19 S.D. 437 | S.D. | 1905
This was an action to foreclose a certain chattel mortgage on a stock of merchandise and a-real estate mortgage executed by the defendants Mary Braun, Henry Braun, and Henry S. Shaper. Findings and judgment being in favor of the defendants, the plaintiffs have appealed. The court found that at the time of the trial there was apparently, due the plaintiffs the sum of $1,779.87 on account of the mortgages executed to them, but it further found that the real estate mortgage was subsequent to, and subject to a lien of, one Peck, who had a prior mortgage upon said property, which had been foreclosed, and the property sold, and redeemed by plaintiffs for $1,009.41, by virtue of their subsequent mortgage. The court further found that the property at the time of the redemption was of the value of $3,000, and it concludes from its findings that the defendants should he credited with the full amount found due from them to the plaintiffs; that sum being less than the difference between the amount required to redeem the property from sale and the value of the property at the time of the redemption, and, giving the defendants the benefit of this credit, the mortgages, both real and personal, were satisfied, and thereupon entered judgment in favor of the defendants.
The principal question presentedfor our decision is: Were the defendants, upon the redemption of the property by the plaintiffs from the sale under the Peck mortgage, entitled to
• This question was fully considered and discussed by the supreme court of Minnesota in the case of Sprague v. Martin, 29 Minn. 226, 13 N. W. 34, in which it was held: “A redemption.from foreclosure sale, by a judgment creditor of the mortgagor, of property exceeding in value the amount of the judgment and the sum paid to make such redemption, satisfied the judgment and extinguishes the right to make further redemp-tions by virtue of the same judgment.” In the opinion that learned court says: “As the foreclosure proceeding by the mortgagee is a process by which the mortgaged property is applied to the payment of his debt secured thereby, so the successive redemptions by creditors are a proceeding for the enforcement of their respective liens, and applying the property to the satisfaction of debts thus secured. This is unquestionably the result of redemption by creditors intermediate;the. purchaser at foreclosure sale and the last redemption-er. - Suppose, for instance, that a mortgagee, A., becomes a purchaser at his. foreclosure sale, not paying money, but, as is generally- the case — and as was done in the case now before usr — buying with his mortgage debt. Suppose B. and 0. to be creditors of the mortgagors, having liens upon the property,
The reasoning of these courts m these cases meets with our approval, and establishes an equitable and just rule. If, as contended for by the appellants, the plaintiffs in this action by their redemption from the Peck foreclosure sale, acquired an absolute title to the property by the redemption, it
It is further contended by the appellants that the foreclosure of the chattel mortgage was not in reality a foreclosure, but a mere substitution in the form of security. There was some conflict in the evidence upon this question, but we are unable to say that there was preponderance of the evidence against the findings of the court. In fact, we are inclined to agree with the court that the evidence fully sustained its findings upon this question. ¶ No useful purpose would be served
It is further contended by the appellants that the court erred in excluding certain evidence offered by the plaintiffs, but we are of the opinion that there was no error on the part of the court in excluding such evidence, and in view of the length of this opinion we do not deem it necessary to enter upon a discussion of these rulings at this time.
It'is further contended that the court erred in reopening the case after the case was submitted to it, and permitting the defendants to introduce certain evidence which had inadvertently been omitted on the trial of the case. It would seem from the record in this case that there were a very large number of letters, documents, and records introduced in evidence, aggregating 100 or more, and that in the course of the trial the defendants had omitted to formally introduce in evidence the subsequent mortgage upon which the plaintiffs made the redemption and the notice of such redemption. The inadvertence was explained by the affidavit of counsel for defendants, and we are of the opinion that there was no abuse of the discretion of the court in opening up the case and permitting the defendants to supply proof. Matters of this kind are very largely in the discretion of the trial court, especially when trying a case without a jury; and unless there was clearly an abuse of such discretion the ruling of the court will not be disturbed. Citizens’ Bank v. Shaw, 14 S D. 197, 84 N. W. 779.
Finding no error in the record, the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.