December 31, 1925, J. Edwin Thamert filed complaint in foreclosure against Marvin A. Yoakum and Elsie J. Yoakum, his wife, Warren J. Yoakum, Henry Ausman and Ida Ausman, his wife, Charles A. Wyman and Ida Wyman, his wife, and on the same day summons issued. January 7, 1926, W.M. Steekman, then deputy sheriff of Adams county, certified that he received the summons December 31, 1925, and thereafter on January 4, 1926, personally served the same in said county on all such defendants, except Warren J. Yoakum. February 9, 1926, the clerk entered the default of all the defendants so served. March 2, 1926, the foreclosure suit was dismissed, by order, as to defendant Warren J. Yoakum, and on that day decree of foreclosure was rendered and entered. Thereafter an order of sale issued and the mortgaged property sold. March 31, 1926, a deficiency judgment was docketed. January 19, 1933 Charles A. Wyman moved to vacate and set aside the decree of foreclosure and deficiency judgment upon the grounds that a copy of the summons and complaint in foreclosure were not served on him and that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to entitle the plaintiff in foreclosure to take a deficiency judgment against him. The *Page 280 motion was supported by the affidavits of Marvin A. Yoakum, Elsie Yoakum, Ida Ausman, Charles A. Wyman, Ida Wyman and H.A. Bishop, and opposed by the affidavit of the deputy sheriff. Before that motion was finally decided, Wyman moved that the court make findings upon the question as to whether he had, or had not, been served with a copy of the complaint and summons in the foreclosure suit. April 29, 1933, an order was made, and later and on May 2, 1933, filed, denying the motion to vacate the deficiency judgment, but declining to make the requested findings.
As hereinbefore stated, the deficiency judgment was docketed March 31, 1926, and the motion to vacate that judgment was made January 19, 1933, more than six and nearly seven years later.
It is earnestly and forcefully contended by appellant that he had two remedies, either by suit in equity to set the decree and deficiency judgment aside, or by motion in the foreclosure suit to vacate the decree and deficiency judgment, and that such remedies are coextensive.
Appellant chose the remedy of moving in the foreclosure suit against the decree and deficiency judgment, but not under section
While respondent concedes that section
We have examined the complaint in foreclosure (a part of the judgment-roll), in the case at bar, and find from such examination, that it states sufficient facts to support the deficiency judgment, and it further appears that the decree of foreclosure is regular on its face, and that that is also true of the deficiency judgment. The alleged failure to serve a copy of the summons and complaint upon appellant does not appear upon the face of the judgment-roll, and appellant did not commence an independent suit in equity to set the decree and deficiency judgment aside, and the motion to vacate the same was not made until nearly seven years after the deficiency judgment was docketed.
The judgment-roll being regular and sufficient on its face, we conclude that, under all the facts shown by the record, this is a proper case for the application of the rule in the Barr case. Applying the rule in and upon the authority of that case, the order of the trial court is affirmed, with costs to respondent.
Givens, Morgan, and Wernette, JJ., concur. *Page 283
