Blake v. Black

55 Iowa 252 | Iowa | 1880

Beck, J.

1. íICrDICJATi sale: rociemptiou from : iuu?er sfimo judgment. I. At a prior term an opinion was filed in this case affirming the decision of the District Court dissolving the injunction. A re-hearing was granted, and < _ * tt the case has been again submitted to us. U non ° ■L ' a reconsideration of the record, we have reached a conclusion different from that announced in our first opinion, which was based upon a misapprehension of the facts.

¥e will proceed to state with particularity the undisputed facts of the case as disclosed by the petition and records submitted upon the motion to dissolve the injunction.

The defendant Black, being seized of the land in controversy, sold the same to one Ellis, and executed a bond obligating himself to convey the property upon certain payments being made as provided for in the bond. Ellis assigned the bond to Yon Berber, who assigned to Charles Deitriek. Subsequent to the execution of this bond a mortgage conveying the land was executed to plaintiff, Blake, and Yan Duzee, which was foreclosed, and the land sold to the mortgagees upon a special execution issued upon the decree, and a sher*254iff’s deed was executed to the purchaser's. Who executed the mortgage does not appear in the record. Yon Ferber, and Charles and Catharine Deitrick and others were made defendants. Black and Ellis were not made parties.

After the sale upon this foreclosure decree, and before the sheriff’s deed was executed to Blake and Yan Duzee, Black commenced an action to foreclose the bond, as authorized by Code, § 3329. Ellis, the several assignees of the bond, and Yan Duzee and Blake'were made defendants in this action.

A decree of foreclosure was rendered against all the defendants except Blake, who had not been served with process, and the cause, as to him, was continued. This was after the sheriff’s sale to Yan Duzee and Blake, and before the sheriff’s deed was executed to them. Upon the foreclosure decree in favor of Black the land was sold to him for about one-half the amount of the judgment, and before the time for redemption under the statute expired Yan Duzee and Blake redeemed from the sale, and the redemption money was paid by the clerk to Black. No question was raised as to the right of Yan Duzee and Blake to make the redemption. After this, process was served upon Blake in the foreclosure proceeding against him,.and a decree was entered cutting off his equity of redemption, but no personal judgment was rendered against him. Thereupon another execution was issued upon the decree of foreclosure, and the interest of Blake in the land was sold thereon to Black. This action is brought to restrain the sheriff from executing, and defendant Black from receiving, a deed under this sale; the judge of the District Court, upon the facts above set out, dissolved the temporary injunction.

II. We will inquire as to the rights of the several parties, and their interest in and title to the property in the different stages of the several proceedings.

The legal title of the land was in Black. Ellis and the assignees of the bond acquired an equitable title. Their interest in the property was conveyed by the mortgage to Blake *255and Yan Duzee, who thereby became mortgagees junior to Black.

Black, by instituting the proceeding to foreclose the bond, ■ treated the defendants as the holders of the equitable title to the land, and the rights of the several parties in the suit are the same as though Black had conveyed the land and taken a mortgage to secure the purchase money. Poweshiek Co. v. Dennison, 36 Iowa, 244.

The land was sold upon the decree of foreclosure rendered in this proceeding. The sale was not of the interest of the parties separately, but of the land itself, without regard to such separate interest. A judgment was rendered against the parties personally liable, and the whole land, and all interest therein, was sold.

Blake and Yan Duzee held, as we have seen, the equitable title to the land, but Black’s decree of foreclosure was a lieu thereon paramount to their title. The decree of foreclosure cut off their equity of redemption. But after the sale of the land the statute secured them the right to redeem from the sale. This right they exercised.

Black exhausted his remedy against the land hy the sale, and after redemption therefrom he could not again sell the land for the satisfaction of the decree and the payment of the balance due thereon. Poweshiek Co. v. Dennison, 36 Iowa, 244.

When Yan Duzee and Blake united in redeeming from the sale on Black’s decree Blake’s equity of redemption had not been cut off. Biit he did not seek to redeem under this equity; he redeemed under the statute. The subsequent decree, cutting off his equity of redemption, in no manner affected his right acquired under the statutory redemption. Nor did it subject the land to the decree, for' no personal judgment was rendered against him, and the remedy against the land, which was exhausted hy the sale, was not revived. Blake and Yan Duzee were subsequent incumbrancers; as such‘they were not necessary parties to the action brought *256by Black to foreclose the bond. Donnelly v. Rusch, 15. Iowa, 99; Street v. Beal & Hyatt, 16 Id., 68; Heimstreet v. Winnie et al., 10 Id., 430.

Tbe omission to make Blake a party did not affect the proceeding farther than to save from the operation thereof his equity of redemption.

III. It will be remembered that Black’s action to foreclose was commenced before the sheriff’s deed was executed to Blake, and before the time for redemption, under the statute, had expired. Blake, at the time, did not hold the title to the land; he was a subsequent mortgagee and nothing more, and, therefore, was not a necessary party.

The title to the land passed by the sheriff’s deed under the decree in favor of Black; the equity of redemption still rested in Blake, which he could have enforced only by payment of the entire debt. Johnson v. Harmon, 19 Iowa, 56. But that right he did not attempt to enforce. lie redeemed under the statute, and when he had made that redemption the lien and claim of Black ujion the land was divested, and Blake and Tan Duzee’s title was free therefrom.

In our opinion the judge of the District Court erred in dissolving the injunction.

Beversed.