218 N.W. 446 | Minn. | 1928
In 1920 plaintiffs granted to one Stevens and others a license to erect a hunting and fishing "shack or cabin" on the farm and near the lake. A cabin was so erected and is used by the persons entitled to the privilege during the hunting and fishing seasons. Otherwise it is not used or occupied save as its equipment of bedding and household utensils remains in it the year round. There are no farm buildings on the place, but it is nevertheless largely under cultivation. In 1920, after having authorized the erection *48 of the hunter's cabin aforesaid, plaintiffs leased the entire farm, without reservation or exception of the cabin site, to one Johnson under a formal written lease, pursuant to which the lessee went into and remained in possession, using the farm for its proper agricultural purposes.
Plaintiffs as owners, not being in possession of the farm or any part thereof, no notice of the foreclosure and sale was served upon them. The argument for plaintiffs is that the foreclosure was invalid because, although the notice was duly served upon the tenant, Johnson, it was not served upon any occupant of the hunter's cabin. That argument misconceives, we think, the controlling purpose of the statute (G. S. 1923, § 9604), requiring notice of the foreclosure to be served upon the person in possession if the mortgaged premises are "actually occupied." Courts must regard that purpose, and it is not enough to invalidate a foreclosure that as to one seeking such a result "there has been an omission of some prescribed act which cannot have affected him, and cannot have been prescribed for his benefit." Holmes v. Crummett,
If in any real sense there were occupants of the cabin, their occupancy was wholly incidental and subservient to that of the tenant of the whole farm, and so of no significance for present purposes. In that respect the case is similar to Holmes v. Crummett,
In Fitger v. Alger, Smith Co.
Casserly v. Morrow,
In the present case there was both occupancy and service. The presence of the cabin and its contents was at best evidence of occasional and brief sojourns. Under the circumstances of this case, not even residence was indicated, to say nothing of an occupancy other than and independent of that of the formal lessee and tiller of the whole farm.
We affirm because the service upon Johnson, the plaintiffs' tenant, accomplished fully the purpose of the statute and plaintiffs were not prejudiced in the slightest by the absence of service upon those in occasional and fleeting tenure of the hunting lodge.
Judgment affirmed. *50