234 P. 553 | Ariz. | 1925
On February 16, 1912, one Roy Sibley executed a mortgage on certain unpatented mining claims in Pinal county to secure the payment of four notes, due, respectively, June 15, 1912, September 1, 1912, December 15, 1912, and February 14, 1913 in favor of A. Kegal and E.C. Taylor. On the same date he deeded the claims to Calumet Copper Creek Mining Company, a corporation. On November 16, 1914, a judgment against the corporation was obtained and docketed by Leo Goldschmidt, which was afterwards assigned to the Consolidated National Bank of Tucson, one of the defendants herein. On November 4, 1914, Albert Steinfeld Co. obtained a judgment against the corporation which was docketed November 6th, and on November 25th of the same year the Eagle Milling Company also obtained a judgment against the corporation, which was duly docketed December 3d. *503
On June 2, 1915, the Calumet Copper Creek Company was adjudicated a bankrupt and on September 24th of the same year the trustees in bankruptcy deeded the property to S.H. Hudson, subject expressly to the lien of the judgments referred to, and the mortgage aforesaid. October 28, 1915, Hudson conveyed the property to the Copper State Mining Company, a corporation, subject to all the liens thereon.
On August 18, 1919, an execution was issued on the Goldschmidt judgment and the property sold to him October 25th, a sheriff's certificate of sale duly issued, and by him assigned to the Consolidated National Bank. September 30, 1919, an execution was issued on the Steinfeld judgment, the property sold October 25th, and the sheriff's certificate of sale issued to Steinfeld Co.
The first note, secured by the mortgage aforesaid, was duly paid, but the others were not, and on February 3, 1913, the unpaid notes and mortgage were assigned to S.H. Hudson, for a valuable consideration. On July 1, 1914, Hudson assigned these notes and the mortgage to the Metropolitan National Bank of Minneapolis as collateral security on a loan. The bank reassigned them to him on August 14, 1916, and on January 3, 1920, he assigned them to the plaintiff herein, Van Slyke.
Suit was filed on April 23, 1920, by Van Slyke, to foreclose the mortgage; no judgment being sought on the note. On its face the mortgage was obviously barred by the statute of limitations, but plaintiff claimed the statute was tolled by certain written acknowledgments and promises to pay. The defendants raised the bar of the statute by demurrer and answer, and also claimed the mortgage was merged with the title to the property, by reason of the alleged fact that Hudson, in purchasing both mortgage *504 and title, did so solely as the agent and for the use and benefit of the Copper State Mining Company, or its predecessor in interest. The case was tried before Honorable O.J. BAUGHN, Judge of the superior court of Pinal county, sitting without a jury. On December 27, 1922, he rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff and at the same time filed findings of fact and conclusions of law. On January 12, 1923, the defendants filed objections to the findings and asked for a modification thereof; but as Judge BAUGHN had retired from office January 1, 1923, no action was taken thereon. May 25, 1923, an appeal from the aforesaid judgment was taken by the Consolidated National Bank, Leo Goldschmidt, Eagle Milling Company, and Albert Steinfeld and Company, whom we will hereinafter call the defendants.
There are some fifteen assignments of error, but they raise substantially only two points: First, was there a merger of the mortgage and of the legal title to the property, in the Copper State Mining Company; second, did the evidence show a legal waiver of the statute of limitations as against the defendants' interests?
