21 N.M. 275 | N.M. | 1915
OPINION OP THE COURT.
The plaintiff below, appellee here, has moved to dismiss the appeal for nonjoinder of necessary parties, both as appellants and appellees. It is pointed ont in the motion that the transcript shows that two defendants and three other defendants, as copartners, appeared in the cause, and filed their answers, setting forth and claiming liens upon the mortgaged property, and were, by the findings and judgment of the district court from which this appeal is taken, adjudged and decreed to have liens upon the mortgaged property, two of them prior and superior to the rights of appellee, and one concurrent with him, and all superior to the other defendants ; that said mortgaged property was decreed to be sold to satisfy their said liens, as well as the lien qf appellee herein, and provided, of course, for the cutting off of the equity of redemption of the appellants and said other defendants; that two other of the defendants appeared and filed a joint answer with appellant in the court below, and thereby attempted to set up a common defense to appellee’s complaint, and also alleged certain interests in said mortgaged property, and defended said suit jointly with appellant; and that the decree of foreclosure was equally against the last-named defendants and appellant; that still another defendant appeared in the suit in-the lower court; and that the decree was equally against him and the appellant.
It appears from the foregoing brief statement of the contents of the motion, and from the record, that the main controversy was between the appellant.and appellee on the question as to the amount due under the mortgage. Appellant claimed that only $57,000 of the par value of the bonds of appellant had ever been issued, and that $193,000 par value of said bonds was still the property of the appellant. The appellee claimed that the whole issue of $250,000 of the par value of said bonds had been issued. Upon this issue the court found with the appellee, and decreed a foreclosure, as before seen. Two of the defendants were adjudged to have prior liens to that of the mortgagee for certain specified' amounts, and one of the defendants was adjudged to have a Hen of equal rank with that of the mortgagee. Two others of the defendants claimed to own some portion'of the property covered by the mortgage, and the court held against them in the decree. Another defendant made a similar claim and was likewise unsuccessful.
In this connection it is to be noted ¡hat where parties have separate rights and interests, and unless joinder is essential to the jurisdiction of the appellate court, the nonjoinder of parties, either as appellants or plaintiffs in error, or as appellees, will generally have no further effect than to preclude any investigation or adjudication which will affect the rights of the parties not joined. 3 C. J. p. 1034, § 1017. We do not find that the joinder of the three lien claimants as appellees is necessary to the jurisdiction of this rourt upon this appeal. The provisions of our statutes (sections 4473-4476, Code 1915) contain no requirement to the effect that all parties to the proceeding in the court below shall be brought into this court in order that this court may acquire jurisdiction of the cause. The effect of an appeal by the defendant mortgagor without joining the three lien claimants is to preclude the mortgagor from presenting to this court any question concerning the rights of these lien claimants. The mortgagee over whose claim two of the lien claimants were declared to -have superior liens, and one was declared to have a concurrent lien, is not in a position to question the decree, he having taken no cross-appeal. As between themselves, the three lien claimants will be assumed to be satisfied with the decree, because liad any of them been dissatisfied, it would have been incumbent upon them, to either join with the appellant or sue ont a cross-appeal.
As to the-defendant the Glendale Power Company, the ■question was whether, under the circumstances, the defendant mortgagor had power to :onvey awav the portion of its property represented by water rights and pipe lines, and the court held that it had no such nower, and that the rights of the Glendale Power Company, if it had any, were inferior to those of the plaintiff under the trust deed of the defendant mortgagor. Both of these power companies were thus deprived of a claimed property right by the decree. As to the principal defendant, the mortgagor, the question was as to the right of the bondholders to claim default and foreclosure, under the'circumstances. It was not interested in the sense that it had a propel ty right in anything claimed by the two power companies, except that, if its conveyance to the Glendale Power Company was held to be .unavailing, it' might have some interest in the equity of redemption in the property so conveyed by it. •
It thus appears that these three defendant corporation's have an interest in the reversal-of the decree, bat for different reasons in each case. The question then is: Assuming, that the two power companies, and of- course their trustee, Dines, are necessary- parties appellant, whether the motion of plaintiff to dismiss the appeal for their failure to join.shall be granted.. The matter is entirely controlled by statute in this jurisdiction, and for that mason it is unnecessary to discuss the general principles governing the matter in the absence of statute. By- section 4476, Code 1915, .it is provided that: .
“Any person who ought to join in a .writ of error or appeal may he permitted to do so on his application, on such terms as the court shall impose, and the writ and proceedings shall he amended hy inserting his name and shall .proceed as in other cases.”
The motion to dismiss the appeal was' filed July 12, 1915, and on August 9, 1915, the defendants the Clear Creek Power Company, the Glendale Power Company, and Tyson S. Dines, as trustee, filed their' application to-be made parties appellant in the cause. This was clearly a sufficient compliance with the terms of the statute, and authorizes the entry into this case, as appellants of these parties. This statute was adopted from Missouri, and is in the identical language there employed. In State v. Mining Co., 169 Mo. App. 79, 154 S. W. 168, just such a proposition was before the court, and it was there held that this section of the statute controlled the matter, and prevented a dismissal of the cause for want of necessary parties appellant.
As to' the surety Herman, who was one of the lien ■claimants declared by'the decree to have a prior lien on the property to that of plaintiff, and, as a partner with two others, to have a concurrent lien with the plaintiff, the plaintiffs position is untenable. Assuming, as is erroneously argued, that Herman is a necessary' party appellee to this appeal, his act in joining with the appellant ■and signing its supersedeas bond amounts to a waiver on his part of his right to have the decree enforced at this time. Of this the plaintiff cannot complain. As to the ■other lien claimants who are sought to be prevented by the supersedeas from an enforcement of the decree in their favor, it is sufficient to say that the plaintiff is not authorized to speak for them, and is not concerned in the preservation of their rights. When they shall complain that their rights have been infringed will be time enough to inquire.as to the qualification of said Herman as a surety ■and the other matters suggested in the brief.
In this connection, we assume that the lien claimant defendants have the right to voluntarily appear in this case at this time, and present to the court the fact that there is no supersedeas bond in this ease running to them, and that for that reason they are entitled to have the supersedeas quashed by this court. Should they do so, an entirely different question will be presented, but until that, time the'plaintiff appellee has suffered no injury by the superseding of tbie; judgment, providing he has a good supersedeas bond.
The motion to dismiss the appeal and quash the supersedeas will be denied, and the application of the three parties to be made parties appellants will be allowed upon the conditions hereinafter stated, and the motion for leave to have citation served upon the absent lien claimants will be denied.
It appearing that the nonjoinder of the three parties as-appellants has entailed upon the plaintiff below the -unnecessary expense of having counsel attend upon this court to present the matters herein mentioned, they will be allowed to appear and join as appellants herein upon the payment into the registry of this court, for the use and benefit of the plaintiff appellee, of the sum of $500 in 20 days after notice of this order, and in default thereof their-said application will be denied; and it is so ordered.