62 Iowa 321 | Iowa | 1883
I. The material facts of the case are as follows: In July, 1856, one J. W. Baird, being the owner of two hundred and eighty acres of land, including the eighty acres involved in this controversy, executed a mortgage thereon to one M. Moore, to secure the payment of $1,300. Thereafter foreclosure proceedings were instituted in the Dallas district court, and on the 20th day of October, 1857, judgment of foreclosure was entered by default. In the foreclosure proceeding, an original notice was issued in the usual form, directed to J. W. Baird, and was, on the 7th day of September, 1857, returned “not found,” whereupon the clerk of the court ordered that the notice be published in the Independent Press for four weeks, which was done. Upon this notice default was entered, and judgment was rendered. Under this
On the 3d day of August, 1868, Poster and wife conveyed, with the usual covenants of seizin and warranty, one hundred and twenty acres of said land to one E. P. Prush, for the consideration of $600, and on the 25th day of November, 1871, E. F. Prush and wife, for the consideration of $700, conveyed, with the usual covenants of seizin and warranty, eighty acres of said land to the plaintiff.
On the 5th day of February, 1878, J. W. Baird and wife, for the consideration of $50, without warranty, conveyed the land in controversy to one 0. A. Anthony, who thereupon toot possession of the land, which was unimproved open prairie, and commenced fencing and breaking the same.
On the 26th day of July, 1880, Anthony and wife, for the expressed consideration of $600, conveyed to plaintiff the eighty acres of land now in controversy.
The agreement of purchase between Eoyer and Anthony was as follows: “Whereas Jacob Eoyer has this day purchased of O. A. Anthony, and received of him a deed for, the following real estate,, to wit: * * * * , for the consideration of six hundred dollars, and whereas said Eoyer desires time to pay said consideration, and whereas said Eoyer has a claim against J. P. Foster, (who conveyed said land to one E. F. Frush, by warranty deed, and by said Prush to him conveyed, by warranty deed, the title to which has wholly failed,) for the sum of four hundred dollars, with six per cent interest from the 3d day of August, 1868, as damages for the breach of the covenants of warranty of the said Poster; now, therefore, said Eoyer agrees to pay said
At the time of the execution of this agreement, there was pending in the federal court an action of right, relating to the eighty acres of land in question, in which Royer was plaintiff and Anthony and others were defendants. J. W. Baird removed to Indiana, March 1,1859, and has ever since continued a resident of that state.
From the foregoing statement of facts, it appears that the plaintiff’s title is derived through the foreclosure proceeding
It follows that the plaintiff, through the conveyance to him, did not acquire the title of Baird, and that the covenants of
It is insisted that the plaintiff, through the conveyance to him, became subrogated to the rights of the mortgagee, Moore, and that he may proceed to foreclose the mortgage, and thus protect his title. But the plaintiff purchased a legal title, and he cannot now be put off with a mere equity. Besides, it seems that the right to foreclose the mortgage is now
II. . It is claimed there is no bill of exceptions in the case, because the filing of what purports to be the bill of excep-ions
III. It is claimed that the assignments of error are not sufficiently specific or definite to raise any question for our consideration. We regard the assignments as sufficiently specific to raise the question of the correctness of the judgment upon the evidence introduced. The judgment is
Reversed.