Thе only question presented in this case is as to whether the foreclosure by statutory advertisement and sale, through which plаintiff’s alleged title was derived, was invalid by reason of the limitation prescribed by the act of March 6, 1871, (Laws 1871, e. 52,) which is as follows: “Section 1. Every mortgage of real estate containing therein a power of sale, upon default being made in any cоndition of such mortgage, may be foreclosed by advertisement within ten years after the maturity of such mortgage. ' * * * Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in force one year from and after its passage.” The mortgage matured in 1859. The foreсlosure was commenced by the first publication of the notice of sale on the 6th day of March, 1872, and the proceedings continued until April following, when the sale was made. The act first became operative as a limitation on the 7th day of March, 1872, and not on the 6th day of that month. The day of the passage of the act should be excluded from the comрutation of time elapsed before the act went into operation.
The learned court, whose decision is in rеview, considered that, the foreclosure proceedings having been commenced before the limitation took effect, the foreclosure was valid. We are unable to so construe the statute. When this act had been passеd, approved, and published, it became a statute of the state, and all persons are to be thereafter presumed to have had notice of its provisions. Its operation as a law of limitation was postponed for a year from the time of its enactment, but its existence in the mean time as a perfected statute, effectual as notice of its prospective operation, must be regarded as determined in this court by the decision in Stine v. Bennett,
The time when-the act, by its publication, came to have the effect abovе indicated, is a matter of which courts must take judicial notice. Berliner v. Town of Waterloo,
The validity of the act, as a statute of limitatiоn, was sustained in Archambau v. Green,
In imposing this limitation in respect to the right of foreclosure, the legislature has used language, the natural import of which is in
It is suggested that foreclosure is not perfected until the lapse of the year given for redemption from the sale, and that the act did not give time to pеrfect such a foreclosure before the time when, by its terms as we have construed it, the limitation went into operatiоn. We think the legislature did not use the word “foreclosed” in such a sense, but in the popular sense above indicated; that is, as referring to the foreclosure sale, and embracing, of course, the necessary precedent conditions required by the statute. Beal v. White,
This mortgage was not “foreclosed” prior to the time when the statutory limitation became operative. Foreclosure proceedings had only been commenced. What was done after that time was unauthorized.
Judgment reversed, and new trial awarded.
Notes
Mitcbell, J., being absent, took no part in tbe decision of tbis ease.
