34 Mont. 375 | Mont. | 1906
delivered the opinion of the court.
Appeal from the judgment. The plaintiff sued the defendant in ejectment. The complaint is an ordinary one in ejectment. From the answer and replication it appears that the plaintiff was at one time'the owner of certain real estate, and on September 21, 1895, made a mortgage to Henry Knippenberg to secure a loan. The mortgage and notes were assigned to William D. Clark and upon default, the sheriff of the county, on the twenty-fourth day of March, 1900, sold the property at sheriff’s sale under the mortgage to Clark, the sheriff, being one Regan. On March 25, 1901,
Seven questions are raised in the brief of the appellant. The only one necessary to be considered is whether or not the Quinn deed conveyed title to the grantee therein. If the Regan deed was void on account of having been made on Monday after the Sunday which was the last day of the year of redemption, then we should consider the case as if no deed had been made at all on the Monday. The year of redemption is for the benefit of the debtor in the mortgage suit. The purchaser went into possession after the expiration of the year of redemption. It does not appear that at any time before the second deed was executed there was any offer to redeem, even if such an offer could have availed the mortgagor after the expiration of the period of redemption. The law does not require the purchaser at a mortgage foreclosure sale to apply for the deed immediately upon the expiration of the year.
The defendant in this case applied for the second deed from the sheriff within a reasonable time, and in our opinion the deed was valid. (17 Cyc. 1743.) A recovery by plaintiff in ejectment may be defeated by defendant showing title in himself, and this is so although he acquire the same subsequent to the commencement of the action. (15 Cyc. 62.) This action was commenced on September 12, 1904, and the second deed from the sheriff was made and delivered pendente lite. Under section 1237 of the Code of Civil Procedure it is the duty of the sheriff who made the sale, if he still be in office, but if not, then of his successor, to
We find no error in the decision of the court below.
Affirmed.