51 Neb. 842 | Neb. | 1897
In the district court of Lancaster county was filed a petition for the foreclosure of a real estate mortgage. The petition did not allege whether any proceedings had been had at law for the recovery of the debt secured by the mortgage, or any part thereof, nor whether said debt, or any part of the same, had been paid. The defendants submitted a general demurrer to the petition which the court overruled. The defendants refused to plead farther, suffered a decree, and have filed a petition in error.
The sole question presented is the sufficiency of the petition to support the decree. Section 850 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides: “Upon filing a petition for the foreclosure or satisfaction of k mortgage the complainant shall state therein whether any proceedings have been had at law for the recovery of the debt secured thereby, or any part thereof, and whether said debt, or any part thereof, has been collected and paid.” And section 851 provides: “If it appear that any judgment hasi been obtained in a suit at law for the money demanded by such petition, or any part thereof, no proceedings shall be had in such case, unless, to an execution against the property of the defendant in such judgment, the sheriff, or other proper officer shall have returned that the execution is unsatisfied in whole or in part, and that the defendant has no property whereof to satisfy such execution except the mortgaged premises.” At common law a real estate mortgagee might bring an action at law to recover the debt secured by his mortgage and at the same time bring a suit in chancery to foreclose the mortgage and an action in ejectment for the possession of the mortgaged premises. It is probable that the statute quoted above was enacted to prevent a real estate
It is insisted by defendants in error that the petition states a cause of action, and that, as the only question made by the demurrer to it was that it did not, the demurrer was properly overruled. The argument of defendants in error is that their cause of action is the mortgagor’s failure to perform his contract, — pay the debt secured by said mortgage when it matured. In a certain sense this argument is correct; But for the statute, the breach of the mortgagor’s contract constituted the mortgagee’s cause of action against him. But the legislature has seen fit to enact that if a
Reversed and dismissed.