1. Where the equity of redemption in land on which there is an outstanding security deed, which is itself junior to a prior recorded judgment, is set aside to a widow as a year's support, the year's support as held by the widow is free from the lien of such prior judgment but subject to the outstanding security deed, and the right of the holder to bring the property to sale for payment of the debt secured by it; and where without the exercise by the widow of her right of redemption the holder of the security deed brings the property to sale, the purchaser at such sale acquires title subject to the lien of such prior judgment.
2. What has been said above likewise requires a reversal of the ruling which sustained another ground of demurrer complaining of the failure to make the widow, whose interest had been divested by sale under the security deed, a party to the case.
3. Nor was there any merit in other grounds of demurrer as shown in the opinion, and the ruling sustaining these grounds was error.
On the question involved there seems to be only one difference between that case and the one now under review, that being that *Page 459
in the one instance the lien was for taxes and in the other the lien is that of a common-law judgment. In neither case is the lien in competition with the widow's year's support. In neither case did the widow assert her right of redemption or transfer it by sale. In neither case was there an excess of funds to which claim might be made by the widow. In Minchew v. JuniataCollege, supra, we dealt with the respective rights of various security-deed holders, claims for taxes, and a year's support where the equity of redemption had been set apart to the widow. Equitable principles were there applied in determining the respective priorities in funds arising from the sale of the property, under which the widow was awarded the full value of the equity of redemption undiminished by any claim for taxes, but the holders of the security deeds were subjected to a pro rata share of the tax claims. The opinion in that case fully reviewed the cases in point, and we believe requires, as does the case ofReal Estate Loan Co. v. Union City, supra, the conclusion that where such a controversy is between the lienholder on the one hand and the holder of the security deed, or the purchaser under him, on the other hand, the lien of the judgment retains its prior rank. We do not believe the statute which makes such a lien inferior to a year's support was intended to displace its rank for any other purpose, or in favor of any other claimant save the widow or minor children, or some one claiming under them. The purchaser at the sale in the instant case obtained his title not from the widow but from the deceased husband through the holder of his security deed. This was pursuant to the failure of the widow to exercise her right of redemption, which, while divested by the sale, was not in any real sense the subject-matter of the sale. The award of the year's support did not nullify the lien of the judgment except in favor of the widow, since the sale under the power did not divest it as would be true in the case of a judicial sale, or in the case of a junior judgment (compare Mutual Loan Banking Co. v. Haas,
2. What has been said likewise requires a reversal of the ruling sustaining another ground of demurrer, which complained of the failure to make the widow, Mrs. F. B. McKown, a party to the *Page 460 case. It is shown above that the sale of the land involved divested her interest, and that the present controversy is left to proceed between the plaintiff and the defendant, to adjudicate the priority of their respective claims.
3. There is no merit in a third ground of demurrer which presents the contention that the petition "shows no right in plaintiff to pay off certain security deeds, but that said right is in said Mrs. F. B. McKown," or in the fourth ground which urges that "it is not shown what claim against said land plaintiff desires to have declared inferior to his judgment."
Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur.