156 P.2d 207 | Utah | 1945
While the factual situation involved is rather complex, there is but one question presented on this appeal.
In February, 1933, Charles Adams, and Lillian Taylor, plaintiffs, and Florence Davies, brother and sisters, were owners, as tenants in common of the lands involved in this action, subject to a mortgage held by defendant Frederick W. Davies, husband of Florence. The Davieses were occupying the premises as tenants. In February of that year Davies brought suit, designated as No. 51032, against the aforementioned owners, to foreclose his mortgage. Adams and Taylor answered and counterclaimed against Davies for rent in arrears sufficient to more than offset the mortgage note. The action was tried in 1934, and appeal was taken to this court. The opinion of this court in May 1936 (Davies v. Davies,
Thus there is presented the single question — did the foreclosure judgment merge with the judgment in the rent action?
A judgment or decree duly entered, establishes in the most authentic form, that which had theretofore been in dispute, or unsettled or uncertain. It resolves the differences and decides the disputes between the parties, and makes the most conclusive and enduring record thereof. This record 1-3 concludes the matter and fixes the rights and liabilities of the parties as to the matters submitted to the court for decision. All previous claims *584
are resolved in this determination and are said to merge or unify in this new, definite, certain and positive pronouncement and record of rights of the parties. Since the parties submitted to the court the resolution of their disputes and the determination of their rights and liabilities, that resolution when entered as a judgment conclusively binds them. Such questions may not again be litigated; they have been adjudicated for all time, and are fused into the judgment or decree. As the English court said inBiddleson v. Whitel, 1 W. Black. 507, they "are drowned in the judgment" and are thereafter functus officio. This doctrine is founded upon a desire to promote justice, and should be carried no further than the ends of justice require. WyomingBldg. Loan Ass'n v. Mills Const. Co.,
With this as the basis upon which the doctrine of merger is bedded, does the instant case meet the requirements for merging one judgment into another? The cases are in conflict, but the majority of jurisdictions hold that a judgment is not extinguished, when being used as a cause of action, it grows into another judgment of equal degree. Griswold v. Hill, C.C.N.Y., Fed. Cas. No. 5,836, 2 Paine 492; Lilly-Bracket Co. v.Sonneman,
In State v. Citizens' State Bank,
"The doctrine [of merger] will be applied only when the ends of justice will be thereby subserved." (Bracket added.)
The court in that case refused to apply the merger doctrine because a bank depositor would thereby be deprived of the protection of a guaranty fund.
In Rush v. Dickenson County Bank,
"* * * There is no more reason for saying that the new notes and judgments thereon in this case effected a merger and satisfaction of the original judgment than there would be if some stranger, instead of Rush, had rented the property and given the notes. The doctrine of merger is not inflexibly applied in courts of equity, and will not be permitted to destroy the security of a decree as a lien, when such a result is not in keeping with the ends of justice." (Citing cases.)
Quoting from 40 C.J. 649, the court in Pacific States Savings Loan Co. v. Strobeck,
"Merger generally is defined * * * as the `absorption of a thing of less importance by a greater whereby the lesser ceases *587 to exist but the greater is not increased.' * * * it is also the law that merger is largely a question of intention and to a great extent depending on the circumstances surrounding each particular case and that the courts will always presume against it whenever it will operate to the disadvantage of a party."
Cobbey v. Peterson,
"The rule is, however, that where the ends of justice require the judgment does not annihilate the debt, and that the doctrine of merger will be carried no further than the ends of justice demand."
In Batten v. Lowther,
"It will not be there applied to destroy the security of a decree as a lien to the defeat of justice."
It was also said there that the first judgment would not be extinguished unless actually satisfied. To summarize the rules applied to the merger doctrine: the lesser security is absorbed by the greater security, as the cause of action by the judgment; the rule of merger is not inflexible and will be applied only when the ends of justice require; when such result is not in keeping with justice, the merger doctrine will not be allowed to impair the security of judgments as liens; merger is the absorption of a thing of less importance by a greater whereby the lesser ceases to exist but the greater is not increased; as to whether there is a merger may depend to a great extent upon intention and the circumstances of each particular case — the first judgment being a right and property of the creditor, it *588 cannot be merged in a second judgment against his will or over his objection, in the absence of strong equitable reasons therefor; since judgments are of equal dignity, a later judgment generally does not absorb a prior judgment. Let us apply these principles to the facts in the present case.
The doctrine of merger as sought to be applied in this case would result in destroying the lien of the mortgage and first judgment, and might defeat the creditor's priority. Such situation has been almost uniformly met by one of two methods: a denial of the merger because it would have 8, 9 such effect, which equity will not permit; or by holding that the new judgment preserves the lien and its priority even if the judgments be considered as merged. On sale, the conveyance relates to the time the lien first attached and transfers all the interests of the judgment debtor as of that time. Tyrell's Heirs v. Roundtree, 7 Pet. 464,
If plaintiffs' position is upheld a lesser security would absorb a greater security. Davies would be put in a less favorable position, not by his act, but by the act of the debtor, and against his will. A valid and secured judgment would, by act of the debtor, be extinguished without 10 payment. The general rule is that a lien of a character given by common law or a statute, securing a debt which becomes merged in a judgment, is not affected by such merger and continues until the debt is satisfied. Bank of Metropolis v.Guttschlick, 14 Pet. 19,
In order for a cause of action or a judgment to be merged in a judgment, it must be set up as a cause of action, or as the basis for a judgment. Only that which forms the basis for a judgment can be merged therein. Only that which is litigated in the action and becomes res adjudicata as determined by 11-13 the judgment can be said to be merged therein. Under the merger doctrine the cause of action changes its nature when reduced to judgment; ceases to exist as an independent liability, and is transferred into obligations created by the judgment thereon. Moore v. Justices of Mun. Ct. of Boston,
This is further evidenced when we look at the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law upon which the judgment in the rent action is founded, to interpret its effect. Those findings and conclusions clearly reveal that the foreclosure judgment, with its right of sale thereunder, was expressly maintained as a separate judgment independent of the judgment in No. 60470, the rent action. No appeal was taken therefrom.
It follows that the judgment appealed from should be, and the same is affirmed. Costs to respondents.
McDONOUGH, TURNER, WADE, and WOLFE, JJ., concur.
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