Civils v. First National Bank

241 P. 1023 | Idaho | 1925

Lead Opinion

Appellant sues as administratrix of Oliver K. Exum, survivor of Allie Exum, both dying March 27, 1923, to cancel a mortgage covering community property of the deceased Exums and to vacate and set aside a foreclosure and sheriff's certificate of sale pursuant to judgment, and restrain the sheriff from executing a deed.

The complaint in part alleged that Allie Exum never signed the mortgage and that summons in the foreclosure action was never served upon her. On respondents' motion the court struck certain paragraphs of the complaint, and refused to admit any evidence on the ground that the portions of the complaint not stricken did not state a cause of action.

Allie Exum was joined as a defendant in the original foreclosure proceedings and therefore was entitled to defend her own right, and upon her husband's neglect to defend, to defend his right also. (C. S., sec. 6638; Overland Nat. Bank v.Halveston, 33 Idaho 489, 196 P. 217.) Since a wife has the right to defend after a disclaimer is filed by the husband (Stowell v. Tucker, 7 Idaho 312, 62 P. 1033), she would certainly have such right after he has defaulted. *692 If process was not served upon her and she did not voluntarily appear she was not bound by the judgment. (34 C. J. 994.) If she did not sign the mortgage it was of course void. (Knudsen v. Lythman, 33 Idaho 794, 200 P. 130; Fargo v.Bennett, 35 Idaho 359, 206 P. 692; McKinney v. Merritt,35 Idaho 600, 208 P. 244; Childs v. Reed, 34 Idaho 450,202 Pac. 685; C. S., sec. 4666.)

The portion of the complaint remaining after paragraphs 15 to 22, inclusive, were stricken, on its face stated a cause of action, since the wife had the right to assert her defenses to the mortgage and such rights on her death passed as an incident to her share in the community to her husband and from him in turn to the appellant.

Paragraphs 15 to 19 of the amended complaint were to the effect that Allie Exum never signed the mortgage; that Oliver K. Exum had forged her name to it and that by fraud he had prevented her from appearing and defending the action. There was no allegation that respondents knew of such situation prior to the foreclosure. The administratrix has no greater rights than Oliver K. Exum, and while in connection with the interest of Allie Exum he could have raised any defense she had, not based on his wrongful acts, he could not have asserted a defense based on his unlawful participation therein; hence these paragraphs did not state all or any part of a cause of action in appellant's behalf and there was no error in striking them. Paragraphs 20 to 22 alleged in substance that respondents unlawfully coerced Oliver K. Exum into signing the mortgage and prevented him from making a defense thereto, and that it had been paid. These were defenses available to Allie Exum, since Oliver K. Exum did not unlawfully participate therein, and therefore should not have been stricken.

The judgment of the lower court is therefore reversed, and it is so ordered.

Costs awarded to appellant.

William A. Lee, C.J., and Wm. E. Lee, J., concur.

Budge, J., being disqualified, took no part in the opinion. *693






Dissenting Opinion

I concur in the main opinion except in the holding, directly or by inference, that, after default of a husband, the wife may later defend a right of the husband lost by such default, in the absence of a showing that the husband neglected to defend, and that the husband can inherit from his wife the right to attack his own default judgment through such inheritance, without even a showing of negligence. So to hold is to reason in a circle.

I think a defense by the wife of the right of the husband, under the statute, on "neglect" of the husband, must be interposed before a default judgment, at least that the default is not presumed to be neglect without proof. I think such a right to defend the right of the husband was personal to the wife, due to her relation as wife, in its nature and agency which did not survive or pass upon her death to her heirs or representatives.

A default of itself is not evidence of neglect of the husband. To neglect means, "To fail to attend to with due care or attention; to forbear one's duty in regard to; negligently to omit or to suffer to pass unimproved, unheeded, undone, etc.; to slight." (Webster's New International Dictionary, G. C. Merriam Co., 1921.) The husband may have given every attention due or necessary. He may have been honest and believed that the plaintiff had a just claim and he no defense, and, being unable to pay or satisfy the claim, have permitted default and judgment as the honorable thing for him to do. Yet the main opinion would permit the wife to defend his right after such default, by a holding that a default establishes neglect, under C. S., sec. 6638.

I think it is entirely unnecessary to go so far to decide the issues. A recital of the inheritance of the wife's interest in the property, with the other recitals, was sufficient to state a cause of action. In fact, I think the husband could have maintained the action, and thus his administrator could. (Shoemaker v. Collins, 49 Mich. 595, 14 N.W. 559.) *694