206 N.W. 461 | Minn. | 1925
The demurrer of the sheriff to this complaint was considered and sustained in Mulroy v. Rowe,
The statute exempting a homestead from liability for debts is liberally construed to accomplish the purpose of enabling a debtor to retain his home. Where a homestead is subject to a mortgage which also covers other lands, the owner is entitled, upon seasonable demand, to have the land other than the homestead first applied in satisfaction of the mortgage. Horton v. Kelly,
Where a mortgage is foreclosed by a sale in gross, as one parcel, of land which ought to have been sold in separate parcels, the sale is not void but voidable only, and will not be set aside unless good cause therefor be shown. Willard v. Finnegan,
The complaint shows that plaintiff asked to have the nonexempt 80 sold first. It further shows that at the sale the full amount of the mortgage was bid for the nonexempt 80; that this bid was refused; and that the entire quarter section was then sold to the same bidder for the same amount previously offered for the nonexempt 80. If the first bid had been accepted the mortgage would have been satisfied in full and plaintiff would have had his homestead left freed from the encumbrance.
That plaintiff's rights were ignored to his substantial prejudice is clear. That he is entitled to have the sale set aside is also clear, unless his failure to comply with the provisions of chapter 389 of the laws of 1907, found as section 9649 in the General Statutes of 1923, precludes him from now asserting that the nonexempt 80 should have been sold first. Chapter 389 is entitled: *298
"An act to protect the rights of homestead claimants in proceedings to foreclose real estate mortgages and to provide that such homestead shall be offered for sale as a separate parcel only."
This statute provides that in proceedings to foreclose a mortgage which includes all or any part of a homestead:
"The person claiming such homestead may, at any time prior to the foreclosure sale, serve or cause to be served upon the sheriff making such sale a notice of such claim which shall designate and describe with reasonable certainty the real estate so claimed * * * which notice together with proof of service thereof shall be filed for record and recorded in the office of the register of deeds. Upon the service and filing of such notice it shall be the duty of the sheriff, at the time of the sale, to first offer for sale and sell that part of the mortgaged real estate, or so much thereof as is necessary, which is not included in such selected homestead."
Plaintiff served a written notice upon the sheriff, but did not file it in the office of the register of deeds, and so failed to bring himself within the protection of this statute. The mortgagee claims that this statute provides the only method by which a homestead claimant may secure the right to have the land other than the homestead first sold.
A statute providing a new method for securing or enforcing an old right does not take away or abrogate previously existing methods, unless the intention to do so is expressly declared or is necessarily implied from the language used. The statute is regarded as giving an additional or cumulative remedy, unless it plainly manifests an intention to make such remedy exclusive. 25 R.C.L. 1058; 36 Cyc. 1176, notes 86, 87, 88; Donnelly v. Minneapolis Mnfg. Co.
The purpose of the statute in question, as declared in its title, is "to protect the rights of homestead claimants in proceedings to foreclose *299 real estate mortgages." It was not the purpose to curtail the rights of such claimants, nor to take away existing remedies for a wrongful sale of the homestead, but to give a greater measure of protection to such rights by providing a method by which the claimant could, in any case in which he deemed it for his interest to do so, compel the nonhomestead lands to be sold before the homestead was offered. Where a mortgage covering a homestead and other lands is being foreclosed under the power of sale therein, the homestead claimant has always had the right to demand that the other lands be sold first. And if the homestead and the nonhomestead lands were, nevertheless, sold as one parcel, he could avoid the sale but, in order to do so, he was required to establish that he had seasonably asserted his right to have them sold separately, and that the failure to sell them separately had resulted to his financial prejudice. This statute provides a method by which he may, before the sale, establish an absolute right to have them sold separately and, if so established, the existence of such right is made a matter of record and placed beyond dispute. But there is nothing in the statute requiring us to hold that it took away the previously existing remedy of voiding a sale in gross by proving a timely demand for a sale in separate parcels and that failure to comply with such demand had resulted in a substantial impairment of the homestead right. To so hold would be a perversion of the purpose of the statute and contrary to the long-established policy of the law. It would needlessly make the rights of the ignorant and unwary depend upon a compliance with statutory provisions, perhaps entirely unknown to them.
Order reversed.
The Chief Justice took no part. *300