 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pamperin-v-scanlan-minn-1881.