8 P.2d 636 | Mont. | 1932
Plaintiffs, as owners and holders of twenty-one real estate mortgages executed by Cook-Reynolds Company, and covering lands situated in Judith Basin county, brought this action to foreclose the mortgages.
The mortgages are dated April 1, 1909, and are identical in form and substance, except as to the amount of the indebtedness secured and the description of the property. Each mortgage secured six promissory notes executed by the mortgagor, each of which matures at a different date, the due date of the last maturing note secured by each mortgage being April 1, 1919. The notes were made payable to William O. Straw and the mortgages were executed to him.
On September 1, 1910, the Cook-Reynolds Company conveyed the property to defendant Wise, subject to the mortgages. By warranty deed dated February 26, 1927, Wise conveyed the lands to his sister, Edna W. Keller, appellant here, the deed not being recorded until September 9, 1929. This deed recited: "This property is conveyed subject to all existing mortgages and liens of record." *432
After the execution and delivery of the notes some of them were assigned to Agnes H. Straw, and she became the owner of the remainder under the terms of the will of her husband, William O. Straw. Plaintiffs, as beneficiaries under the will of Agnes H. Straw, deceased, have become the owners of the notes and mortgages.
On January 13, 1919, Agnes H. Straw, being then the owner of the notes and mortgages, made a formal agreement with Wise, who was then the owner of the land, by the terms of which the respective dates of maturity of all of the notes were extended for a period of ten years from and after April 1, 1919. This agreement was duly acknowledged. It was duly recorded on July 23, 1929. By the terms of that agreement defendant Wise assumed and agreed to pay the mortgage indebtedness represented by the notes, together with interest. It then provided, "that this instrument is for the purpose of avoiding the necessity of a renewal of said respective mortgages and shall operate and have the effect of the execution and delivery of new mortgages securing said respective sums of money." Defendant Wise paid interest on the notes until April, 1926, and nothing since.
When appellant Edna W. Keller took the deed to the property she had no knowledge of the extension agreement. She alleged in her verified answer that she became the owner of the land on the twenty-fifth day of February, 1927, but Wise testified that the deed was not actually delivered to her until in December, 1927; but when he was asked, "When did you say you transferred to her this land?" he said, "On the date it is conveyed in the deed." There was sufficient evidence to warrant a finding that there was constructive delivery of the deed at the moment it was executed. (Sec. 6848, Rev. Codes 1921.) At the time the deed to her was executed, the only mortgages of record were those set out in the complaint.
The court, sitting without a jury, found in favor of plaintiffs, and defendant Edna W. Keller appealed.
The question presented by the appeal is whether the extension[1] agreement takes priority over appellant's deed. Her contention *433
is that it does not because of sections 8243, 8267 and 9029, Revised Codes of 1921. The question was properly raised by attacking the sufficiency of the complaint and by objection to the introduction in evidence of the extension agreement. Were these the only statutes on the subject, the contention would have merit in view of the holding in the case of Morrison v.Farmers' etc. State Bank,
The case of O.M. Corwin Co. v. Brainard,
In Vitt v. Rogers,
The extension agreement here involved was made before but not[2] recorded until after the original maturity of the last maturing note secured by the mortgages. It was not recorded until after the lapse of the time embraced in the extension agreement, but was recorded before appellant's deed was placed of record. It affected the title to real property, and hence was a "conveyance" as that term is defined in section 6936, Revised Codes of 1921. As between the parties to it, it was valid. (Sec. 6938, Id.) The recording of the extension agreement was necessary only for the protection of *435 subsequent purchasers or encumbrancers. By section 6935, Id., it is provided: "Every conveyance of real property * * * is void against any subsequent purchaser or encumbrancer, * * * in good faith and for a valuable consideration, whose conveyance is first duly recorded."
Bearing in mind that the extension agreement was recorded[3] before Keller's deed was placed of record, it takes precedence over the deed, even though we assume that appellant Keller was a subsequent purchaser in good faith and for a valuable consideration. We may say, in passing, that there is respectable authority holding under the facts here, that appellant, who took her deed while the mortgages were valid and subsisting and took it subject to those mortgages, is not a "subsequent purchaser" within the meaning of recording statutes. (Bliss v. Redding,
But for the purpose of this case we may assume that she is a[4, 5] subsequent purchaser in good faith and for a valuable consideration within the meaning of section 6935. Her deed is still not entitled to priority over plaintiff's mortgages, as extended, because under section 6935 a conveyance (here the extension agreement) is void as against those only who meet both conditions, viz.: (1) That they are purchasers or encumbrancers in good faith and for a valuable consideration; and (2) that their conveyance is first duly recorded. The clear implication is that, unless both of these requirements are met, the first conveyance is valid. The adjudicated cases under statutes similar to ours support this conclusion.
In Butler v. Bank of Mazeppa,
Under identical statutes in California, the supreme court of that state, in Thomas v. Vanlieu,
Under statutes of like import in the state of Illinois, the same conclusion has been reached in Simmons v. Stum,
In recognition of the same principle, under like statutes, the court, in Blair State Bank v. Stewart,
The case of Marling v. Nommensen,
The court properly held that defendant Keller's deed is subject to the mortgages held by plaintiffs, as extended by the agreement, and the judgment is affirmed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY and ASSOCIATE JUSTICES GALEN, FORD and MATTHEWS concur.