195 Iowa 891 | Iowa | 1923
In a separate division of the petition, Carrie L. Sherman and twelve other named persons are impleaded as defendants, and it is alleged that, on and before January 26, 1910, the real estate described in the mortgage aforesaid was owned by one Alfred E. Bigelow, and that, on the date last named, said Bigelow and wife executed a warranty deed for said property to the defendant Lee Miller, in which deed there was an expressed consideration of $3,500 in hand paid by Lee Miller. Embodied in the same instrument was a provision, by which said grantee agreed “to erect a hotel building on the described premises, to be completed not later than January 1, 1911, and costing not less than $20,000, otherwise the title to the premises to revert to Alfred E. Bigelow.” It is further alleged that the said Lee Miller did, during the year 1910, erect the required hotel building, at an approximate cost of $30,000, and thereby satisfied the condition or stipulation contained in the deed from Bigelow, and that the same was a/ccepted by the latter as satisfactory and as perfecting the absolute title in Miller. It is further made to appear that Bigelow and wife are now both deceased, and that the additional defendants named in the second division of the petition are the
In a third division of the petition, plaintiff states his claim as against the defendants Frank C. Burke and Perle E. Burke, as follows: After repleading the matter contained in the first division, and asserting a paramount lien on the property securing payment of the notes, he alleges that there was filed for record in the office of the county recorder a certain lease, which constitutes an apparent claim or cloud upon the title to said property. The lease in question bears date of April 17, 1913, and is executed by Lee Miller to Frank C. Burke, and purports to lease said property to the latter for the term of 10 years, at the rental of $200 per month, and among other things embodies the following provision, to wit:
“It is further agreed that at the end of 10 years the second party, his heirs and assigns shall at their option have the privilege of renting said premises another 10 years for the same amount of rent as herein stated and on the same terms as provided in this lease.”
The plaintiff prays that the lien of his mortgage be established and confirmed as superior to any right or claim of the defendants Burke, and that said mortgage be foreclosed.
Answering this petition, the defendants Burke admit the lease as alleged, and further plead that, at the date thereof and ■ at all times since, said property was being occupied and used for hotel purposes; that, having obtained said lease, said Frank C. Burke also purchased and took over from said Miller the furniture, fixtures, and furnishings, paying therefor the sum of $10,000; that thereafter, said Frank C. Burke by oral assignment transferred all his interest in said property and lease to his codefendant Perle E. Burke, who at once took possession thereof, and has since conducted and managed the same as a hotel. The said Perle E. Burke further pleads his desire and purpose to avail himself of the option to rent said property for the extended period of 10 years, as provided for in the original
In a second count of the answer, it is charged that the notes secured by the mortgage were transferred to the plaintiff on the eve of their due date, to be foreclosed by him in the secret interest of said Lee Miller, and thereby to cut off and determine Perle E. Burke’s rights under the lease.
Both plaintiff and Miller demurred to the answer of the Burkes. The demurrer was overruled. Beplying to said answer and cross-demand, Lee Miller and Bertha E. Miller aver that they are husband and wife, and plead a homestead right in the mortgaged premises from a time antedating the lease, and that such lease, being signed by Lee Miller only, is void. To this the Burkes rejoin by denial, and by alleging that, if the Millers ever occupied the property as a homestead, they abandoned it and removed from the state.
The record of the pleadings is very unnecessarily complicated and obscured by a multiplicity of amendments and motions, but we think that the foregoing is sufficient to develop the real controversy. On trial to the court, a decree was entered, establishing the plaintiff’s mortgage as the first lien, and foreclosing it as against all defendants. It further confirmed and established the interest of Perle E. Burke as tenant of said property under the lease above mentioned, subject, however, to the prior lien of the mortgage, and provided that, upon sale under said foreclosure, the property be first offered to bidders, subject to the rights of the tenant under said lease, and that, if a sale can be so made for an amount sufficient to satisfy plain
I. Counsel for appellants give first attention to the proposition that.the case presented is not one to which the rule for “marshaling assets” can be applied, because that rule or doctrine can be invoked only where a junior lien holder’s lien attaches to only a part of the assets; and he demands that the senior shall first exhaust his lien on those assets or securities which are not available to the junior.
