156 Iowa 486 | Iowa | 1912
John Linder, now deeeásed, was at one time the husband of Harriet C. Linder. Mrs. Linder had had previous matrimonial experiences, and - as a result had four children by former husbands. Some time in the year 1908 she brought suit for divorce against her theb husband, John, and in that action claimed title .to 495 acres of land in Jefferson county, which stood on the records in the. name of John Linder. Upon the trial of that case, decree of
A temporary injunction issued as prayed. Defendants subsequently appeared and filed answer, in which they denied that the deed was either forged or fraudulent, and at the same time moved to dissolve the temporary writ of injunction, because the orders made by this court in the premises constituted an adjudication;'because plaintiff was not entitled to subrogation before it paid the judgment; for the further reason that the district court had no power
Counsel on either side have made statements as to subsequent proceedings not sustained by the record; but they all agree, and so state in argument, that since the
Again, it is said that Mrs. Linder is not contesting the right of the subrogation, but denying that there is anything for plaintiff to be subrogated to. We have already intimated that this matter should not be tried out by motion to dissolve; that she has made her election; and that she is in no manner interested in the result of the litigation between plaintiff and her children with reference to their title to the land.
In ordering the judgment against the plaintiff as surety upon the supersedeas bond, there was no adjudication whatever as to its right of subrogation. After judgment, it could undoubtedly enforce its equitable right of subrogation by an independent action in equity, or it might have proceeded under section 3967 of the Code, which reads as follows: “When the principal and surety are liable for any claim, such surety may pay the same, and recover thereon against all liable to him. If a judgment against principal and surety had been paid by the surety, he shall be subrogated to all the rights of the creditor, and may take an assignment .thereof, and enforce the same by execution or otherwise, as the creditor could have done. All questions between the parties thereto may be heard and determined on motion by the court or ,a judge thereof, upon such notice as may be prescribed by it or him.”,
This statutory remedy is manifestly not exclusive. And an independent action in equity will lie, as already indicated in what precedes. So that the judgment ordered by this court against the surety on the supersedeas bond did not in any manner adjudicate plaintiff’s right to subrogation; and the orders entered by this court expressly reserved the question of subrogation for another court by appropriate proceedings. It is also true that this court, on motion, denied plaintiff the right to a special execution upon the judgment in favor of Harriet C. Linder; but this did not determine its right to equitable subrogation, and the order of this court on that motion reserved the question.
It is said in argument, but not supported by the record,'that ‘after the appeal to this court one of the judges entered a restraining order preserving the status quo, which' was afterward dissolved upon motion; but it is manifest that, even if this be true, it did not' constitute an adjudication of plaintiff’s rights in the premises. In each and every order made by this court, there was an express provision saving plaintiff’s rights and equities, so that there is no adjudication binding upon it which deprives it of the right to proceed with its equitable suit for subrogation. It is apparent from what has been said that this suit will involve many questions which could not be heard by this court, among them the following: (1) Was the deed from Linder to the children of Mrs. Linder a forgery? (2) Was the-deed, or rather the withholding of the same from record, a fraud ? (3) Are the grantees in that deed estopped from claiming thereunder? (4) Is Mrs. Linder estopped from asserting that her husband did not have any interest in the land upon which her judgment was made a lien? (5) Although the deed to the children may be good, is plaintiff entitled to have the Linder judgment made a lien thereon ?
None of these questions could properly be determined upon motion in this'court; and it was these questions, together with the right to equitable subrogation, which were expressly reserved for determinátion by a proper tribunal —-the district court. This court never decided that plaintiff did not have an equitable remedy of subrogation be
It is no answer to say that the filing of the petition is lis pendens; for were it so the plaintiff might be compelled to resort to another action against a purchaser to enforce his rights. Fraud being charged, the filing of an answer in denial was not sufficient ground for dissolving the writ. Walker v. Stone, 70 Iowa, 103; Hayes v. Billings, 69 Iowa, 387; Shricker v. Field, 9 Iowa, 366; Judd v. Hatch, 31 Iowa, 491.
It follows from what we have said that the orders and judgment of the district court must be and they are reversed, and the cause is remanded for trial upon the merits and a reinstatement of the temporary writ of injunction, in so far as necessary to preserve the statics quo. — Reversed and remanded.