13 Wis. 10 | Wis. | 1860
By the Court,
The material facts of this case are as follows: Matthias Thullen and wife executed to Louis Weimar, the mortgage to foreclose which this suit is brought, on the 22d day of July, 1855, and it was recorded on the 26th of the same month. Afterwards, in March, 1856, they executed a second mortgage upon the same premises, to Moses Weil, which was duly recorded, and was afterwards as
The conclusion to which we have come upon the first question, makes it unnecessary for us to determine the second. Though if the first should be answered in the affirmative, and it should be held that Weimar’s rights would, in such case, have been cut off, and vested in the purchaser, there is much reason for holding that, under our registry laws, which make an assignee of a mortgage a purchaser, an unrecorded assignment from Weimar could not be set up afterwards against the purchaser’s title. Suppose Downer had purchased from the mortgagor, and Weimar had released the first mortgage, Downer having no notice of its assignment. Would he not then be entitled to protection, as a bona Jide purchaser, under the registry laws ? And if so, would he not be equally entitled to it, if he purchased under a judicial proceeding against Weimar, which was as competent to divest his interest as a release executed by him? These questions have suggested themselves, in our consideration of this case, but as we do not find it necessary to determine them, we shall express no opinion in regard to them. The case of Wilson vs. Kimball, 7 Fost. (N. H.), 300, is a very strong authority in favor of the rights of such an assignee. But whether that conclusion could be sustained under our registry laws, is a matter worthy of serious consideration.
But we are of the opinion that the rights of’Weimar would not have been divested by the foreclosure and sale, even if he had still held the first mortgage. His mortgage was a prior incumbrance to the one being foreclosed, and of course the right under it was paramount both to the rights of the mortgagor and to those of the owner of the second mortgage. As such he was not a necessary party to the foreclosure suit on the second. And if made a party, without any allegation contesting his title, he had a right to assume that the proceeding was to be conducted upon the theory that his claim was paramount, and therefore not subject to it It seems to be established by the authorities that those claiming title adverse to the mortgagor,
We think, therefore, that the rights under the first mortgage would not have been cut off, even though Weimar had
Tbe judgment is affirmed, witb costs.