Scammon v. Ward

1 Wash. 179 | Wash. | 1890

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Scott, J.

Plaintiff instituted this proceeding in the probate court of Klickitat county, under 1523 and 1524 of the code, to require said executrix to redeem certain lands from the lien of a mortgage given to the plaintiff by William G. Ward, who died in June, 1887, leaving a will. In August, 1887, the probate court of said county admitted said will to probate, and appointed defendant executrix thereof. A notice to creditors was duly published under code, § 1465, in September, 1887. The claim secured by the mortgage was not presented to the executrix. The lands covered by it were a part of Ward’s estate at the time of his death, but were not devised by him, nor was their redemption provided for in the will. In October, 1889, after the time for presenting claims against the estate had elapsed, Scammon commenced this proceeding. He sought for no relief except as against the land mortgaged. Defendant resisted the application upon two grounds: 1st. That the mortgage debt was barred by reason of its not having been presented within the year, as provided by g 1467 of the code. 2d. That if the claim was not barred the plaintiff could not apply to the probate court after the expiration of said year without having presented his claim within the time prescribed. The probate court sustained the objections, and the plaintiff appealed to the district court, where the objections were overruled and a redemption of the land was ordered. Whereupon the defendant appealed to this court.

*182As to the first objection raised by the defendant, we think that the plaintiff’s rights under his mortgage, as to the lands mortgaged, were not barred by a failure to present his claim secured thereby to the executrix; that the failure to present his claim would only operate to prevent him from making any deficiency that might remain after exhausting the mortgaged property, out of the testator’s other estate. Woerner’s Am. Law of Adm’n, § 409, and authorities there cited; Allen v. Moer, 16 Iowa, 307; Fisher’s Ex’r v. Mossman, 11 Ohio St. 42; Wiltsie on Mort. Foreclosures, § 63; Wood on Limitations, 390, and cases cited in note 5 (commencing on preceding page); Willard v. Van Leeuwen, 56 Mich. 15; McClure v. Owens, 32 Ark. 443; Richardson v. Hickman, 32 Ark. 407. The only authorities produced by defendant holding a contrary doctrine, that were not subsequently overruled in the same courts where rendered, were from California, and were founded upon the provisions of a statute materially differing from our probate act. Section 1524 of the code, where it allows the mortgagee to file a claim for a balance remaining unpaid after selling the mortgaged land, seems to imply that it is not necessary to present the claim and have it allowed or established before applying to have the lands redeemed. For if the claim should be established in the first instance, subsequent proceedings thereunder in selling the land and applying the proceeds where a sale is ordered, would be conducted by and be within the knowledge of the probate court and the executor or administrator of the estate, and it would be an entirely idle and useless provision to require a filing and authentication of a claim for a deficiency in such a case. By holding that a mortgage debt, as to the land mortgaged, is not barred by a failure to present the claim, the usefulness of this provision in § 1524 becomes apparent, where proceedings are resorted to in the probate court to have the land redeemed, and where a sale ish ad therein and an amount remains unsatisfied thereafter.

*183As to the second objection urged, however, we are of the opinion that a mortgagee who wishes to apply to the probate court under ?¿ 1523, to compel the redemption of land from his mortgage lien (the alternative being that when the order to redeem is not granted the land must be sold under § 1524, and the proceeds applied upon the mortgage debt), whether he seeks any relief outside the property mortgaged or not, must so apply within the year allowed for the presentation of claims against the estate. It is contrary to the intent of the probate act, and also to public policy to allow these matters to come in afterwards. And where the application is not made within said time the remedy must be sought in a foreclosure suit. Upon this last ground the judgment of the district court is reversed.

Anders, C. J., and Stiles and Hoyt, JJ., concur. Bunbab, J., not sitting.