Machold v. Farnan

SULLIVAN, J.

This action is a continuation of the litigation of the parties hereto begun in April, 1907. See Machold v. Farnan, 14 Ida. 258, 94 Pac. 170, reference to which opinion is made for some of the facts in this ease. The action was originally brought for the specific performance of the contract sued on in this action, and the theory upon which the case was then tried was that said contract was for the sale of real estate. On the first trial judgment was given to the plaintiff and on appeal the judgment was reversed and a new trial granted. After the ease was remanded for a new trial, the plaintiff filed an amended complaint, wherein it was alleged that a certain deed from one Millick to the defendant Farnan and a contract between the parties hereto were intended as a mortgage to secure the payment of money loaned to appellant, and prayed that the deed from the Oregon Mortgage Company to Millick and from Millick to the defendant be adjudged and decreed to be mortgages, and that the plaintiff be adjudged and decreed to be the owner of the premises described therein,- that the defendant be adjudged to account and pay to plaintiff the damages he has sustained by the breach of the covenant to convey said land to plaintiff, and that plaintiff be given a money judgment against the said defendant to comply with section 3364, Rev. Stat. of Idaho, 1887 (sec. 3402, Rev. Codes), and for costs of suit.

An answer was filed to said amended complaint in which its material allegations were denied, and respondent set forth allegations to quiet her title to said land, which cross-complaint was answered by appellant. The cause was again tried upon the new issues thus made, and the trial court made its findings of fact and conclusions of law and entered judgment holding said deed to the defendant and contract between the *85defendant and plaintiff to be a mortgage to secure tbe payment of $2,000, together with interest and taxes to the date of said trial, amounting in aE to $2,929.87, and further adjudging that the appellant have ninety days in which to make payment of the amount so found due, and upon the payment thereof that the said property be freed and discharged from any claim or lien held or possessed by respondent by reason of said mortgage. It was further ordered that in the event appellant failed to make payment of said amount within the time limited, that respondent’s title to the land and premises should be quieted as against appellant. The appeal is from said judgment and from the order denying a new trial.

Numerous errors are assigned and a brief containing sixty-nine pages of printed matter and a supplemental brief containing fourteen pages of typewritten matter were filed by the appellant, who appears as his own attorney.

In our view of the matter, it wEl not be necessary for us in this opinion to pass upon each of the errors assigned, but will say at the outset that we have examined them all in connection with the briefs and argument of counsel for appellant and find no reversible error in the record.

We will say in limine that the prayer of the complaint contains a request that the deed and agreement be declared a mortgage, but it does not ask permission to redeem from that mortgage. It was held in Mack v. Hill, 28 Mont. 99, 72 Pac. 307, that there is no such thing as an action for the sole object of declaring a deed to be a mortgage, as the court wiE not grant that relief unless the plaintiff shaE be willing to have the whole controversy disposed of by offering to redeem from the mortgage so established. The case at bar, however, was treated as one in which permission to redeem is sought and the findings and decree were entered upon that theory. This action having been tried upon that theory, it was proper for the court to find the amount due and to order that it be paid within a reasonable time, or in the event of failure to make payment, that the plaintiff’s action be dismissed.

*86In Cowing v. Rogers, 34 Cal. 648, from which the Montana court in Mack v. Hill, supra, quoted, the court said:

“It is very clear that when he [the mortgagor] does sue, offering to redeem and praying that the premises may be reconveyed to him, the court is authorized, if the facts warrant it, to declare that the deed, absolute in its terms, was intended as a mortgage, and to prescribe the terms of redemption and reconveyance. Such judgment is as binding upon the grantor in respect to the redemption, as upon the grantee in respect to the character of the instrument and the conveyance. It is one of the incidents of a mortgage that where the mortgagor seeks the aid of a court of equity in effecting a redemption, the court may prescribe the terms of the redemption. ’ ’

27 Cyc., p. 1859, states the rule as follows:

“Where the equity is found to be with the complainant, the proper and usual form of the decree is that he be allowed to redeem upon the payment of the sum found to be due, within a reasonable time to be fixed by the court, and that upon such payment the mortgage shall be adjudged to be satisfied, but that in default of payment that bill shall be dismissed.”

