Court Opinion

ID: 7893326
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 21:50:58.405126+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:31:59.262391
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Smith, J.:
This was a suit in foreclosure. E. E. Parker, plaintiff below, filed his petition against William Cook, Sarah J. Cook, and the Lincoln Mortgage and Trust Company, alleging that the individual parties named above executed and delivered to the Lincoln Mortgage and Trust Company their note in the sum of $900, together with a mortgage on certain of their real estate, to secure payment of the same ;• that the trust company assigned the note and mortgage to one Roberts, who was the plaintiff’s assignor. *820Against the trust company the following allegation was made in the petition :
“The plaintiff further alleges that the defendant the Lincoln Mortgage and Trust Company is a corporation duly organized, existing and doing business under the laws of the state of Kansas, and that said the Lincoln Mortgage and Trust Company is or claims to be the owner of the fee-simple title to real estate herein described, or has or claims to have an interest in or lien upon said mortgaged premises, the exact nature of which is to this plaintiff unknown, but plaintiff alleges that the said title, estate, lien or interest of the defendant the Lincoln Mortgage and Trust Company, whatever the same may be, is subsequent, inferior and junior to the mortgage lien of this plaintiff.”
The suit was commenced in 1900, and the petition showed that nothing of the principal or interest had been paid within ten years before the action was brought. William and Sarah J. Cook, the makers of the note and mortgage, did not plead in the case but were in default. The Lincoln Mortgage and Trust Company filed a general demurrer to the petition, which was overruled. Electing to stand on its claim of right to have the demurrer sustained, a decree was entered foreclosing the mortgage. It has come here, presenting the one question — that of limitation.
The question is whether, without disclosing its interest in the mortgaged real estate, the trust company was in a position to object that the action was barred by limitation. The nature of the claim of the trust company, or its interest in the property, nowise appeared in the petition. In Ordway v. Cowles, 45 Kan. 447 , 449 , 25 Pac. 862, a holder of a tax deed on mortgaged land sought to interpose, in a foreclosure suit *821involving the property, that the mortgage was barred by limitation as against the makers. The court said:
“The plaintiff in error insists that the note and mortgage of the plaintiffs below were barred by the statute ; that the notes became due January 1, 1883, and that the five years had completely run before he filed his answer. The suit was commenced on the 14th day of October, 1887, and the five years had not elapsed; besides, we do not think that Ordway can avail himself of the statute of limitations. He claims under a distinct and independent title, in no way derivéd from the mortgagor. Generally, the plea of the statute of limitations is a personal privilege, and a third party cannot interpose the defense. (Baldwin v. Boyd, 18 Neb. 444, 25 N. W. 580; Wood, Lim., 1st ed., §41; 10 A. & E. Encycl. of L. 710; 7 Wait, Act. & Def. 236; Waterson v. Kirkwood, 17 Kan. 9.)”
Under the rule stated, if the trust company had answered, setting up a title not derived from or through the mortgagors, it could not avail itself of the fact that the statute of limitations had barred the right of action against the makers of the mortgage. The proposition presented has received attention in courts of other states and in the federal courts. In Corbey v. Rogers, 152 Ind. 169, 170, 52 N. E. 748, the allegations in the complaint read: “The defendant Corbey claims to have some interest in said estate, but if he has any interest it is subject to plaintiff’s mortgage lien, and said defendant, therefore, is made a defendant to answer as to his interest so claimed.” It was held that, without a disclosure showing his interest in the property, the defendant could not plead the statute of limitations. See, also, Board v. First Presbyterian Church, 19 Wash. 455.
In Blair v. Silver Peak Mines, 84 Fed. 737, it was held that one who is made defendant in a foreclosure suit merely because he claims some interest in the *822mortgaged property, without any allegation in the bill that he owes any part of the debt, or is in possession of any part of the property, or has any legal title thereto, cannot by demurrer set up the defense of the statute of limitations. In the ease at bar, the trust company might have satisfied the demands of the petition by disclaiming any interest in the property. A party disclaiming would certainly not be in a position to interpose an objection that the plaintiff's demand was barred.
Counsel for defendant in error rest their right to demur on section 18 of the code, which provides that actions like this “can only be brought” within five years “after the cause of action shall have accrued.” The language of the» statute does not help the defendant in error, so long as it has not shown itself to be situated in a position to raise the question of limitation. It did not show that it was in privity with the mortgagors. (Wood, Lim. [Bd ed.] §41.)
The judgment will be affirmed.
All the Justices concurring.