Court Opinion

ID: 8654782
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-24 21:14:49.325927+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:56:39.455715
License: Public Domain

ROLAPP, District Judge,
after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the court.
This appeal involves simply the determination of the question as to where an action shall be brought for the foreclosure of a real mortgage, when the indebtedness by express terms is made payable in one county and the real estate securing the payment of such indebtedness is situated in another county. Our statute provides that “there can be but one action for the recovery of any debt secured by mortgage” (Rev. Stat. 1898, section 3498); that “a mortgage of real property shall not be deemed a conveyance, whatever its terms, so as to enable the owner of the mortgage to recover possession *50of the real property, without a forecolsnre and sale” (Id. section 3517); and that “actions for the following canses must be tried in the county in which the subject of the action or some part thereof is situated: . . . Subd. 3. For the foreclosure of all liens and mortgages on real property” (Id. section 2928). Respondent contends, however, that this latter section is unconstitutional, as being in conflict with that part of the provisions of article 8, section 5, of the Constitution of this State, which reads as follows: “All civil and criminal business arising in any county must be tried in such county. ’ ’ As general propositions of law, he insists that in ease of a debt evidenced by a promissory note secured by mortgage the debt is the principal thing, and the mortgage is but an incident and collateral thereto; that with the establishment of the doctrine in this country that a mortgage is a mere security for the payment of the debt, a breach of condition for the payment merely gives to the mortgagee a right to proceed for his judgment against the security; that, in other words, the breach of payment gives rise to the right of action, and that the mortgagee’s right to foreclose does not accrue and his cause of action does not arise until the time when and the place where the debt becomes due and remains unpaid; and that it is upon this essential fact of failure to pay the notes that the right to foreclose the mortgage is based. Upon this correct statement of fundamental legal principles, and based upon the decisions of this court that an action can only be commenced in the county where the cause of action arises (Konold v. Rio Grande Wes. Ry. Co., 16 Utah 151, 51 Pac. 256), and the further decision that a cause of action for the nonpayment of a note arises alone in the county in which the instrument is made payable (Overland Mining Co. v. McMaster, 19 Utah 177, 56 Pac. 977), the respondent very naturally concluded to commence this action in the county where the note, by its express terms, was made payable, rather than to follow the statutory direction to commence such action where the mortgaged *51premises were situate. Counsel for respondent were doubtless aware of the fact that this court, by way of dicta, in two cases has held that section 2928, Eev. St., affecting the venue of actions for mortgage foreclosure, is in force, and not unconstitutional; yet they evidently reasoned that whenever the matter should come directly before this court the contrary conclusion must inevitably follow from the past views of this tribunal upon the constitutional clause involved.
The more recent decisions of Gibbs v. Gibbs, 26 Utah 382, 73 Pac. 641, and Fields v. Daisy Gold Min. Co., 26 Utah 373, 73 Pac. 521, however, overrule the former decisions and are more in accord with my views of the correct interpretation of the constitutional clause in question than are the decisions rendered prior to that time. It has always been difficult for me to understand the reasons for the past judicial correctness of the apparently wholly unambiguous language in our Constitution: “All civil and criminal business arising in any county must be tried in such county. ’ ’ This statement would seem to be so plain that it would require no judicial interpretation, much less to have caused so much uncertainty as to venue as has in fact been produced. I apprehend that the error has arisen from the judicial notion that the constitutional convention intended to upset an existing judicial system, when, as a matter of, fact they apparently desired simply to provide for the holding of trial courts in each county, and gave to such courts probate as well as ordinary civil and criminal jurisdic- ■ tion. With this, as I think, erroneous judicial notion before them, the Supreme Court of this State felt impelled to give an entirely different meaning to the constitutional clause in question than the language itself would ordinarily warrant. In the dissenting opinion of Gibbs v. Gibbs, supra, Justice BAETCH severely criticises the chief justice for substituting the words “causes of action” for the word “business” in the clause mentioned; and yet I can conceive of no other reasonable inference that can be drawn from the pre-existing opinions of this *52court upon this subject. Says the court in the case of Konold v. R. G. W. Ry. Co., 16 Utah 151, 155, 51 Pac. 256, 257, when this question was first before this court: “The manifest intention was that all suits, civil and criminal, should be brought, and the cases tried, in the county in which the causes of action arose.” Clearly, that is as nearly the same substitution of language as that indicated by the chief justice. Again, in the case of Desert Irrigation Co. v. McIntyre, 16 Utah 398, 402, 52 Pac. 628, 629, it is said: “A case must be commenced in the county where the cause of action arose. ’ ’ In the case of Mosby v. Gisborn, 17 Utah, 257, 275, 54 Pac. 121, 126, the court uses the following language affecting the same constitutional clause: “The phrase, ‘civil business’ means such civil business as amounts to a cause of action, as the law defines a cause of action; and by ‘criminal business’ is meant such conduct, attended with such intent, as amounts to a crime, as the law defines a crime.”