We are, of course, bound by the findings of fact of the trial court if there be any reasonable evidence to sustain them.Blackford v. Neaves,
The mortgage was admittedly barred on its face by the statute of limitations, but plaintiff relies on *505
three letters which were offered in evidence, dated January 11, 1916, August 29, 1916, and December 18, 1917, as constituting such waiver. Without setting up the substance of these letters, we may state that we are of the opinion any one of them is sufficient in its language to satisfy the provisions of paragraph 726, Revised Statutes of Arizona of 1913. Wooster v. Scorse,
Answering the first proposition, it will be observed this action is not for a personal judgment on the notes as against the maker, but for the foreclosure of the lien of a mortgage. The effort is to charge the real estate alone with the debt, and, under such circumstances, the present owner of the title is certainly the one who is required to sign the acknowledgment.Foster v. Bowles et al.,
Two of the letters in question were signed, "Copper State Mining Company, by Martin E. Tew, President," and the other was signed, "Martin E. Tew." It is contended that the president of a corporation, and especially one like this, has no power or authority thus to bind the corporation, and further that the last letter was obviously a personal one. It will be observed that the trial court specifically found that all of the letters were authorized by the corporation. If there is any reasonable evidence in the *506 record tending to support that finding, we must, of course, uphold it. We are of the opinion there is abundance of such testimony, and that the provisions of paragraph 726, supra, were fully complied with, so far as the mortgage was concerned.
Had this action been between plaintiff, Van Slyke, and the Copper State Mining Company, alone, there is no doubt in our minds that the bar of the statute was tolled. The contention that the acknowledgment does not comply with the form required by paragraph 4093, Revised Statutes of Arizona of 1913, is not tenable, since the acknowledgment was made before the statutory period expired. S.P. Company v. Prosser,
This brings us to the most important point in the case: Was the acknowledgment and the waiver of the statute effective, as against the rights of defendants? The question may be stated in the abstract thus:
"When A. gives a mortgage to B. and thereafter, and before the running of the statute of limitations, junior liens attach to the lands, does an acknowledgment made by C., a subsequent grantee, before the statute has run, toll the statute as to the junior lienholders?"
There is an irreconcilable conflict in the authorities on this point, due, apparently, to a difference of opinion as to the relative importance of two principles which are both equitable, but in conflict with each other. The first principle may be stated thus:
"A junior lienholder, when he acquires his lien, is entitled to assume the rights outstanding against him at the time will not be increased or enlarged without his consent, and a subsequent waiver of the statute of limitations as to the senior lien constitutes such enlargement."
This principle has been adopted as a paramount consideration by the Supreme Courts of California, *507
Washington, Utah and possibly one or two others, and the decisions of these courts have been uniformly consistent therewith. Wood v. Goodfellow,
The other principle is:
"If a junior lienholder had notice, actual or constructive, of a valid and enforceable prior lien, at the time he acquired his rights, he took the latter subject to a possible extension of the time of payment, and cannot complain thereof, as it is only an incident of the lien."
To this effect are the decisions of the Supreme Courts of Iowa, Nebraska, Vermont, Texas, Mississippi and Minnesota. Kerndt Bros. v. Porterfield,
While in a number of the cases cited other points were involved, such as the tolling of the statute being done by payment, instead of written acknowledgment, the acknowledgment being of the debt instead of the mortgage, the absence of the mortgagor from the state, and similar questions, yet the two general principles set forth above are, either the one or the other, distinctly and fully stated.
The question is one of first impression with us, and we are therefore at full liberty to follow the rule which seems best sustained by reason. After careful deliberation, we have concluded to adopt the second rule as being most in consonance with equity and justice, for two reasons: First, because while the statute of limitations is a legitimate defense, it is *508 not one of right, but of repose, and is not to be extended beyond its plain terms; and, second, because in our opinion the waiver of the statute of limitations in favor of a prior lien, made before the statute has run, does not impose an inequitable burden on a junior lienholder who acquired his lien, with that prior lien, to his knowledge, actual or constructive, still enforceable.
The contrary doctrine would in many cases work a real hardship on debtors, by compelling the prior lienholder to proceed with a strict foreclosure, when he was willing to grant an extension of time, while under our ruling the junior lienholder may easily, at any time, by proper proceedings, protect all of the rights he had at the accrual of his lien.
We do not think it is necessary to discuss the other questions suggested by appellants. Holding as we do that there was no merger of the mortgage and legal title, that there was a legal waiver of the statute of limitations made by the proper party, before the statute had run against the mortgage, and that such waiver was effective as to the defendants, the judgment of the lower court is affirmed.
McALISTER, C.J., and ROSS, J., concur.