151 Ind. 463 | Ind. | 1898
The appellee brought this action against the appellants for the foreclosure of a mortgage dated March 31, 1893, and made a lien upon certain real estate in the city of Hammond, described in the complaint. Among the allegations of the complaint are the following: “The said plaintiff further avers that the defendant the Deming-Colborn Lumber Company 'claims to have furnished lumber and materials for the erection of a dwelling house or other building upon said premises in the year 1893, and to have filed a notice of its intention to hold a mechanic’s lien upon said real estate, in the recorder’s office of Lake county, Indiana, on the 22nd day of June, 1893, and claims to have foreclosed its mechanic’s lien by suit in the Labe Circuit Court, and obtained a decree for the sale of said real estate, and by virtue thereof said real estate was duly advertised and sold under such decree, and said Deming-Colborn Lumber Company purchased the same at such sale; but the plaintiff avers that said lien was not filed according to law, and the same does not describe the above described property, or any other property, and as to it the said pretended mechanic’s lien is of no force or validity whatever; that it was filed and recorded more than one year previous to this date, and that the plaintiff was not a party to said foreclosure proceeding in 'favor of the said the Deming-Colborn Lumber Company, and no attempt has been made to enforce said pretended lien against this plaintiff, and that as to this plaintiff the said pretended lien stands as if it had never been foreclosed, and the time permitted for the foreclosure of the same has expired, and said lien is barred against this plaintiff.” The appellant lumber company filed its motion to make the complaint more specific, in this: “That whereas it seeks to have its mortgage declared
So far as to mortgages made prior to the attaching of a mechanic’s lien. The mortgage here considered was, however, given after the attaching of the mechanic’s lien, and is therefore a junior incumbrance. But it is not absolutely necessary to the validity of a foreclosure proceeding that either senior or junior incumbrancers should be made parties. At most, it is to be said that the rights of those not made parties are not affected. If such rights are not thereby diminished, neither are they increased, and we are to look to the law in each case to see what such rights are. If we should treat appellant’s mechanic’s lien and appellee’s junior mortgage lien as having to each other simply the relation of two mortgages, as appellee would seem to argue they ought to be treated, then,
But counsel for appellee contend that, however true it may be that the lien of the lumber company was prior to that of the mortgagee, at the time of the foreclosure of the former, yet such priority could last only during the life of the mechanic’s lien. This, we think, must be admitted. The statute section 7259, Burns’ R. S. 1894 (5298, Horner’s R. S. 1897), gives one year from the time when notice is filed in the recorder’s office, or, if a credit is given, one year from the expiration of such credit, during which time