Schill v. Korthof

Dibell,, J.

Action to foreclose a mortgage. There were findings for the defend*444ants and tbe plaintiff appeals from the order denying his motion for a new trial.

1. The controversy is between the plaintiff Schill and the defendant Forsyth.

August 11, 1913, defendant Steele, the owner, gave Schill a mortgage for $1,200.

January 27, 1914, Steele gave Forsyth a mortgage for $800 on the same property. This mortgage was by its terms subject to the $1,200 Schill mortgage.

On March 11, 1914, one Hicks filed a mechanic’s lien. The lien dated from June 13, 1913. It was prior to both mortgages, unless facts prevented an assertion of priority. In the foreclosure it was adjudged that Hicks had a lien for $189.99, which was prior to the Schill mortgage and subsequent to the Forsyth mortgage. It was subsequent to the Forsyth mortgage, because Forsyth took the mortgage in reliance on Hicks’ statement that no claim for a lien would be made against the mortgage. This created an estoppel. On June 7, 1915, the property was sold on foreclosure to J. W. Dreger for $217.64. The evidence is that Dreger purchased in the interest of Schill to protect his mortgage. For the purposes of this appeal. Dreger is Schill.' No redemption was made from the sale.

Upon the theory that the lien foreclosure ripened into a title which destroyed the lien of the plaintiff’s mortgage, the court held that the mortgage was not a lien and that the plaintiff could not foreclose. The net result is that Schill loses his $1,200 mortgage and gets, under the lien foreclosure, a title which is subject to the $800 Forsyth mortgage, which by its terms was made subject to the Schill $1,200 mortgage.

The trial court recognized the hardship resulting to the plaintiff, but felt compelled to adopt the theory stated. It is of course true that Schill, to prevent his mortgage being lost by a redemption from the foreclosure sale by a lien creditor subsequent to his mortgage, must have redeemed from the lien foreclosure though he owned both the mortgage and the interest acquired under the foreclosure. This was held in Pamperin v. Scanlan, 28 Minn. 345, 9 N. W. 868, cited by the trial court in its memorandum, and again in Moore v. Penney, 141 Minn. 454, 170 N. W. 599, 3 L.R.A. 161, where the subject is discussed and the author*445ities are collated. Here, however, the controversy is 'between Schill and Forsyth and no others are concerned. There is such equity in the plaintiff that he should be allowed to keep alive his mortgage lien as against the lien of the Forsyth mortgage, though he purchased at the lien foreclosure sale. Forsyth has no equity calling for the destruction of the ■lien of the $1,200 mortgage subject to which his $800 mortgage was taken. If there were a statute making the result necessary in a particular case, -as in the two cases cited, or 'in 'equity in anyone interested in the property requiring such result, Schill would be required to lose the lien of the $1,200 mortgage. With the whole controversy between Schill and Forsyth there is neither a statute nor an equity calling for such result. As between the two, Schill’s mortgage should be held a live lien and prior to the lien of the Forsyth mortgage. The doctrine of merger, which is of equitable application, does not operate to destroy the lien.

2. It does not follow that Forsyth loses the advantage of the judgment subordinating the Hicks lien. Schill claims that there was no prayer for relief in the foreclosure action justifying the subordination of the Forsyth mortgage to the lien, that he defaulted, and that with him in default the court was without jurisdiction to grant such relief. Sache v. Wallace, 101 Minn. 169, 112 N. W. 386, 11 L.R.A. (N.S.) 803, 118 Am. St. 612, 11 Ann. Cas. 348. However this may be Schill bought under a judgment giving the priority stated.

The defendant cites Malmgren v. Phinney, 50 Minn. 457, 52 N. W. 915, 18 L.R.A. 753. There is nothing in that ease contrary to our holding here. It was followed in Miller v. Stoddard, 54 Minn. 486, 56 N. W. 131. Both state the rule of distribution settled in this state. The rule for working out the priorities is not difficult. Schill cannot have the -amount of the lien foreclosure sale paid out of the proceeds of a foreclosure before the Forsyth mortgage is paid. The Schill mortgage will be paid first and then the Forsyth mortgage. As between Schill and Forsyth, and they are the only ones contending here, exact equity is done.

The case will be Temanded for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.

Order reversed.