Later, when the objection was raised that such interpretation would make nugatory certain statutory provisions, this court expressed itself as follows in the case of Bach v. Brown, 17 Utah 435, 443, 53 Pac. 991, 994: “Under the mandate of the Constitution the action must be commenced where the cause arose. It is true, under the former practice, before statehood, a transitory action, like the one at bar, could be brought where the defendant resided; but that practice no longer exists in this State. The people in their sovereign capacity, by their fundamental law, have ordained otherwise, and neither by interpretation nor legislative enactment can the old practice be restored. Sess. Laws 1896, c. 93, in so far as it authorizes the bringing of an action upon a contract in the county where the defendant resides, when such contract, by stipulation therein, is to be performed in another, is in conflict with Const. art. 8, section 5, and is void.” Again, in the case of Condon v. Leipsiger, 17 Utah 498, 501, 55 Pac. 82, the following expression of the law is found: “The phrase ‘civil bus*53iness ’ means the fact or facts that constitute the cause of action, and ‘ criminal business ’ means criminal acts constituting the crime. . . . When all the facts essential to a cause of action exist, the cause of action has arisen, and can only be tried in the county in which it arose. ’ ’ Again, in Woodward v. Edmunds, 20 Utah 118 121, 57 Pac. 848, the court uses the following language: “It is a fundamental right of every defendant in an action in this State to have the same commenced and tried within the county where the act which gave rise to the cause of action occurred.”
Prom these expressions it would seem settled without doubt that this court intended to convey that the word “business” in the Constitution meant “causes of action,” including probate and other civil proceedings. Following this interpretation, by indirect substitution, and as a resulting consequence thereof, the word “arising,” also contained in the same clause, became correspondingly amazingly important and difficult of interpretation, and nearly every decision affecting this clause has striven to determine when a “cause of action” should be said to have “arisen.” In my opinion, none of this substituted interpretation should have been resorted to, and I think could have been entirely obviated by accepting the ordinary and natural meaning of the words used in the Constitution as the meaning most likely intended by its framers. The word “business,” in its ordinary broad sense, simply means those matters which occupy the attention and labor of men engaged in definite affairs. Webster’s definition of the word ‘ ‘ arise ” is “ to come into being or notice. ’ ’ Remembering now that the clause in question refers wholly to courts, court officers, and court affairs, and applying the above ordinary definitions of the words actually used to such conditions, then the paraphrased clause •would read: “All civil and criminal matters occupying the attention and labor of men engaged in legal affairs (business) coming into being or notice (arising) in any county, must be heard and determined (tried) in *54such county.” If the constitutional convention had used this verbose method of stating what they as clearly expressed in fewer words, there could have been no opportunity for maintaining that by this language they intended by implication to both repeal existing statutory provisions and to overrule established common-law principles. Unquestionably, the members of the constitutional convention were fully aware of the then existing statutory and common-law principles affecting the venue of actions and proceedings, and they apparently simply desired to provide that all legal matters coming into being in any particular county under the then existing law should be heard and determined by the courts created by them in such particular county, and not transferred to some other county, probably more convenient to the bench and bar. I fully agree with the view expressed by Justice BARTCH in his dissenting opinion in the case of Gibbs v. Gibbs, supra, that a judge “has no right to substitute his own notion of what the phraseology of a particular provision should be for that of the sovereign power,” and I further think that there should not be impugned to that sovereign power an intention to overthrow established legal principles, so vitally important as those affecting the venue of their disputes, unless such intention is clearly manifest from the document itself, and should not be determined by the unrecorded notions of any particular person as to the public needs or demands in that regard.
From the foregoing views it is apparent that I am of the opinion that there are no statutory provisions of this State which conflict with the provisions of article 8, section 5, of the Constitution. Consequently, the action at bar should have been commenced, as the statute directed, in the county of Tooele, where the real property securing the debt was situate. The demurrer to the complaint was improperly overruled, and judgment illegally entered.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded to the lower court, with instructions to proceed in ae-*55cordanee with, the views herein expressed. Under the circumstances, we are of the opinion that the costs on appeal should he equally divided between the parties.