73 Neb. 435 | Neb. | 1905
The defendant John Grant gave his promissory notes to the plaintiff, and as collateral to secure the payment thereof pledged to the plaintiff shares of the capital stock of the Grant Paving Company. This action was brought in the district court for Douglas county to foreclose the lien of the pledge. For this purpose the petition contained the usual allegations and prayer, and also contained the prayer that the plaintiff should have permission to apply for judgment for any deficiency which might remain after the sale of the stock. There was a decree of foreclosure and the stock pledged was sold thereunder. Objections were filed to the confirmation of the sale and to the enter- ’ ing of a deficiency judgment. These objections were overruled and the sale confirmed, and a judgment entered against the defendant for the deficiency. From this decree the defendant appeals.
It was admitted upon the argument that there is no distinction between actions of foreclosure of pledges and those of foreclosure of chattel mortgages in this regard. That it is the proper practice to enter deficiency judgments in such cases is indicated or assumed, if not declared, and so far ns we have observed has never been denied, in jurisdictions under code practice similar to ours. 7 Cyc. 102, and notes.
In an action to foreclose a chattel mortgage, the su
“I think it might properly be decreed, where the evidence showed that the party in such case had disposed of the property, that he be required to pay its value, or a sufficient part thereof to make up any deficiency that might be found after applying the proceeds of the sale of the remaining property to the payment of the debt.” Commercial Nat. Bank v. Davidson, 18 Ore. 57, 22 Pac. 517.
The supreme court of Illinois in Wylder v. Crane, 53 Ill. 490, which was an action to foreclose a chattel mortgage, said:
“It is urged that the court below should have rendered a decree against Crane (the mortgagor) for the balance of the debt due to plaintiff in error. If, after failing to establish a right to equitable relief against the property, he was entitled to such a decree, having, as he had, a complete remedy at law, he should have asked for the decree. Such relief was not prayed for in the bill, and to have received it he should have asked for it under the prayer. If entitled to receive it, and he had asked for it, the court below would have granted it.”
And the supreme court of South Carolina held, in an action to foreclose a mortgage on property which is in the possession of the defendant, who holds both a senior and junior mortgage on the same property, and who is not personally indebted to the plaintiff, it is error to give a personal judgment against such defendant. The ground for this decision is plainly stated in the opinion:
“As far as we can see, the defendant was not personally indebted to plaintiff, either by contract, or in any*439 other way.” Edwards v. Dorgan, 30 S. Car. 177, 8 S. E. 858.
It is said by the supreme court of Washington in Weir v. Rathbun, 12 Wash. 84, 40 Pac. 625, that their statute, fairly construed, contemplates a decree for the foreclosure of a mortgage and, in a proper case, for a personal judgment in the same action. The opinion does not disclose the provisions of the statute alluded to.
This court appears to be committed upon the principle involved. In Kloke v. Gardels, 52 Neb. 117, the plaintiffs alleged in their petition that they had sold real estate to the defendant and had given him a written contract of sale of the same, by which contract the defendant had agreed to pay a stated sum which was paid upon the delivery of the contract, and agreed to pay the remainder of the purchase price on a given day, and that possession of the land was agreed to be given to the defendant upon the payment of the purchase price; that the defendant had failed to pay the purchase price as agreed, and “there was a prayer that Gardels be required to perform his part of the agreement, or, in case of his refusal, the real estate might be sold and the proceeds of such sale applied to the payment of the amount the court should find due the plaintiffs, and in case of a deficiency, Gardels might be decreed liable therefor.” A decree was entered by default that, “in case Gardels should fail to pay the sum found due by a day stated, his interest in such real estate should be aj>praised, advertised and sold by the sheriff of the county to make and raise the sum found due; and if there Avas not realized from the proceeds of such sale a sufficient sum to pay the amount found due by the decree, Gardels should be liable to the plaintiffs for such deficiency.” Afterwards, in pursuance of this decree, the defendant’s interest in the land was sold and the proceeds applied upon the amount found due the plaintiffs, and the plaintiffs then filed “a formal petition reciting the proceedings to foreclose the land contract, the decree rendered therein, the sale of the premises, and the application of the proceeds to the amount found
“But there is in this state but one form of action, namely, a civil action; and the differences between actions at law and actions in equity, so far as the form of such-actions is concerned, are abolished by the code, and the district courts, both by statute and the constitution, are invested with general legal and equitable jurisdiction. The district court, then, was not Avithout jurisdiction to render the deficiency judgment asked for in this case simply because the deficiency gmv out of an executory contract for the sale of real estate which had been foreclosed as a mortgage. It may be that Kloke and others Avere under the necessity of filing a petition (of course in the same action) as in a suit at iaAv for the recovery of the deficiency which they claim to be due them. It may be that Gardels should have been given an opportunity to answer as in other actions at law; that issues should have been framed and tried to a jury; and had all this been done certainly it Avould not be claimed that the district court was Avithout jurisdiction to enter a judgment for the deficiency found by such jury. * * * Hoaa-, then, can it be said that the district court aauis Avithout jurisdiction of the subject matter of this proceeding for deficiency judgment? * * * We do not decide in this case Avhether a district court which has foreclosed an executory contract for the sale of real estate as a mortgage, and caused the premises to be sold and the proceeds applied toward the payment of the amount found due, may in that action and as a court of equity, without further pleadings, render a personal judgment against the parties liable for the deficiency. But we do decide in this case that the district court had unquestioned jurisdiction to entertain the pro*441 ceeding as instituted herein for the deficiency judgment and itself try the issues and render the judgment for deficiency without a jury, as neither party demanded one.”
It appears from the latter part of this quotation from the opinion that the question left undetermined was whether the court could proceed to enter the deficiency judgment against the objection of the defendant without requiring an issue to be made up in the action and allowing the defendant, if insisted upon, a jury trial thereon. That the court should proceed in the same action to dispose of the whole matter and render a judgment for the deficiency is clearly determined.
What effect should be given to the action of our legislature in enacting the provisions of section 847 of the code so far as relates to the entering of deficiency judgments in the foreclosure of real estate mortgages and afterwards repealing the same, it is not necessary to determine in this case. If it were an open question in this state as to the duty of a court of equity to enter a deficiency judgment in the foreclosure of real estate mortgages, in the present condition of our legislation the writer would be inclined to give careful consideration to the opinion of the supreme court of Wisconsin in Sauer v. Steinbauer, 14 Wis. 76. This question, however, is not involved in the case at bar.
The judgment of the district conrt is
Affirmed.