Van Antwerp v. Garnett

1935 OK 964, 50 P.2d 609, 174 Okla. 144, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 1399
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 8, 1935
DocketNo. 24775.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1935 OK 964 (Van Antwerp v. Garnett) 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
Van Antwerp v. Garnett, 1935 OK 964, 50 P.2d 609, 174 Okla. 144, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 1399 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This was an action brought by Huida Garnett, as plaintiff, against the defendants, L. N. Van Antwerp *145 and Louise Van Antwerp, makers of promissory notes and a real estate mortgage, to recover money judgment and to foreclose said mortgage. Judgment creditors, O. A. Talcott and Standard Roofing & Material Company, were made parties to tlie action. Tlie parties will be referred to as in the court below.

Judgment was entered in favor of tlie plaintiff on April 21, 1932, for the full amount sued for and for foreclosure of her mortgage as a first lien on the real property therein described. This mortgage waived the appraisement of the property. The judgments of the cross-petitioners, Tal-cott and the Standard Roofing & Material Company, were declared junior liens on the property and ordered satisfied after the plaintiff’s judgment was paid. The Van Antwerps filed their motion on April 28, 1932, to modify the judgment in favor of said cross-petitioners on the ground that the property involved was the homestead of said defendants and said judgments were not liens thereon. The cross-petitioners confessed this motion and the court rendered judgment on May 28, 1932, modifying the judgment of April 21, 1932, by decreeing that the cross-petitioners were without liens upon said homestead property. This modified decree made no other change in the original judgment and in no way affected the judgment and lien of the plaintiff.

On October 25, 1932, more than six months after the decree of foreclosure was entered, the plaintiff issued an order of sale, sold the property, xmrehased same at sheriff’s sale for $2,000, and the sale was confirmed on November 28, 1932. No objection was made to the confirmation of sale. On December 2, 1932, the Van Antwerps filed their motion to vacate the confirmation of sale and to set aside the sheriff’s deed. The court overruled this motion, and defendants have appealed from the order overruling the same.

It is the contention of the defendants that the sale is void because prematurely held; that the six months’ redemption period provided by statute, sec. 704, C. O. S. 1921, commenced at the date of the modified decree on May 28th instead of April 21st, the date of the foreclosure decree. In support of this contention the defendants cite in their brief and rely on the following cases: Brown et al. v. Kemmerer, 140 Okla. 140, 282 P. 297; Hancock v. Youree et al., 25 Okla. 460, 106 P. 841, and Tolbert et al. v. State Bank of Paden, 30 Okla. 403, 121 P. 212.

In the Brown Case a foreclosure decree without appraisement was entered and later set aside on motion of the owners of the land for the reason that summons had not been served upon them. Thereafter alias summons was served and a final judgment rendered. A sale was not made until more than six months after final judgment. It is elementary that a valid decree of foreclosure cannot be had without the owners of the property before the court. After the judgment was set aside it was then necessary to secure final decree against the owners and redemption period began from the date of the final decree.

In the Hancock Case the record discloses that the property was sold without appraisement within six months from the date of judgment., and for that reason the sale was held void. In the Tolbert Case, where appraisement was waived, it was held that a sale with appraisement does not render valid a sale of the .property before expiration of six months from the date of judgment. We have carefully examined all the authorities cited by defendants and fail to find therein support for their contention.

In support of the sale and confirmation the plaintiff calls attention to the case of Hall et al. v. Local Building & Loan Association, 117 Okla. 174, 245 P. 548. Judgment of foreclosure without appraisement was entered on November 5, 1923, and the court corrected the decree on May 7, 1924, by reducing the amount of the judgment in the sum of $97.15. Thereafter the property was sold without appraisement and sale confirmed within six months from May 7, 1924. Reversal of the order of confirmation was sought on the ground that the correction of the journal entry of November 5, 1923, to conform to the real judgment of the court amounted to a new judgment, and that plaintiff should have waited six months from May 7th before selling the property. This court held that the change of the form of the journal entry to conform to a judgment reached by the court, on a former date, is not the rendition of a new judgment in the cause, and refused to reverse the order of confirmation.

The next case cited by plaintiff is Jones et al. v. Illinois Valley Trust Co. et al., 135 Okla. 85, 274 P. 36. This was a mortgage foreclosure providing for sale without ap-praisement. It was there contended that the court erred in entering its order confirming the sale of the real estate involved, for the reason that the sale was had less *146 than sis months after the motion for new trial had been overruled. This court rejected that contention. Syllabus paragraph 3 in that case reads as follows:

‘•Where there is a waiver of appraisement contained in a real estate mortgage, and a judgment of foreclosure thereof is entered decreeing the sale of said property, and a motion for new trial is filed and thereafter overruled, an order of sale may then issue cut of the court six months from the date of the judgment, for the reason that the effect of the overruling of the motion for new trial relates back to the force and purposes of the judgment originally entered.” See Miller v. Farmers’ National Bank, 94 Okla. 101, 221 P. 71; Shoals v. Freeland, 91 Okla. 238, 217 P. 176.

In that case we sustained the sale and at the same time ordered that the personal judgment rendered against the mortgagors on publication service be vacated and set aside. We quote the following from said opinion:

“The action of the trial court is sustained in all things save and except the personal judgment that was rendered against Ole O. Cooper and Bettie W. Cooper, and as to this part of the judgment it is ordered that the same be vacated, set aside and held for naught, and the court is also: directed to set aside its judgment relating to the service by publication on M. S. Grant & Company, as well as its final judgment thereupon rendered. ”

The plaintiff further insists that even in cases where the order of sale is issued within six months from the date of the decree, where appraisement is waived, if sale is made and confirmed within six months without any objections from the parties affected, the illegality is waived and the sale is valid. On this point plaintiff cites the cases of Oklahoma City Packing & Provision Company et al. v. Pearson, 94 Okla. 124, 220 P. 932; and Cudjo et al. v. Harris, 119 Okla. 69, 248 P. 343.

It is true that the defendants did not file any objections to the confirmation of sale. However, we do not deem it necessary to decide the point here insisted on, because wo base our decision on other grounds.

The record in this appeal shows that plaintiff had a valid judgment of foreclosure against all of the defendants more than six months before the order of sale issued. The period of redemption for the defendants, the Van Antwerps, commenced on the date-of the rendition of that judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 964, 50 P.2d 609, 174 Okla. 144, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 1399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-antwerp-v-garnett-okla-1935.