This is an action to foreclose a mortgage on real estate in Oklahoma county, brought by plaintiffs, J. B. Lawton and Lea Lawton, against defendants, J. H. Lincoln, Esther E. Linсoln, Ralph R. Dubour, and Nellie Lou Dubour. The case was tried to the court without a jury. The court held that the action was prematurely brought; that the indebtedness sued оn was not delinquent, and that under the evidence plaintiffs were not justified in accelerating the maturity of the mortgage. It denied foreclosure, and rendered judgment in favor of the defendants for reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs. Plaintiffs appeal.
The mortgage and the note thereby secured were dаted June 4, 1945. The mortgage was for $5,000, and covered 20 acres of land adjoining what is now Crestline addition to Oklahoma City. After the execution of the mortgage, the mortgagors, J. H. Lincoln and Esther E. Lincoln, on June 20, 1945, sold the property to the defendants Ralph R. and Nellie Lou Dubour, who assumed and agreed to pay the mortgage. The mortgage provided, among other things, that the mortgagor would keep all buildings erected and to be erected upon said land insured against loss or damagе by tornado, fire and hail, with insurers approved by the mortgagee, in the sum of $5,000, and that if the mortgagor failed to procure and maintain such insurance the mortgagee might procure the same, but was not obligated to do so. The mortgage further provided that mortgagors should not commit waste upon said premises and that the improvements should be kept in a good state of repair. It further provided for the acceleration of maturity of the principal sum at the option of the mortgagee upon default of the mortgagor, or breach by him of any of the covenants in the mortgage contained.
The note secured by the mоrtgage was due and payable twelve months after date with interest at 7 per cent per annum, and the mortgagors at the time the mortgage was made paid in advance interest for one year.
This action was begun on August 1, 1945, and in their petition plaintiffs alleged a breach of the terms and conditions of the mortgage in that, on or about July 23, 1945, defendants removed from the mortgaged property one four-room house and one chicken house, and that by reason of such brеach of the conditions of the mortgage the whole amount of the principal indebtedness had matured and was due and payable, together with an attоrney’s fee, and that under the provisions of said mortgage the indebtedness bore interest from the date of the filing of the action at the rate of 10 per cent per annum. In an amended petition filed on September 28, 1945, plaintiffs alleged an additional breach of the terms and conditions of the mortgage in that the defendants Ralph R. and Nellie Lou Dubour had furnished an insurance policy covering the property in the amount of $4,500, and delivered
Defendants have filed a motion to dismiss the appeal, stating that, since the appeal was lodged in this court, they have paid to plaintiffs the full amount of the note and mortgage prior to maturity, and this statement is not denied by plaintiffs. Since the judgment appealed from included attorney’s fees for defendants’ attorneys which have not been waived, we do not consider the question involved moot, and the motion is denied.
Inspection of the record convinces us that the judgment of the trial court was correct. The action was one of equitable cognizance. Luke v. Patterson,
As to the insurance, it appears that at the time Dubour purchased the property he was engaged in the insurance business. After the purchase he wrote a new policy of insurance covering the property in one of his own companies, and insured it for $4,500 instead of for $5,000. He testified that in his judgment $4,500 was all that the buildings on the property were worth, and he did not check the mortgage to ascertain whether it required him to writе any particular amount of insurance. This policy was delivered to plaintiffs, and retained by them without objection, or without any demand upon Dubour for additionаl insurance. Dubour had no information that a larger amount of insurance should have been placed upon the property, other than that containеd in the recorded mortgage, which he admits he did not examine, until the amended petition was filed in this action, at which time he promptly mailed to plaintiffs a cеrtificate for additional insurance in the sum of $500 to be attached to the original policy.
Under the circumstances, we think that in the absence of a demаnd for-more insurance on the part of plaintiffs, or any objection by them to the policy so delivered, the delivery of such policy amounted to a substantial compliance with the provisions of the mortgage, and that in the absence of any showing that the failure to furnish a policy for $5,000 was in any way prejudiciаl to the plaintiffs, or impaired their security, the failure to furnish a policy for $5,000 did not constitute a sufficient ground for the acceleration of the maturity of the debt and the foreclosure of the mortgage. As said in McNeal v. Truesdell,
Affirmed.
