255 P. 305 | Idaho | 1927
Aaron G. Scott, deceased, gave appellant two notes secured by a mortgage upon real property. Both parties were residents of the state of Idaho at the time the notes and mortgage were given but appellant subsequently moved to California, where he has since resided.
After Aaron G. Scott's death June 11, 1922, letters testamentary were issued to the son, who, as executor, caused notice to creditors to be published, the first publication being July 21, 1922, wherein creditors were notified to present their claims within ten months. Berry did not see the notice and learned of the death of Scott some time in July, 1922.
In October, 1923, appellant came to the state and on January 11, 1924, after the time set forth in the published notice had expired, presented his claim to the probate court seeking permission to file his claim. The application was denied and the claim in effect thereby rejected and the action herein was brought for the purpose of establishing the claim and praying that the amount of the notes and accrued interest be adjudged a valid claim against the estate and that the same be paid in the due course of administration. Judgment was entered in favor of respondent and this appeal was taken from that judgment.
The main question involved and the only point necessary for determination is with respect to the conclusion of the trial court that this action in the form in which it was instituted and prosecuted is prohibited by C. S., sec. 6949, and that the plaintiff is entitled to no relief.
C. S., sec. 6949, reads in part as follows:
"There can be but one action for the recovery of any debt, or the enforcement of any right secured by mortgage upon real estate or personal property, which action must be in accordance with the provisions of this chapter. . . . ." *792
It is appellant's contention that in view of the "Probate Act," "Civil Practice Act," and "Code of Civil Procedure," 1864, it was never intended that C. S., sec. 6949, was to apply to the foreclosure of a mortgage, where a claim against an estate secured by mortgage has been presented and rejected, and that the statutes contemplate that notes secured by mortgage may be presented to the executor or administrator and in the event of their rejection the claimant must bring suit in the proper court and within the time fixed by C. S., sec. 7586, and that the "proper court" referred to in this section means the court having jurisdiction of the subject matter of the claim. In other words, that an action at law may be brought on the notes and the claimant is not compelled to foreclose his mortgage.
This court in construing C. S., sec. 6949, has held that the intention of the legislature in enacting this section was to provide an exclusive remedy in such cases (Rein v. Callaway,
C. S., sec. 7588, is practically identical with Cal. Code Civ. Proc., sec.
"It was manifestly the intention of the section last referred to, as it was first adopted and as it was re-enacted in 1876, to give the holder of the mortgage, where he held a claim against the estate secured by it, which, when allowed, would rank with the acknowledged debts of the estate, an election to present the claim for allowance, have it allowed, and proceed to foreclose for the whole amount due on the claim, including any deficiency arising on a sale of the mortgaged premises, or to present no claim and sue on the *793 mortgage alone, and obtain whatever might be realized on a sale of the mortgaged premises under the decree of foreclosure."
In other words, the claimant has two lines which he may follow at his discretion: If he believes that the security, the real estate mortgaged, is sufficient to pay his mortgage, he may waive all recourse to a deficiency judgment and look alone to the security to pay the mortgage, that is, foreclose his mortgage. (C. S., sec. 7588; Anglo-Nevada Assur. Corp. v.Nadeau's Exrs.,
Appellant cites Idaho Trust Co. v. Miller,
"If permission to present it against the estate is denied, that is equivalent to a rejection of the claim, and it then is in the same position as any other rejected claim, and must be established by an action at law in which the claimant must affirmatively establish all matters which it was essential for him to make proof of in the first instance to the judge or court to whom application was made to be permitted to present it against the estate. . . . . In such action we think, as we have stated, that in the matter of supporting or defeating its validity, it is subject to the same rules as apply to other rejected claims." (Tropico Land Imp. Co. v. Lambourn,
In construing the statutes prescribing probate proceedings as exclusive the claim was allowed. (Visalia Sav. Bank v. Curtis,
In Hibernia, Sav. Loan Soc. v. Thornton,
C. S., sec. 6949, has been construed with reference to its application to the enforcement of a claim against a decedent's estate as follows:
"Rev. Codes, sec. 4520, prescribes the only method for the recovery of a debt, or the enforcement of any right secured by a mortgage upon real estate or personal property, and this was the only action that could be maintained by respondent in order to satisfy its debt secured by its mortgage. The filing of a claim, secured or unsecured, with the administrator, is not an action within the meaning of the rule contended for, and gives to the claimant no right of action, but leaves the selling of the property and the payment of the debt in the discretion of the administrator, in the manner prescribed by law." (Kendrick State Bank v. Barnum,
The judgment is affirmed, costs awarded to respondent.
Wm. E. Lee, C.J., and Taylor and T. Bailey Lee, JJ., concur. *796