61 Iowa 728 | Iowa | 1883
Another position taken by the defendants in this connection is, that the interest acquired by the plaintiff as a tax sale purchaser is not a derivative interest; by which they appear to mean that it is not an interest derived from Hornback; and their legal proposition is, as we understand it, that a right of redemption from a mortgage debt, after foreclosure sale, exists only in favor of a person who has a lien upon the identical title or interest upon which the mortgage rests.
They cite 5 Wait’s Actions and Defenses, 426. The learned author, discussing the right of a person to redeem from a mortgage, says: “He must have an interest derived mediately of immediately from, through, or in the right of the mortgagor, so as to constitute him the owner of a part of the mortgagor’s ori ginal equity.” In support of the defendant’s propo
In oue sense, of course, it is true that a lien holder cannot redeem from a mortgage debt, unless his lien rests upon the same title that the mortgage does. The very theory of the right of redemption is that the redemptioner’s interest is subordinate to the claim redeemed from. If the redemptioner’s lien rests upon a wholly independent title, that is, upon one that can be valid only in case the mortgagor had no title, there is no ground for redemption, and no occasion for it. The rule expressed in "Wait’s Actions and Defenses contemplates a ease of this kind. The case at bar is different. A tax sale purchaser does not claim under a title that is independent in that sense. So long as he holds a lien, it has the same force and effect, so far as the question before us is concerned, that it would have if created by the voluntary act of the owner. It is á charge upon his interest, and that is the essential idea. Being a charge upon the same interest upon which, the mortgage rests it is not to be divested, we think, by any equitable proceeding to'which the tax sale purchaser is not a party.
In Crum v. Cotting, above referred to, the essential fact was that the tax sale took place after the foreclosure action had been commenced. The tax sale purchaser in such case was not a necessary nor even proper party. Having acquired his interest subsequently to the commencement of the action, he was affected by the foreclosure precisely as he would have been if he had been made a party. He accordingly claimed the right to redeem through the right of a junior mortgagee who had not been made a party; but the court held that such right did not pass to the tax sale purchaser. His right to redeem was simply through his own lien, so long as he had one, but that had been extinguished through the foreclosure action commenced before he acquired his lien. In the case at bar, the foreclosure action having been commenced after the plaintiff
Reversed.