Rambeck v. La Bree

194 N.W. 643, 156 Minn. 310, 1923 Minn. LEXIS 536
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 13, 1923
DocketNo. 23,488
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 194 N.W. 643 (Rambeck v. La Bree) 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
Rambeck v. La Bree, 194 N.W. 643, 156 Minn. 310, 1923 Minn. LEXIS 536 (Mich. 1923).

Opinion

Lees, C.

Appeal from a judgment canceling a certificate of redemption issued to tbe appellant by tbe defendant La Bree, as sheriff of Pennington county.

On November 26, 1915, one Ole Oveson owned a quarter section of land in Pennington county and mortgaged it to a bank at Thief Biver Falls. On November 1, 1919, Olaf Oveson gave a second mortgage to tbe appellant, and on July 30, 1920, a third mortgage [312]*312to the respondent. The first mortgage was foreclosed by advertisement and the land sold on June 11, 1921, to the Savings Loan & Trust Company, a Wisconsin corporation, for $2,285.67.

The Ovesons failed to redeem. June 11, 1922, fell on a Sunday, hence the time within which they might have redeemed did not expire until June 12. On May 17, 1922, appellant duly filed notice of its intention to redeem, and respondent duly filed a like notice on June 12, 1922. On June 15 appellant paid $2,420.78 to the sheriff in redemption of the land from the sale to the trust company. It produced to the sheriff its mortgage from Oveson. Attached to it was an affidavit made by appellant’s cashier, stating that the papers were produced for the purpose of making redemption pursuant to appellant’s notice of its intention so to do, and that the amount then actually due on its mortgage was $1,261.72. The sheriff accepted the redemption money and signed a certificate of redemption, but did not have his signature witnessed and did not acknowledge the execution of the certificate. On June 15 he deposited the incomplete certificate in the office of the register of deeds, where it remained until June 19, when it was properly witnessed and acknowledged and placed on record. The certificate did not contain a statement of the amount claimed to be due on appellant’s mortgage at the date of redemption. It stated that appellant redeemed as a junior mortgage. In all other respects it complied with section 8149, G-. S. 1913.

The mortgage and affidavit of appellant’s cashier were not filed as required by section 8148, G-. S. 1913. By mistake the sheriff mailed these papers to the Farmers’ State Bank of Mavie, Minnesota. They were received on June 16 and mailed to appellant on the same day. It received them on June 17 and filed,them with the register of deeds on June 19 at 5 o’clock p. m. On June 19 at 10 o’clock a. m. respondent’s attorneys examined the files and records in the office of the register of deeds and were shown and examined the incomplete certificate of redemption the sheriff had issued. Respondent did not attempt to redeem on the nineteenth, but on the following day at 4 o’clock p. m. he produced to the sheriff his mortgage and an affidavit of the amount due thereon and tendered $2,421.90 in [313]*313redemption of the land. Because he did not include the amount due on appellant’s mortgage, the sheriff refused to receive the sum tendered. Respondent has kept the tender good and insists that the sheriff should have accepted it because appellant’s redemption was invalid.

This action was brought to compel the sheriff to accept the money tendered and execute a certificate of redemption to respondent, to cancel the certificate issued to appellant and annul the record there- • of, and to have respondent adjudged the owner of the land in fee. The facts stated were set out in the pleadings and in affidavits produced by the parties at the hearing of a motion made by respondent to strike out appellant’s answer as frivolous. The motion was granted and judgment as demanded was entered as for want of an answer.

Respondent contends that appellant’s redemption was invalid for 0 two reasons: (1) Because the mortgage and the affidavit of appellant’s cashier were not filed within 24 hours after redemption was made; (2) because of the omission from the sheriff’s certificate of redemption of a statement of the amount claimed to be due on appellant’s mortgage when it redeemed and the absence of a more particular statement of its lien. The trial judge was of the opinion that the statutory provisions relative to these two matters were mandatory and that the failure to comply with them was fatal to the redemption.

In Sedgwick’s Statutory Law, it is said [2d ed. pp. 317-318] that when a strict compliance with the provisions of a statute with respect to time does not appear essential to the judicial mind, a proceeding will be held valid, although a command of 'the statute was disregarded. The questions which arise under this head are not properly those of construction, but rather of .application. The statute is sufficiently clear. The only point is what shall be the consequence of a disobedience of its direction. The writer concludes [page 325] by expressing the opinion that the legislature should say what consequences should result from a disregard of a provision of a statute. When none are specified, a court should seek to ascertain the legislative Intention. The language of the statute, the subject matter, the importance of the provision and the object intended [314]*314to be secured should be considered. 3 Dunnell, Minn. Dig. § 8954. If the provision does not go to the essence of the thing to be done, or if the act is to be done within a certain time without any negative words to restrict the doing of it afterwards, the provision is usually held to be directory. 25 R. C. L. 767.

This court has said that as a general rule the statute requiring an act to be done within a certain time should be regarded as directory unless the limitation of time is essential to the protection of private rights, Johnson v. Northwestern L. & B. Assn. 60 Minn. 393, 2 N. W. 381, and that a statute mandatory in language may be merely directory, depending on the object to be subserved by the particular requirement. Farmers Co-operative Elev. Co. v. Enge, 122 Minn. 316, 142 N. W. 328. In Laroque v. Chapel, 63 Minn. 517, 65 N. W. 941, it was held that the statute requiring a sheriff’s certificate of foreclosure sale to be executed and recorded within 20 days after the sale, section 8133, G. S. 19.13, may be merely directory as to time. The legislature has not said what consequences follow a disregard of the time limit fixed by section 8148.

We must ascertain, if we can, what the legislature intended but failed to express. The purpose of filing the redemption paper's is to inform other lien creditors of the amount they will have to pay if they choose to redeem. The statuté is intended for their protection and they alone can take advantage of a noncompliance with its terms. Wilson v. Hayes, 40 Minn. 531, 42 N. W. 467, 4 L. R. A. 196, 12 Am. St. 754. If the .papers are on file when a junior creditor exercises his right of redemption, the essential purpose of the statute is served. If the junior redemptioner may close his eyes because the papers were not filed within 24 hours and, by redeeming, cut out a prior lien, leaving the debtor liable for its payment, the letter of the law prevails over the spirit. In the instant case the necessary papers were filed on June 19, nearly 24 hours before respondent attempted to redeem. He was not injured by appellant’s failure to file them in time. He did not act until after they were filed. If he had gone to the office of the register of deeds on the day he redeemed, he would have .ascertained: (1) That the bank had redeemed; (2) the nature of the lien under which it had [315]*315redeemed; (3) the amount due on its lien. In other words, all the information he was entitled to have was available when he attempted to make redemption. If he had exercised his right to redeem the day before, the situation would have been entirely different.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 N.W. 643, 156 Minn. 310, 1923 Minn. LEXIS 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rambeck-v-la-bree-minn-1923.