Rives v. Stanford

1940 OK 447, 106 P.2d 1101, 188 Okla. 108, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 392
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 29, 1940
DocketNo. 29658.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1940 OK 447 (Rives v. Stanford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rives v. Stanford, 1940 OK 447, 106 P.2d 1101, 188 Okla. 108, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 392 (Okla. 1940).

Opinion

NEFF, J.

The administrator of a real estate mortgagee’s estate foreclosed the mortgage. It is said that the foreclosed property was the homestead of the mortgagors, husband and wife, in whole or in part, and it is assumed for the purposes of reasoning herein that all of it was homestead. After the filing of the action, and after obtaining service of summons upon the husband and upon the wife, but before the case went to judgment, the husband died. The plaintiff revived the action as against him in the name of his administrator, and thereafter proceeded to judgment. The property was bid in by plaintiff at the sheriff’s sale for the full amount of the judgment, approximating $10,000. The sale was confirmed, plaintiff obtained sheriff’s deed, the judgment became final, and no portion of the proceedings therein is of interest here except the omission hereinafter related.

That omission consisted of the failure to make the three children of the intestate husband parties to the action upon his death. Two of them were minors. Assuming the land to be homestead, the minors then became necessary parties as a condition precedent to the effective foreclosure of their interests, and the failure to join them resulted in their interests not being foreclosed. Bledsoe v. Green, 138 Okla. 15, 280 P. 301.

So discovering, the plaintiff then filed the present action, against the adult child and the two minor children by their guardian ad litem. This action is to “reforeclose” the mortgage, as the parties term it, as against the interests of said children, who were not parties to the former foreclosure, the idea being to clear plaintiff’s title. It resulted in a judgment for plaintiff, adjudicating approximately the same amount as involved in the prior foreclosure action to be a lien against the property, and ordering same sold to satisfy said judgment. The defendants appeal.

The first proposition advanced by defendants is that they were necessary parties to the first cause of action and that the judgment in, that case did not foreclose or affect their interests in the property. The plaintiff concedes the correctness thereof (Bledsoe v. Green, supra), and might have added that such was the reason for filing the present action.

The second proposition is that the notes and mortgage sued on and foreclosed in this action had already been merged in the judgment in the former foreclosure, which judgment had been paid and satisfied by the sheriff’s sale therein for the full amount of said judgment; that therefore the judgment *109 herein is contrary to the evidence and the law.

Under this proposition the defendants start off with the admission of the general rule that equity will afford relief in such situations where necessary parties have been omitted in the first foreclosure action, but they contend for certain exceptions which will be considered later. The gist of this opinion being the general rule, it is better that we first discuss that rule, in order that the exceptions claimed by the defendants may then be more clearly considered.

The principle involved is the same whether the omitted party be the owner of a fee interest or equitable interest, such as a second mortgage. Our decision in Darks v. Kansas City Life Insurance Co., 181 Okla. 165, 72 P. 2d 810, states the general rule:

“When the holder of a first mortgage on real estate forecloses his mortgage and becomes the purchaser at his own foreclosure sale, but inadvertently fails to join the holder of a second mortgage as a party defendant, equity will keep the first mortgage holder’s mortgage alive against the holder of the second mortgage, and the senior mortgagee will be entitled to an action de novo to reforeclose his mortgage as to the omitted parties.”

See the opinion therein for a full treatment of the question, and also the following: Jones on Mortgages (6th Ed.) vol. 1, § 870, p. 912, and vol. 2, par. 1679, p. 636; Bancroft’s Code Practice and Remedies, vol. 6, § 5161, p. 633; Yoder v. Robinson, 45 Okla. 165, 145 P. 775.

In Stough v. Badger Lumber Co., 70 Kan. 713, 79 P. 737, a mortgage was foreclosed without the grantee of the mortgagor having been joined as a party defendant. A sheriff’s sale of the property was then had. It was held that the purchaser acquired assignment of the liens sought to be foreclosed, by operation of equity principles, and that the right to complete the foreclosure as against the mortgagor’s grantee inured to the purchaser in a proceeding de novo.

We have already referred to the decision of this court in the Darks Case, supra, as containing an explanation of the principles and reasons underlying the rule herein involved. The basis of that rule will further appear in considering the defendants’ claim of exceptions thereto, to which we now proceed.

One of the contentions by defendants is that the plaintff could not maintain this action without first vacating the judgment in the prior action; that the notes were canceled in the judgment, and that the full amount of the judgment was satisfied by the former sale, and that therefore plaintiff’s right to foreclose the interests of defendants now falls for lack of a supporting money judgment. This argument is, however, more of theory and technic than of substance. Neither in the prior action nor in the present action was the plaintiff entitled to any personal money judgment against the defendants, since they did not execute the note or assume any indebtedness. If they had been parties to the prior action, they would have been in no better or worse position than they are in the present action. There is nothing that they could have done in that action, to redeem the property, that they may not still do. They are not faced with two judgments, as they contend. They are not confronted with any valid personal judgment at all; they have the same right of redemption, in a slightly less amount, that they would have had in the former action. Not in any substantial manner have their rights been abrogated or their position worsened.

In Horr v. Herrington, 22 Okla. 590, 98 P. 443, we approved, and in Johns v. Wilson, 180 U. S. 440, 45 L. Ed. 613, 21 Sup. Ct. 445, the Supreme Court of the United States approved, apropos of a like situation, the following statement from volume 2 of Jones on Mortgages (6th Ed.) par. 1679, p. 636:

*110 “He may, by a supplemental bill, bring in all persons interested in the premises whose rights are not already foreclosed; or, if necessary, he may have the sale set aside and obtain a resale of the premises; or the court may give such other relief as justice demands. Although a new action is the proper remedy for a foreclosure imperfect through failure to make all persons interested in the equity of redemption parties to the suit, the courts have allowed the original suit to be reinstated upon an amended petition, even after an interval of several years.”

The defendants also assert that the general rule should not apply when the full amount of the judgment was bid at the first sale by the mortgagee. This contention is well answered by the cases collected in an exhaustive annotation at 73 A.L.R. 630 and 633, from which we quote in part:

“The purchaser of property at a foreclosure sale for the

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Bluebook (online)
1940 OK 447, 106 P.2d 1101, 188 Okla. 108, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rives-v-stanford-okla-1940.