And on page 1862 says:

“In settling a decree for redemption, tüe terms and conditions rest very much in the discretion of the court as exercised upon the.facts of each particular case. But the decree should find the exact amount due or necessary to redeem, and condition the redemption upon its payment within a fixed and limited time, the period being a matter for the court’s discretion, subject to the proviso that it should not be unreasonably short. ’ ’

From the holding of numerous authorities it seems that the general rule is that it is not necessary that there be any provision in the decree for the sale of the property when the court finds the deed and agreement to be a mortgage because the action is not an action to foreclose, and therefore the usual order of sale in foreclosure cases is not required. (Cowing v. Rogers, 34 Cal. 648; Cline v. Robbins, 112 Cal. 581, 44 Pac. *871023; Mack v. Hill, 28 Mont. 99, 72 Pac. 307; Decker v. Patton, 120 Ill. 464, 11 N. E. 897; Martin v. Ratcliff, 101 Mo. 254, 20 Am. St. 601, 13 S. W. 1051; Rodman v. Quick, 211 Ill. 546, 71 N. E. 1087.)

In Decker v. Patton, 120 Ill. 464, 11 N. E. 897, the court, in answer to the suggestion that the decree should have ordered the sale of the property, says:

“Had this been a bill foreclosing a mortgage, and had a decree been rendered cutting off the rights of the parties in interest without a sale of the mortgaged premises, and denying the redemption provided by statute, then there might be force in the argument. ’ ’

In Martin v. Ratcliff, 101 Mo. 254, 20 Am. St. 601, 13 S. W. 1051, it is said:

“Our statute concerning mortgages and deeds of trust contemplates a sale of the premises in all suits brought to foreclose such instruments, and a strict foreclosure in any such case would be erroneous on its face. There is no doubt but that the court may, on a petition to redeem, direct a sale of the premises in the event the redemption money is not paid within the specified time. And in such eases the sale may be ordered, though there is no specific prayer therefor either in the petition or answer. But it is a different thing to say that a decree is, on its face, erroneous and must be reversed because it does not provide for a sale. The plaintiffs in this ease did not ask for a sale of the property in their petition. They did not, by motion or otherwise, ask the court to modify the decree. They have made no showing that a sale can be of any possible benefit to them. If this decree is reversed, it must be upon the ground that in all suits where there is a decree permitting the plaintiff to redeem, there must be a further order that in case of default in payment of the amount found due, the premises shall be sold. This, in our judgment, is not the law, for there is a wide distinction between a suit of foreclosure and one brought to redeem from a voidable foreclosure sale.”

In Rodman v. Quick, 211 Ill. 546, 71 N. E. 1087, it is said:

“The distinction must be carried in mind between a statu*88tory redemption which is from the sale, and not from the mortgage, and the equitable redemption established by the courts, in which the redemption is from the mortgage and not from any sale, and out of which springs the rule that the redemptor must do equity and pay all that is due under the mortgage.”

The decree, then, under the allegations and prayer of the complaint, in substance and form is in accordance with the law, and violates no right of the appellant as mortgagor, but, on the contrary, grants him the equitable relief for which he prays upon condition that he do equity himself.

