256 P. 10 | Colo. | 1927
THE defendant in error obtained a decree foreclosing a trust deed and a mortgage given by William H. Buer. The administrator of Buer's estate seeks a reversal of the decree.
On January 29, 1923, William H. Buer executed and delivered to the plaintiff a promissory note for $3,500, payable one year after date, with interest at the rate of 8 per cent per annum from its date until due. The note contained the provision that if the note is not paid promptly at maturity, the unpaid principal and interest shall bear interest at the rate of 12 per cent per annum from maturity until paid; and also provided for the payment of 10 per cent "additional on amount due, as attorney's fees for collection." To secure the payment of the note the maker gave a trust deed of certain land and also a mortgage of certain lots. Neither the trust deed nor the mortgage provides for the payment of an attorney's fee. On October 25, 1925, Buer died, and defendant Lilly Swartz Buer was appointed administratrix of his estate. On December 14, the plaintiff filed in the county court, where the estate was being administered, his claim for the amount due upon Buer's promissory note. The court allowed the claim as a claim of the fifth class. On November 13, 1926, the plaintiff brought this suit to foreclose the trust deed and the mortgage. Lilly Swartz Buer having resigned as administratrix, O. A. Hiller, the plaintiff in error, was appointed administrator, and filed an answer. On March 25, 1927, the case was tried, and the court decreed a foreclosure. In determining the amount due, the court included interest at the *461 rate of 12 per cent per annum, as provided in the note, and also an attorney's fee of $321.81. The decree also provided that if the proceeds of the sale were not sufficient to pay the amount found due, a deficiency judgment against the "defendants" shall enter, and that William H. Buer pay to the plaintiff the amount of such deficiency judgment, with interest, and that the plaintiff have execution "thereof."
1. The decree should not have provided for a deficiency judgment against William H. Buer. The complaint alleged his death over a year before the commencement of the suit. Although he was improperly named as a defendant in the original complaint, his name was omitted from the amended complaint.
2. In providing for a deficiency judgment against the defendants, the decree provided that execution shall issue. So far as the administrator is concerned, this is erroneous. A money judgment against an administrator is payable only out of the decedent's estate in due course of administration.
3. Among the defendants are seven heirs of the decedent and also the public trustee of Alamosa county, not one of whom is liable for the debt. Providing in the decree for a deficiency judgment against the "defendants" was clearly an inadvertence; and although the heirs and the public trustee are not parties to this writ of error, this palpable mistake in the decree should be corrected.
4. The plaintiff in error contends that the trial court erred in including the attorney's fee as part of the indebtedness, and also in computing interest at 12 per cent instead of at 8 per cent. The allowance by the county court of the plaintiff's claim was a judgment on the promissory note. Section 5340, C. L., is as follows: "The county court shall make an entry of record of every demand allowed against any estate, and shall file all papers relating to the same. Such entry of allowance shall have the force and effect of a judgment." *462
See Denison v. Jerome,
The judgment is reversed, with directions to proceed in harmony with the views herein expressed.
MR. JUSTICE ADAMS not participating.