82 P. 867 | Wyo. | 1905
This action was commenced by the plaintiff in error October 5, 1901, in the District Court of Albany County, against the defendants in error, to recover judgment on a note against the defendants, Daniel B. and Lottie C. Davis, and to foreclose a mortgage given to secure the note. There is but one controverted question of fact in the case as presented to this court in the briefs of counsel. The facts not controverted are, that the defendants, Daniel B. Davis and Lottie C. Davis, his wife, on December 30, 1891, executed to John H. Symons their promissory note for $250, due twelve months after date, with interest at one and one-half per cent per month, and to secure the payment of said note they at the same time executed a mortgage upon certain real estate situated in Albany County, Wyoming, of which they were then the owners; that Symons assigned and transferred the note and mortgage to plaintiff December 7, 1893; that nothing has ever been paid on the note; that on March 15, 1892, the defendants Davis and wife conveyed the mortgaged premises to Josiah J. Fisher, by warranty deed, subject to the mortgage; that on March 11, 1893, Josiah J. Fisher conveyed, by warranty deed, to Eli Crumrine and on April 18, 1893, Crumrine conveyed, by warranty deed, to the defendant, Fannie Fisher, who still owned the land at the time the action was commenced.
After pleading the note and mortgage, the plaintiff alleges in the third paragraph of the petition, “That the said defendants, Daniel B. Davis and Lottie C. Davis, after the execution and delivery of the said note and mortgage as aforesaid, departed from the State of Wyoming and for more than a period of seven years last passed have been continuously absent from and non-residents of the State of Wyoming.” The petition then alleges that the defendant, Fannie Fisher, claims some interest in the premises, and prays judgment against the defendants Davis; that the defendant Fisher be required to set up her claims; that the rights of plaintiff and defendant Fisher be determined and
Counsel for plaintiff, in his brief, relies upon two propositions for a reversal: First, that an action to foreclose a mortgage does not come within the provisions of Section 3454, Revised Statutes of 1899; and second, that the evidence shows that the mortgagors were absent from the state and that such absence tolled the statute as to the defendant Fisher. The first point was attempted to be raised by demurrer to the third paragraph of the answer; but the demurrer was to the entire paragraph which contained a specific denial of the allegations of the petition in relation to the absence of the mortgagors from the state, and for that reason, if for no other, the demurrer was properly overruled. The point, however, was otherwise preserved and must be determined. Under our code of civil pro
We find no error in the record, and the judgment of the District Court is affirmed. Affirmed.