44 Minn. 353 | Minn. | 1890
This case requires a determination as to the legal!: effect of an attempted foreclosure of a mortgage of two distinct tracts of land, which.mortgage was executed in 1870. The foreclosure was~
1. The principal question is whether the foreclosure sale was void, or only irregular, by reason of the fact that the two separate tracts were sold together as one. The sale was certainly irregular, and not in strict compliance with the statute, which declared that in such a case the separate and distinct tracts should be sold separately, and that no more tracts should be sold than should be necessary to satisfy the amount due on the mortgage, with interest, taxes, and costs. Gen. St. 1866, c. 81, § 9. But in view of the decisions which have heretofore been rendered, it should now be regarded as a settled rule of property in this state that a sale is not rendered void by reason of the fact that separate tracts may have been sold together. In Willard v. Finnegan, 42 Minn. 476, (44 N. W. Rep. 985,) our opinion upon this subject was fully expressed, and what is there said is adopted for the decision of this case. Upon this point, therefore, the ruling of the court upon the demurrer is sustained.
2. At the time of the foreclosure, the statute in force did not prescribe any particular time within which the certificate of sale should be recorded. Laws 1876, c. 39. That statute, and not the law in force at the time the mortgage was given, controlled as to the procedure for foreclosing the mortgage. Therefore the recording of the certificate some 10 months after the sale was within the requirements of the statute.
Order affirmed.