The appellant contends that he made a tender of $2,268 and kept that tender good, and for that reason the court erred in finding that there was any greater sum than that due on said contract. It appears that the plaintiff tendered that amount on April 6, 1907, just prior to bringing the first suit thereon, heretofore referred to, on the theory that said contract was a contract of sale and not a mortgage. Said money was deposited with the clerk of the court and on the 20th day of May, 1908, withdrawn from the clerk. It appears that after the case was remanded from this court on the first appeal, the plaintiff on June 8, 1908, filed his first amended complaint, he having withdrawn from the clerk said deposit prior to filing said amended complaint. However, plaintiff alleged in the eleventh paragraph of said first amended complaint that he had made said deposit with the clerk on the 6th of April, 1907, “to be held by him until accepted by defendant or until the determination of this suit.” It appears that said money had been withdrawn from such deposit some eighteen days prior to the filing of said amended complaint, and there was no tender on deposit at the time said first amended complaint was filed. Thereafter, on the 21st day of November, 1908, by leave of court, a second amended complaint was filed, on which this action was tried. In the fifth paragraph of the second amended complaint plaintiff alleges the tender of $2,268 on the 6th day of April, 1907, and that he kept said sum on deposit with the clerk of the *89court for defendant for a period of about fourteen months, and that during all of said time defendant refused to accept said money or any part thereof, and alleges that plaintiff is ready, able and willing and now offers to pay the defendant the sum of $2,268. Said sum was not the amount due at the 'time said second amended complaint was filed. It thus appears that when said money was first tendered, it was tendered by the plaintiff upon the theory that said contract was a contract for the sale of said land to the plaintiff, and that time was not of the essence of said contract, and that it was the duty of defendant to receive said money and convey said land to the appellant. While the defendant agreed with the plaintiff that it was in effect a contract of sale, she contended that time was of the essence of said contract, and as the money was not paid at the date fixed in the contract, or to which the date of payment had been extended, the contract was forfeited. Said money was not tendered upon the theory that said contract was a mortgage. That being true, the tender was not a tender in payment of said mortgage, and was withdrawn before the first amended complaint was filed upon the theory that said contract was a mortgage. In the second amended complaint, the plaintiff alleges that he “is ready, able and willing and now offers to pay defendant the sum of $2,268.” Upon the facts as they appear in the record, the tender was not sufficient, as it did not include interest to the date of filing said amended complaint. To stop the running of interest, it was not only necessary that plaintiff should tender the whole amount due, but if the money so tendered was not accepted, it was necessary for him to keep it on deposit subject to respondent’s demand or to make a sufficient offer in writing to avoid the necessity of keeping it on deposit. Appellant did neither, as there was no tender in writing in the amended complaint. After plaintiff deposited the money, he withdrew it and did not leave in lieu thereof any offer in writing to pay it. The respondent was then left without the money and without a written tender. The offer of November 21, 1908, found in the second amended complaint, is not a *90sufficient offer to bring him within the terms of sec. 6110, Rev. Codes, which provides:

“An offer in writing to pay a particular sum of money, or to deliver a written instrument or specific personal property, is, if not accepted, equivalent to the actual production and tender of the money, instrument or property.”

In the first amended complaint the plaintiff alleged that he had deposited the money with the clerk to await the determination of the action; when as a matter of fact he had withdrawn it eighteen days before said complaint was filed. And in the second amended complaint, the amount due on said mortgage was not tendered in writing. Said tender was not sufficient to prevent the running of interest.

Appellant prays for damages in his complaint under the provisions of section 3402, Rev. Codes. This prayer is upon the theory that he had tendered a sufficient amount of money to pay in full said mortgage, and under the provisions of said statute, after a mortgage has been satisfied, the mortgagee or assignee of such mortgagee who refuses to execute, acknowledge, and deliver to the mortgagor the certificate of discharge, or to enter satisfaction, or cause satisfaction of the mortgage to be entered, is liable to the mortgagor or his grantee or heirs, for all damages which he or they may sustain by reason of such refusal, and shall also forfeit to him the sum of one hundred dollars. After this action was brought upon the theory that said contract was a mortgage, no tender has been made of sufficient money to pay the amount due on said contract with interest. The plaintiff is therefore not entitled to any damages whatever under the provisions of said sec. 3402.

Both parties no doubt acted honestly in the belief that said contract was not a mortgage. They had the advice of able counsel, and their advice to their clients was that said contract was a contract of sale and not a mortgage, and under the theory of the first action on said contract; the defendant refused to receive said tender on the ground that said tender was not made in time. At the time the second amended com*91plaint was filed, the money deposited with the clerk had been withdrawn about six months previous thereto. The plaintiff in his second amended complaint does not tender the amount due on said indebtedness, but his offer is to pay the same amount that he first tendered, which was tendered on the theory above stated about eighteen months after the first tender was made. The trial court, after hearing the case and ascertaining the amount due to respondent, gave appellant three months to make payment thereof, and decreed that in ease he failed to make such payment, the title to said property should be quieted in respondent.

(August 22, 1911.)

Under the facts and law, that judgment and decree are correct. The judgment must therefore be affirmed, with the exception, however, that the time for paying said judgment with interest thereon at the rate of seven per cent from the date said judgment was entered, will be extended to the first day of September, 1911, and if it be not paid within that time, the title shall be quieted in the respondent, and it is so ordered. The cause is remanded to the trial court with instructions to modify the judgment to the extent above indicated ; that is, extend the time for the payment thereof until the first day of September, 1911. Costs are awarded to respondent.

Ailshie, Presiding J., concurs.