Pike v. Gleason
This text of 14 N.W. 210 (Pike v. Gleason) 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
I. Each of these cases rests upon substantially the same facts. They were tried upon the same testimony and are submitted together in this court. The controlling facts of the respective cases, so far as it becomes necessary to state [151]*151them, in view of the questions upon which our decision is based, are these: Griswold and wife executed the mortgages in suit. The mortgage involved in the second action was given to Huber, those in the first and third, to Crosby. Huber transferred the mortgage executed to him, with the note which it was given to secure, to Crosby, who afterwards transferred it, and the note and mortgage involved in the second case, to the Second National Bank of Aurora. Crosby transferred the note and mortgage, which are the foundation of the first action, to Pike, the plaintiff therein. Subsequently to these transfers, Stivers obtained a judgment against Griswold, the mortgagor, in the several cases, and caused the land covered by the several mortgages to be sold, bidding it in and taking a sheriff’s certificate, which he assigned to defendant Gleason, to whom a sheriff’s deed was afterwards executed.
After the transfer of the respective mortgages and notes as above stated, Griswold and wife conveyed the lands covered by the mortgages to Crosby.
Gleason now insists that the lands were conveyed to Crosby in satisfaction of the respective mortgage debts; that the respective assignees of the mortgages stand in the shoes of Crosby, not being entitled to the protection of indorsers of commercial paper, and that the mortgages cannot be enforced as liens paramount to his title under the sheriff’s sale and deed.
As the mortgage continued to be a subsisting lein, it was competent for Crosby to assign whatever interest remained in him. The bank being the holder of the mortgage as collateral security, Crosby was entitled to any balance that should remain after the bank was paid. The assignment to the intervenors transferred the right and title of Crosby to the balance. It was not necessary, as appellants claim, that the court should find an amount due the intervenors and render judgment therefor. As the assignment to.them passed title to the balance due on the mortgage after the bank should be paid, it was proper for the court to direct that such balance be paid them.
The decree of the Circuit Court is
Afeiemed.
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14 N.W. 210, 60 Iowa 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pike-v-gleason-iowa-1882.