210 N.W. 530 | Iowa | 1926
The proceeding was originally commenced by Cara A. Fellers, the mortgagee, against the mortgagors, certain grantees of the mortgagors, who had assumed the mortgage debt, and the present holder of the title, Vera Lake, trustee. Prior to the trial, the note and mortgage were assigned to Montgomery, who had, as a grantee of the property, assumed and agreed to pay the mortgage; and he was substituted as plaintiff. The defendants Vera Lake, trustee, John E. Lake, and Vera Lake, only, have appealed. The appellants present three grounds upon which they rely for a reversal.
I. Appellants complain of the judgment against the makers of 1. APPEAL AND the note and the mortgagors, and in favor of ERROR: Montgomery, their grantee, who assumed and review: agreed to pay the mortgage debt. As to this, it party is sufficient to say that the mortgagors made entitled to default below, and have not appealed from the allege judgment. The appellants are in no manner error: prejudiced by a judgment against the makers of error the note and mortgage. affecting only coparty.
II. The chief complaint is over the appointment of a receiver for the mortgaged premises. The petition was filed November 26, 2. RECEIVERS: 1924. On December 8, 1924, an amendment was grounds for filed, alleging that the property was being appointment: depreciated, run down, and going to waste, and mortgage the rents and profits were being lost. It was foreclosure. further alleged that the appellant Vera Lake, trustee, and her husband, the appellant John E. Lake, were in *505 possession of the property, and did not intend to pay any interest on the mortgage or to keep the property in repair; that she had failed to pay the taxes; and that the property would not sell for sufficient to pay the indebtedness due plaintiff. The appellants appeared to the petition as amended, and resisted the appointment of a receiver.
The appellant Vera Lake is the holder of a junior lien upon the premises, and Vera Lake, as trustee, acquired title to the mortgaged premises October 31, 1924. Vera Lake and her husband, John E. Lake, moved into the premises on November 1, 1924, after the commencement of the foreclosure proceedings, and before the filing of the amendment asking for the appointment of a receiver.
There is no claim that the rents and profits are not pledged in the mortgage. See Young v. Stewart,
We shall not review the evidence in detail. There was a conflict in the testimony as to the value of the property, but the inadequacy of the security to satisfy the mortgage debt is conclusively established by its sale on execution for less than the amount due on the judgment. Sheakley v. Mechler, supra.
That the property, a suburban residence, was rapidly getting into a state of bad repair is beyond question. Appellants say that this is chargeable to the appellee Montgomery, who was at one time the owner of the property, and who now, as the assignee of the mortgagee, is seeking this redress for the results of his own neglect.
Montgomery acquired the title nearly two years after the execution of the mortgage, and held it eleven months. A year and two months thereafter, the appellants purchased the property, the title being taken in the name of Vera Lake, trustee, after it had, in the meantime, passed through the hands of two successive owners. Appellants occupied the property from December *506 1st, a month after their purchase, up to the time of the trial, on March 30, 1925. During their occupancy of the property, notwithstanding the sad need for repairs, appellants have expended only $14.10 upon it. We do not think the condition of the property at the time of the trial was so exclusively chargeable to the appellee as to deprive him of the right to the appointment of a receiver, if otherwise entitled to that relief.
While appellants claim to have purchased the property for the purpose of protecting certain junior liens held by the appellant Vera Lake, they admit having received from their immediate grantor, after their purchase, $177.93, to pay taxes that were unpaid at the time of their purchase, and that they have not so applied the money. The assertion of the appellant John E. Lake, as a witness, that, if a receiver was not appointed, he would make a proper application of this money, gives some color to the charge of appellee that their purchase of the property after foreclosure was begun was a speculation in the right of occupancy during the year for redemption.
The insolvency of the mortgagors and their grantees, subsequent to appellee, who assumed and agreed to pay the mortgage, is satisfactorily shown.
We conclude that the order appointing a receiver was proper.
III. Complaint is made of the taxation, as part of the costs, of an attorney's fee for the plaintiff's attorney, upon the ground that the note and mortgage were only due by virtue of an election on the part of the holder to so declare 3. COSTS: under authority of an acceleration clause in the taxation: mortgage, and that no notice thereof, or attorney opportunity to pay, was given before bringing fees: suit. The acceleration clause is identical with presumption. that considered in Moore v. Crandall,
Under the statute, Section 11647, and the holding in Moore v.Crandall, supra, if the makers were residents of the county, they were entitled to information of the election of the holder to declare the debt due under the acceleration clause, and to a reasonable opportunity to pay, before action was brought, in order to authorize the taxation of an attorney's fee. But, if the makers were not residents of the county, the holder was not required to give them such information and opportunity, before *507 being entitled to have an attorney's fee allowed; or, if they were such residents, and such information and opportunity were given them, he was entitled to the attorney's fee.
The record is silent upon both these propositions. It does not appear whether the mortgagors were residents of the county or not, or whether notice of the election to declare the debt due, and an opportunity to pay, were given before bringing suit, or not. In the absence of any issue in the court below upon the question, and as the attorney's fee was to be taxed as costs, the right to the fee could be determined after the determination of the issues raised by the answer. If the finding had been for the defendants upon the issues raised by the pleadings, there would have been no occasion to determine if an attorney's fee should be taxed. In Kelso v. Fitzgerald,
Furthermore, while the allowance of an attorney's fee was made by the court in the judgment and decree, and the objection now urged is not to the amount allowed, but to the allowance of any amount at all, — a situation that would not be 4. APPEAL AND reached by a motion to retax costs, and to which ERROR: such a motion would not be applicable (Perry v.
presentation Kaspar,
The judgment and decree are — Affirmed.
De GRAFF, C.J., and STEVENS and FAVILLE, JJ., concur. *508