57 Minn. 465 | Minn. | 1894
Although a great number of facts are set forth in the complaint herein, to which a general demurrer, was interposed and sustained, the few which are important and controlling are as .follows: April 6,1891, the premises in controversy were owned by
On the day first mentioned herein — April 6, 1891 — Tubbs conveyed the premises by deed to one Dorman, and on July 5, 1893, the latter conveyed the same to this plaintiff. Both deeds were recorded August 31, 1893, and on the same day plaintiff tendered to defendant Ege, as sheriff, the amount paid by Wheaton and Reynolds at the lien foreclosure sale, Avitli interest, the .amount paid by them in redemption from the sale in foreclosure of the first mortgage, with interest, and “out of excess of caution,” as counsel puts it, an additional sum, to cover, with interest, amounts which had been paid and were due to other pretended redemptioners, before referred to, and •demanded that there be executed and delivered to her a certificate of redemption of said premises in due form, free and clear from all •claims had or held thereto by the party who had taken a mortgage from Topliff, and had then redeemed from Wheaton and Reynolds, namely, the defendant Chadbourn Finance Company, and free and -clear from all- claims had or held by its mortgagee, defendant insurance company. The sheriff refused to accept the-tender or to execute and delive. the certificate of redemption, and this action is the result of such refusal.
With this statement of dominant facts, very little need be said in disposing of the appeal. The period Avithin which the owner of ¡real property may redeem from mortgage foreclosure sales made under a power is fixed by 1878, G. S. ch. 81, §§ 13, 14, at one year from the day of sale; and at the expiration of the year, no redemption being made, the certificate of sale operates as a conveyance to the purchaser or his assigns of all the right, title, and interest of the mortgagor in the premises at the date of the mortgage. It has often been stated in the decisions of this court that the estate of the mortgagor, and of all persons claiming under Mm, is extinguished by a foreclosure of the mortgage and a failure to redeem; that the interest acquired by a mortgagee who purchases at a foreclosure sale ripens into an absolute title at the end of the year, if there is no redemption; that the right given to creditors having a lien, legal or «equitable, to redeem, begins after the title of the purchaser at the /sale has become perfect and absolute as against the mortgagor or
We need not discuss the effect of the owner’s failure to redeem from the foreclosure of the second mortgage — the first foreclosure in point of time — within the year of redemption, which ended August 10, 1892, 20 days before the sale to Wheaton and Reynolds, for it does not seem important. There had been — September 7, 1891— a sale under a foreclosure of the first mortgage, which antedated and was prior and paramount to all other liens, at which sale the mortgagee, Topliff, was the purchaser, and duly received and recorded a certificate thereof. The year within which the owner of the premises could exercise the statutory right of redemption from the sale expired September 7, 1892, eight days after the sale to Wheaton and Reynolds, and but four days after the sale to them was confirmed by the court. The owner made no redemption from this mortgage foreclosure sale, so that, under the statute and the decisions referred to, whatever estate the mortgagor or any person claiming under him had in the mortgaged premises was wiped out and extinguished at the end of the year, even if it had not been when there was a failure to redeem from the earlier sale under the second mortgage. The interest acquired by the mortgagee as a purchaser at the foreclosure sale ripened into an absolute title as against Dorman, who then held a deed of conveyance from Tubbs, the mortgagor, when the year had elapsed without redemption. It was then that the right of creditors, legal or equitable, to redeem began; and, by redemption under the statute, the right of Dorman to redeem as owner, already extinguished, could not be revived.
We need not attempt to point out wherein the cases cited by plaintiff’s counsel fail to establish their position that Dorman’s right to redeem was in some manner revived by the redemption made September 12th by Wheaton and Reynolds. They either involve general equitable principles where there was no statute to govern, or are decisions upon statutes entirely unlike ours. Evidently none are in point here, unless we could in some manner, and in the face of undisputed facts, as well as the provisions of the statute, declare that Dorman’s rights were not extinguished at the end of the year of redemption, and that the redemption by Wheaton and Reynolds
Order affirmed.
(Opinion published 59 N. W. 495.)