84 N.W. 559 | N.D. | 1900
Plaintiff prosecutes this action to foreclose a real estate mortgage executed by Michael Barras, one of the defendants herein, and, as an incident thereto, to have the lien of such mortgage declared paramount to the interests of the other defendants in the mortgaged premises. Barras does not answer. The remaining defendants answered separately, setting forth their respective interests, and ask that the same be adjudged superior to the lien of plaintiff’s mortgage. It is admitted that the mortgage was executed as alleged, and that the notes secured thereby are unpaid. The sole controversy in the case is whether the mortgage constitutes a prior lien. The trial court found with" plaintiff, and directed the entry of judgment in .accordance with the prayer of his complaint. Defendants appeal from the judgment.
For the purpose of this appeal, appellants caused a statement of case to be settled, which embraced all of the evidence offered at the trial, and also a specification that they desired a retrial of the entire case in this court under the provisions of section 5630, Rev. Codes. So far, however, as their appeal relates to a retrial in this court under said section, it has been entirely abandoned. The evidence offered in the trial court has been wholly omitted from,the record presented here, and appellants do not now ask a trial de novo. They are satisfied with the findings of fact made by the trial court, but-insist that such findings do not warrant the conclusions of law and the judgment of the District Court, wherein it was determined that plaintiff’s mortgage was paramount. On the contrary, they contend that the findings of fact, as they stand, entitle them to a judgment declaring plaintiff’s mortgage subject and subordinate to their respective interests in the premises. This presents the sole question in the case, and it arises fairly upon the statutory judgment roll. Do the findings of fact warrant the conclusion and judgment of the trial court? We are agreed that they do, and that the judgment'of the trial court must accordingly be affirmed. The facts upon which the trial court based its conclusions, so far as pertinent on the question of priority, are these: Plaintiff’s mortgage was executed and recorded on February 24, 1897. A building known as the “French College” was then in process of construction on the premises covered by such mortgage,. The building wás commenced on December 9, 1896, and was not completed until March 24, 1898. Three mechanics’ liens were filed against the premises. They were filed approximately a year after plaintiff’s mortgage was recorded — the exact date not being material, — and were 'for labor and material furnished long subsequent to the recording of the mortgage. These
The conclusions of law reached by the trial court-upon the facts as found in this case were entirely sound, both in principle and under the authorities, and the judgment is accordingly affirmed.