Robertson v. Moline, Milburn & Stoddard Co.
This text of 55 N.W. 495 (Robertson v. Moline, Milburn & Stoddard Co.) 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
There is no question but that if those deeds were in fact absolute, as they purported to be, they would convey to the appellee the same rights to redeem that the execution defendant had, namely, to redeem at any time within one year from the day of sale. According to the petition, they are not absolute, but were given for the sole purpose of securing the indebtedness owing by Mr. Meredith to the' appellee, “and for no other purpose.” This court and the courts of this country have very generally held that a conveyance of real estate, absolute on its face, may, by proper evidence, be shown to have been intended to operate as a security, and when so shown it is regarded as a mortgage, and the rights of the parties enforced accordingly. Trucks v. Lindsey, 18 Iowa, 504; Key v. McCleary, 25 Iowa, 191; Green v. Turner, 38 Iowa, 112; 6 Am. & Eng. Encyclopedia of Law, 675.
The appellee does not' question the rule just stated, but contends that the conveyance to Smith is shown in [467]*467'the petition to have been in trust; that his conveyance 'to the appellee was a transfer of the trust; that it was the privilege and duty of the appellee, as trustee and holder of the legal title, to protect the trust estate by redeeming; and that it might do so as trustee at any time within the year. Concede that the conveyance to Smith was as trustee, yet, according to the petition, it was as security, and, therefore, under the law, but a mortgage. A mortgage is not an estate in the land, but simply a specific lien or charge thereon. Newman v. De Lorimer, 19 Iowa, 244. Smith did not have an absolute assignment, and, therefore, he was not a vendee of the defendant, within the meaning of the statutes we have referred to. If Smith was a trustee, the trust was 'terminated by his conveyance to the appellee. The appellee took no greater rights than Smith had, which were the rights of a mortgagee. Taking, as we do, for ‘the purposes of the demurrer, the allegations of the. petition to be true, we think they show that the appellee is but a mortgagee. If the Merediths had executed a mortgage to Smith as trustee, or directly to the appellee -as a security, it would hardly be claimed that the appellee could redeem otherwise than as a creditor, and yet, under the allegations of the petition and the law, these conveyances were but as a mortgage. We are of ■opinion that, under the facts as alleged, the appellee had the right to redeem as creditor only.
Our conclusion is that the demurrer should have been overruled. Reversed.
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55 N.W. 495, 88 Iowa 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robertson-v-moline-milburn-stoddard-co-iowa-1893.