122 Iowa 321 | Iowa | 1904
Stated as near as may be in chronological order, the material facts are as follows: On September 9, 1896, one Kenyon, being then the owner of the property now in controversy, mortgaged the same to secure the payment of a promissory note held by the plaintiff, which note and mortgage were thereafter duly assigned to E. 3d. Scott. Thereafter, and while the mortgage lien was still in force, one 0. A. 3Iaurer obtained a judgment against Kenyon, which judgment was made a lien on the property, and was later assigned to one Paxton. In this condition of the title and liens, Scott, the assignee of the mortgage, brought suit of foreclosure,
The correctness of the court’s conclusion that redemption by Cooper, as the grantee of Kenyon, left the land subject in his hands to the lien of the judgment existing against Kenyon at the time of the conveyance, is the question we are called upon to consider. We may say at the outset that, the appellee’s attempt to redeem from the foreclosure sale having been adjudged inoperative by the trial court, and the appeal from such ruling having been abandoned, we shall consider her rights in the premises precisely as if such attempt had never been made; and such appears to be the theory of her counsel in their arguments in this court. It is conceded that the grantee of a mortgagor’s title, whose conveyance is executed after a foreclosure sale and during the statutory period of a redemption, may redeem from the sale, and thereby acquire a title freed from the claims of junior lienholders who have been made parties to the proceedings and have failed to redeem within the time prescribed therefor. This rule is now well established. Harms v. Palmer, 13 Iowa, 446; Todd v. Davey, 60 Iowa, 532; Moody v. Funk, 82 Iowa, 1: Bevans v. Dewey, 82 Iowa, 85; Co-operative S. & L. v. Kent, 108 Iowa, 146; Wells v. Ordway, 108 Iowa, 86.
Whatever may be the true theory in this respect, it is at least safe to assume that the combined effect of the sheriff’s sale and expiration of the statutory period of redemption was to effectually discharge the land from the lien of the ap-pellee’s judgment. If Kenyon had not convoyed his title, but had appeared and made redemption from the sale, this judgment could have then been enforced against the land, not because of any lien or incumbrance which had survived
It must be borne in mind that this case involves tbe rights of no lienholders who are not made parties to the foreclosure, and we do not attempt to say bow far, if at all, tbe rule here approved may be applicable under a different state of facts. Tbe distinction between tbe rights which tbe grantee of tbe debtor may assert against a lienholder who was made a party and failed to redeem within tbe time limited by statute and tbe rights which may be asserted against a lien-holder who was not a party seems to be made tbe turning point in tbe case of Bank v. McCarthy, 119 Iowa, 586, an authority upon which tbe appellee herein largely relies. We there said that in tbe Moody and Bevans Cases, supra, the “junior lienholders were made parties to the decree, and the court held that because of this their liens expired upon failure to redeem from the sale within the period prescribed, and the mortgagor’s grantee took the land freed from their claims.” In the Bevans Case, speaking to the same point,