48 Iowa 163 | Iowa | 1878
II. Another objection is urged by the defendant’s counsel, upon the ground that, the claimant in making final proof must show by affidavit that he has not alienated the land. The execution of the mortgage, it is said, is an alienation within the meaning of the statute. But we think this is not so. The giving of a mortgage may result in alienation, but it is not such of itself, nor can it be said that the mortgage is given with such purpose. Land is often mortgaged with the view of obviating the necessity of alienation. The office of a mortgage is simply to create a lien. Under our statute the legal title remains in the mortgagor, though the case would probably not be different if it passed to the mortgagee. A conveyance made merely to create a lien lacks the essential element of alienation. This has been repeatedly held in the law of insurance. Rollins v. Columbian Ins. Co., 5 Foster, 200; Conover v. Mutual Ins. Co., 1 Com., 200; Jackson v. Mass. Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 23 Pick., 418; Hubbard & Spencer v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., 33 Iowa, 333. So, also, it has been held that an inhibition upon selling is not an inhibition upon mortgaging. Middleton Savings Bank v. Dubuque, 15 Iowa, 394; Krider v. Trustees of Western College, 31 Iowa, 547. In Nycum v. McAllister, as we have seen, a mortgage executed by a claimant under the homestead act, before the issuance of a patent, was sustained. Yet by the act no patent could issue except upon proof by affidavit of the claimant that he had not alienated the land. And the fact that such affidavit
III. The mortgage is further assailed upon the ground that it is not sufficient in form to bind the land. In respect to forty-acres of the land it might be conceded that this position is well taken. The mortgagor’s wife did not join in the granting part of the mortgage, and appears to have signed merely for the purpose of releasing dower. It was held in Sharp v. Bailey, 14 Iowa, 387, that such an instrument does not bind the homestead.
It is insisted, however, that- while the mortgage might be invalid as against the mortgagor or his wife, it is not the right of a purchaser from them to set up its invalidity. Whether he could or not would depend upon whether he purchased the land subject to the mortgage. Where land is purchased of a mortgagor subject to a mortgage supposed to be valid, whether it is so or not, the mortgaged land becomes the primary fund for the discharge of the mortgage debt. The theory is, that the amount of the mortgage is deducted from the purchase money, and it would be inequitable to allow the purchaser to take advantage of the invalidity of the mortgage, and cast the debt upon the vendor who had virtually furnished the consideration for its discharge. Nor is it necessary, in order that the land may stand primarily charged with the payment of the mortgage debt, that the purchaser from the mortgagor should have assumed its payment. It is-sufficient if the land was purchased subject to the mortgage, without any personal liability being assumed by the purchaser. Green v. Turner, 38 Iowa, 112; Russell v. Allen, 10 Paige, 249; Shuler v. Hanlin, 25 Ind., 386; Jones on Mortgages, § 736. The question, then, is as to whether Griffin purchased subject to the plaintiff’s mortgage. If he had taken a deed with a covenant against incumbrances, it would be presumed that he did not. But he took a quit claim deed, and the consideration named is one dollar. It is true the evidence
In our opinion the decision of the court below should be
Affirmed.