57 P. 611 | Ariz. | 1899
On the twenty-first day of July, 1894, John H. Bolton brought suit in the district court of Maricopa County against James H. McClintock, A. J. Daggs, and P. J. Cole to foreclose a mortgage on the southeast quarter of section twenty-two, township 1 south, range 4 east, of the Gila and Salt River base and meridian, executed by defendant James H. McClintock to secure his promissory note in the sum of five hundred and fifty dollars, dated December 30, 1890, and made payable to said John H. Bolton. The complaint alleged that the defendants A. J. Daggs and P. J. Cole had, or claimed to have, some interest in or lien on said mortgaged premises which had accrued since the execution of the mortgage. Personal service was had upon the defendants McClintock and Cole, and service by publication was had on defendant A. J. Daggs. Default was taken against all of the defendants, and at the November, 1894, term of said court, judgment by default was duly entered against McClintock in the sum of five hundred and fifty dollars, with interest on the same at the rate of one and one half per cent per month, compounded quarterly from the seventh day of July, 1893, until paid, and for the sum of fifty-five dollars attorney’s fees and for all costs of suit, and a decree entered foreclosing the mortgage lien on said premises, and directing the sale of the same to satisfy said judgment. On the nineteenth day of March, 1895, and during the term at which said judgment was entered, one J. C. Goodwin applied to the courts for an order setting aside said judgment, and permitting him to intervene in the said action. The order was consented to by Bolton, the plaintiff in the case, and J. C. Goodwin was permitted to intervene and file an answer to the cause of action set up by the plaintiff. In this answer Goodwin set forth that on October 16, 1893, said James H. McClintock and Sara A. McClintock gave their promissory note to the Phoenix National Bank, of Phoenix, Arizona, in the sum of three hundred dollars, payable on the sixteenth day of April, 1894, and drawing interest at the rate of one and one half per cent per month from date until paid, and providing for an attorney’s fee of ten per cent upon the amount due in case of suit; that said note was secured by mortgage on the said southeast quarter of section twenty-two, township 1 south, range 4 east, etc.; that thereafter the said Phoe
1. The question whether the district court of Maricopa County had lost jurisdiction of this cause by reason of the order made by the presiding judge at the November, 1894, term of said court, is not one which appellant can, under the record, now raise. It is true the record discloses that a motion was made by appellant in the court below to have the cause stricken from the files, for the reason, as assigned, that the court had no jurisdiction of the action. At the time the motion was presented, appellant was in default, and had no right, therefore, to appear; but, however this may be, his appearance, if such it was, was not special, but a general one Again, at a subsequent term at which this motion was made,
2. The answer made by A. J. Daggs, and which he terms a verified cross-answer or complaint, is too lengthy to be given in full. It is discursive, argumentative, and in many particulars inconsequential. There may be gathered from it, however, two defenses which the pleader had in mind, and which he has attempted, however badly, to set up. The first is a tender of the amount due upon the note and mortgage set forth in the complaint, and, second, that said note and mortgage had been fraudulently assigned to Mary Goodwin, and the judgment obtained by the Phoenix National Bank had-been fraudulently assigned to intervener J. C. Goodwin in the interest of, and for the benefit of, James H. McClintock and Sara A. McClintock, and that, at the time of said intervention by said J. C. Goodwin, the indebtedness represented by the note and mortgage set forth in the complaint, as well as the indebtedness represented by the judgment obtained by the Phoenix National Bank, had been paid by the said MeClintoeks, and that said assignments were made, and that said suit was being prosecuted, for the purpose and intent that the premises sought to be foreclosed should be sold to satisfy the said indebtedness, to the injury of the defendant as the owner of said premises.
It is contended by appellant that the answer so made by him was one which required a replication by the plaintiff and by the intervener, and that in default thereof he should have been given a judgment according to the prayer with which
The second defense made by appellant was likewise not one that required a replication, inasmuch as it merely raised the question of the right of the plaintiff and intervener to maintain the action, for the reason, as alleged, that the note and mortgage, as well as the judgment, did not represent a valid indebtedness against the McClintocks. It must be remembered that A. J. Daggs was made a defendant because he held the legal title to the premises sought to be foreclosed, and that his sole interest lay in defeating a foreclosure of the mortgages and a sale of the premises to satisfy the same. The effect of his answer and both defenses is a denial that the mortgages were valid and existing liens against the premises, matters which the court was required to find before any valid' decree or judgment foreclosing said mortgages and ordering said sale could be made. The answer, therefore, of appellant was not in the nature of a cross-complaint, and needed no answer thereto.
3. ¥e find the judgment to be erroneous in two particulars: First. The court found that there was due Mary Goodwin, the successor in interest of John H. Bolton, the sum of $1,405.40, and allowed an attorney’s fee of ten per cent upon this amount, and gave judgment for the amount found due, together with said attorney’s fee, and allowed interest on the total amount of the judgment at the rate of one and one half per cent per month. Under the terms of the note, the judgment should have been for $1,405.40, with interest thereon at one and one half per cent per month, and for the further sum of $140.54 attorney’s fee, with interest thereon at seven per
Doan, J., and Davis, J., concur.