Daws v. Craig

62 Iowa 515 | Iowa | 1883

Seevers, J.

Tbe undisputed facts, sufficiently stated, are:

' First — The mortgage sought to be foreclosed was executed in 1868, and in tbe same year it was sold and assigned to tbe plaintiff; but such assignment never was recorded in tbe recorder’s office.

*516Second — In June, 1880, Geo. Keenan, the owner of the mortgaged premises, conveyed the same to one of the defendants, in consideration of the conveyance to him by the defendants of a tract of land owned by them. This transaction in fact was an exchange of lands.

Third — To secure themselves against said mortgage, Geo. W. Keenan executed to the defendants a mortgage on the land they had conveyed to him.

Fourth — At the time of the exchange of lands and the execution of said conveyances and mortgage, the defendants had knowledge of the existence of the plaintiff’s mortgage, and that the same was unpaid.

Fifth — In July, 1881, James Keenan executed a-release of the mortgage sought to be foreclosed, and the same was duly filed for record.

Sixth — Upon being informed that such release had been executed, the defendants released of record the mortgage which Geo. W. Keenan had executed on the land they had conveyed to him.

We do not understand the appellee to claim that the defendants, at -.the time the conveyance was made to them of the mortgaged premises, or at the time they released the mortgage executed to them, had any knowledge that the mortgage sought- to be -foreclosed had been assigned by James Keenan to the plaintiffs or any one else.

I. Counsel for the appellee insists that the release of the mortgage sought to be foreclosed is a forgery. There is not, however, any such issue made in the pleadings. But, if such was the case, the evidence fails to establish such fact. It was signed and acknowledged by James Keenan, and the most that can be said is that the release was obtained by fraud, of which the defendants had no notice until after they had released the mortgage executed to them by Geo. Keenan.

II. The remaining question is thus stated by counsel for the appellee: “Under the decisions in this state, however, we *517concede that the plaintiff’s mortgage was fraudulently re leased, if there was not in fact a forged release; and if such ' fraudulent release was made before Mary E. Craig purchased, and she was a Iona fide purchaser after such release, that plaintiff’s mortgage could not be foreclosed against her; * * but no court to our knowledge has gone so far as to hold that the fraudulent release of a mortgage, after the conveyance of the land to another, prevents the foreclosure of the mortgage as against such grantee.” It will be seen that the foregoing proposition is made to depend upon the fact that the conveyance .to the defendants was made before the release of the mortgage sought to be foreclosed. But it ignores the further fact that such conveyance was not made until after the defendants released their mortgage, and that this was done because of the fact that the mortgage sought to be foreclosed had been released. The defendants, we think, stand in precisely the same condition as if they were holders of a second mortgage on the premises described in the plaintiff’s mortgage, and, upon the first mortgage being satisfied of record, they took a conveyance of the premises in satisfaction of their mortgage, and released it of record.

Now, under such circumstances, should the satisfaction of the prior mortgage be set aside, and the same enforced to the prejudice of the defendants? We think not; and that this case in legal effect is precisely like The Bank of The State of Indiana v. Anderson, 14 Iowa, 544.

We do not think that the fact, if it be one, that the defendants could have had the satisfaction of their mortgage set aside, is material. Conceding that they could have done so as to Geo. Keenan, for aught we know he may have parted with the land. But, if not, this burden should not be cast on tíre-defendants, who have acted in good faith. The negligence and failure of the plaintiff to have the assignment of the mortgage to her recorded has been the primary cause of this controversy, and we think the burden to have the satisfaction of the defendant’s mortgage set aside *518should have been assumed by her. Possibly this might have been done in a proper action against the proper parties. But what would be the effect, if such had been done, on the rights of those parties, we do not determine, as there is no such question in the record before us.

Reversed.