126 Minn. 14 | Minn. | 1914
This is an action to recover damages for breach of a covenant of warranty contained in a deed executed by defendants to Howard Babcock, on March 17, 1909, for certain real estate situate in the
On November 29, 1912, plaintiff Allis brought this action, upon the covenant of warranty in the deed executed by defendants, to recover the damages arising from the failure of title and the eviction referred to above. Defendants made an application to bring in, as parties plaintiff, all other parties interested in the property, and, by stipulation between all the parties, I. W. Keerl, the First National Bank of Sisseton and J. O. Knapp, were made additional parties plaintiff. It was provided in the'stipulation that the joining of the additional parties as plaintiffs should be without prejudice to their respective rights as between themselves, but that any recovery against the defendants might be awarded to them collectively,
The time to redeem from the foreclosure sale expired before the trial. Defendants were permitted to allege that fact by supplemental or amended answer, and it was admitted that all rights under the foreclosure had passed to and were vested in plaintiff Knapp. Thereupon defendants moved to dismiss the action as to all the plaintiffs except Knapp, on the ground that no cause of action then existed in favor of any of the plaintiffs except him. This motion was granted. Thereafter plaintiffs Allis, Keerl and the First National Bank, made a motion for a new trial. Their motion was denied and they appealed from the order denying it.
The period for redemption having expired and no redemption having been made, the important question is whether the cause of action upon the covenant in defendants’ deed vested in the purchaser at the sale, without any cause of action thereon remaining in the plaintiffs.
In Hokanson v. Gunderson, 54 Minn. 499, 56 N. W. 172, the court in speaking of the interest acquired by the purchaser at a mortgage foreclosure sale say: “The purchaser succeeds to the equitable interest of the mortgagee, and when no redemption is made this interest draws to it the subordinate legal title of the mortgagor, and his title then stands under the mortgagee precisely as if the mortgage had been an absolute conveyance at its date; or, in other words, the mortgage ripens into a perfect title through the process of foreclosure.” In Lawton v. St. Paul Permanent Loan Co. 56 Minn. 353, 57 N. W. 1061, the court say: “It can make no difference whether the purchaser at the mortgage sale was the mortgagee or a stranger. Both must be bidders on the same basis. Had a stranger been the purchaser, he would clearly have bid on the basis of the value of the land, as warranted by the covenants of title in the mortgage. * * * After the mortgage sale, the defendant was no longer a creditor, but a purchaser, of the premises; the consideration which he paid representing the value of the land, as warranted by the covenants.” In American Building & Loan Assn. v.
It is clear that the cause of action upon the covenants in the deed executed by defendants passed to Knapp as assignee of the purchaser at the foreclosure sale, and vested and became absolute in him at the expiration of the period for redemption. The mortgage held by the bank was second and subordinate to that under which the sale was made. The conveyance to Allis was subject to both mortgages, and his rights were subordinate to all rights accruing under either. Keerl held under Allis and has no greater rights, as against the prior mortgages, than Allis possessed. The rights of Knapp, as assignee of the purchaser at the foreclosure sale under the first mortgage, were superior and paramount to all rights held by any of the other plaintiffs. True, Allis was in possession at the time the eviction occurred and was the person evicted. But the cause of action against defendants upon their covenants was a part of the security included in the first mortgage, and the right thereto, acquired by the purchaser at the sale under that mortgage, related back and took effect as of the date of that mortgage. It is well settled that the right to sue for breach of covenants which run with the land rests exclusively in the last covenantee, and that an intermediate covenantor possesses no right of action thereon until he has reimbursed such subsequent covenantee. Booth v. Starr, 1 Conn. 244, 6 Am. Dec. 233; Chase v. Weston, 12 N. H. 413; Smith v. Perry, 26 Vt. 279; Baxter v. Ryerss, 13 Barb. (N. Y.) 267; Claycomb v. Munger, 51 Ill. 373; Vancourt v. Moore, 26 Mo. 92; Redwine v. Brown, 10 Ga. 312; Brady v. Spurck, 27 Ill. 478; Suydam v. Jones, 10 Wend. (N. Y.) 181, 25 Am. Dec. 552. A redemption
Knapp is proceeding directly against defendants as the first covenantors and the parties primarily liable, and has not asserted any claim against any of the intermediate parties. As none of the intermediate covenantors have indemnified him, none of them are in position to maintain an action against defendants. Furthermore, the bank, Allis, and Keerl are not in Knapp’s chain of title, and he has no recourse against them. If they had actually recovered from defendants upon the covenant, he might, perhaps, maintain an action against them in the nature of an action for money had and received, but that question is not involved or determined herein. They hold under Hinck and their rights are no greater than his would have been if he had not conveyed to them. When the sale became abso
Appellants call attention to the fact that, where different parcels of property are conveyed to different parties and the title fails, the several parties may recover upon the covenant pro tanto, and urge, ■ in effect, that, where different parties possess diverse interests under the title at the time of the eviction, all are entitled to share in the proceeds of the recovery. The position occupied by the purchaser at the sale during the period allowed for redemption is somewhat anomalous under our statutes. The legal title does not vest in him at the sale but remains in the mortgagor or his grantees. Yet, if no redemption be made, the legal title passes to and vests in the purchaser at the expiration of the period allowed therefor, and, when the title becomes absolute in him, it relates back and takes effect as of the date of the mortgage under which the sale was made. Appellants’ argument ignores the fact that the rights of the purchaser date back to the'execution of the mortgage and are paramount and superior to those possessed by appellants, and that, when the title vested in him at the expiration of the statutory period for redemption, he took the entire right of action upon the covenant and the appellants no longer had any interest of any kind therein.
Order affirmed.