That the rule is as stated, in an appropriate case, may be admitted; but we are unable to see its application to a case like the one before us. The decree appealed from does not undertake a marshaling of assets or liens in any such sense. Here we .have a suit to foreclose a mortgage on a specified item of real estate. It is the right of the mortgagee to bring in and make defendants all persons having or asserting any junior claims upon the property, whether they be subsequent purchasers, junior mortgagees, or tenants. These parties may appear to the suit and assert the validity of their several claims and ask to have their interests recognized, protected, and enforced in the order of priority in which the court shall find that their rights attached to the property. No authority is cited, and we think none can be found, which inhibits the court from adjudicating all the claims presented, and fixing the order in which such claims shall be satisfied from the sheriff’s sale of the property. Neither the holder of the senior lien nor the common debtor is in any manner wronged or injured, nor can the junior creditors complain if prior liens are first paid, while their rights to the benefit of the surplus, if any there be, are preserved. If the appellee were a junior mortgagee, instead of a lease holder, it would hardly be denied by counsel that the court may not properly, by its decree, protect such junior lien; and we can perceive no good reason why a tenant’s right may not also be recognized and established, subject, of course, to the paramount right of the senior mortgagee. The latter has no interest in the premises except to insist that the property, or. so much thereof as may
“I first formed the intention of returning to the hotel at New Hampton immediately, when I found how bad my wife felt about it when she got home. It was my intention to return to the hotel if I could get possession, — if I coAld buy it or get someone else to buy it for me. I wanted to get hold of the hotel, and expected to return any time I could get it. * * * I don’t know as I had any thought at the time I made the lease, of coming back and running the hotel.”
It will thus be seen that, so far as the husband was concerned, the idea of returning to the hotel was formed after the lease was made and the tenant was in possession, and that the purpose then formed was not to assert a claim of homestead, but to repossess the property, if possible, by purchase of the tenant’s right. Indeed, until his pleading was filed in this case, he appears never to have denied or challenged the validity of the lease he had made. The wife, as a witness, after stating her original objection to leasing the hotel, as already indicated, testifies that,
Much attention is given in the record to describing the details of residence and occupation of the property in controversy by Miller and family, as bearing upon its alleged homestead character, the details of which we think it unnecessary to dwell upon; for, without now committing ourselves upon the proposition whether the owner of a large and expensive hotel block or building may, by living therein or occupying a few rooms therein for family use, impress a homestead character upon either the entire property or upon a fractional part thereof, we think it sufficient, for the purposes of this case, to say that, even if it be conceded that Miller and wife had acquired a homestead in this property, it appears quite conclusively that they abandoned the same, and cannot be heard to assert it in this action. It is true that a homestead, once acquired in realty, is not the subject of valid conveyance, except by the joint deed of both husband and wife; but it is equally true that it may be lost or abandoned by actual removal under circumstances clearly indicating that such removal is not merely temporary. It has often been said, in cases turning upon this question, that “no general rule can be enunciated; each turns upon, and the decision of each exacts a special regard to its own peculiar facts.” Fyffe v. Beers, 18 Iowa 4, 8. It has been said to be “the general rule that, to entitle a party to the homestead exemption, he must actually occupy and be in possession of the premises as a home;”
If the case before us presented an instance where the husband abandoned his home and family, his act would not, of course, operate to estop his wife from insisting upon her homestead right; but where he still maintains the family relation, and by deed or lease or by other act assumes to abandon the homestead, and the wife leaves the homestead to accompany her husband, when he abandons it, she waives her right to object; and if, after so yielding her right, she finds the change to have been unwise or unfortunate, she cannot withdraw her waiver, to the prejudice of third parties.'
Without further discussion at this point, it is sufficient to say that the trial court’s conclusion denying the appellant’s plea of homestead is fully sustained by the record. This conclusion involves no holding, as counsel argue, inconsistent with the statute invalidating conveyances of a homestead where the husband and wife do not unite in executing the same joint instrument, but simply reaffirms the well. settled equitable rule that the right to rely upon a statutory provision or acknowledged principle of law may be lost, abandoned, or waived by conduct radically inconsistent with the relief demanded.
We find nothing in the decree below of which just complaint can'be made. The priority of right of the several parties appears to be fixed in due order of their several equities.