37 Iowa 239 | Iowa | 1873
I. At the trial plaintiff was permitted, against defendant’s objection, to prove, by his own evidence, conversations had with defendant tending to establish a promise on the part of the latter to pay the debt of Cooper secured by the mortgage, and that defendant had, in the purchase of the land, assumed it in payment of a part of the consideration. Cooper was also permitted to give testimony tending to establish the fact that plaintiff had released him from the debt. The admission of this evidence is made the grounds of objections, and it is claimed, is in conflict with the statute of frauds.
In our opinion the rulings are correct. The evidence tended to establish a novation and was competent for that purpose. The promise of the defendant was not to pay the debt of another but his own debt. His indebtedness to Cooper was transferred, by the arrangement, to plaintiff, and the consideration for the promise is found in the original consideration of the contract with Cooper. The consideration for the release of Cooper is the promise of defendant to pay to plaintiffs the amount of his own indebtedness to the former, according to the terms of the arrangement. Such a transaction is not within the provisions of the statute of frauds.
TIT. The counsel of defendant insist that, if Cooper was in fact discharged, the mortgage debt was satisfied and in that ease there could be no foreclosure of the mortgage. The decree granting this relief they insist is therefore erroneous. But counsel misapprehend the precise facts of the case. Cooper was discharged from liability for the debt. But the debt was not thereby satisfied or paid; it still subsisted and defendant became the party liable for its payment. The mortgage is but an incident of the debt and follows it.
IY. It is a familiar doctrine, recognized by many cases determined in this court, that when the vendee of real estate assumes to pay a mortgage thereon as payment for the property, the mortgage may be foreclosed against him and a decree rendered binding him personally. This is the precise case made by the answer of defendant. He admits that the balance of a certain sum of money, which was a part of the consideration paid by him for the mortgaged land, after deducting taxes and liens to be paid by Cooper, he was to pay to plaintiff upon the mortgage. We are at a loss to understand upon what grounds a foreclosure with a personal judgment for such an amount can be objected to.
Y. We do not understand counsel to claim that defendant can be protected against the lien of the mortgage by his tax title. That he cannot is quite clear. Porter v. Lafferty, 33 Iowa, 254.
YI. By a special finding of the jury it appears that defendant paid $260 for taxes and to acquire the tax titles. It was also found that defendant was to pay the taxes oirt of the money, $450, to be paid for the land; that is, he was to pay and discharge the taxes and deduct the sum required out of
But as the purchase of defendant with notice of the mortgage cannot affect its lien, it must be foreclosed for the whole amount of the debt, and proper process be issued for the sale of the land to satisfy the same.
The decree of the district court will be modified accordingly. The case may be remanded for that purpose or at plaintiff’s option a proper decree may be rendered in this court.
Modified and affirmed.