Court Opinion

ID: 3512766
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 22:23:38.909122+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:59:13.289253
License: Public Domain

L. 1933, p. 514, c. 339, does not appear to me to be as drastic and dangerous as stated in Justice Stone's dissenting opinion. It appears to be conceded that the legislature was confronted with an extraordinary emergency, and that, in such an emergency, the legislature may enact emergency laws vitally necessary for the welfare of the people of the state provided it does not thereby unreasonably impair the obligations of contracts or leave the contract holders without a reasonably adequate remedy on their contracts. The law has the effect of extending the time for redemption on mortgage and execution sales on mortgage debts. If it stopped with that the time extension until May 1, 1935, might be held unreasonable. But the act goes further and provides that, during the time so extended, the property owner must account for and pay to the mortgage holder the income from or rental value of the property, or such part thereof as the court finds to be just and equitable. In the case of farm property it may be necessary in some cases to devote a part of the income or rent to the upkeep of the farm; and in case of residence or business property it may be necessary to apply part of the rent or income for repairs. The mortgagee, in either case, has the benefit of having the property kept up, thereby protecting his security. The act does defer entry of deficiency judgments until the expiration of the redemption period, and does provide that the court may likewise extend the period of redemption from execution sales on judgments against mortgagors on the mortgage debt under the same conditions as on foreclosure sales. The act, as I read it, does not prevent the mortgagee from bringing suit on the notes or other evidence of indebtedness at any time.
Section 8 of the act further provides that the act shall not in any way permit any stay, postponement, or extension of time such that *Page 437 
any rights of the mortgagee might be adversely affected by a statute of limitations. See also part 2, § 5, of the act.
The law does extend the time within which a mortgagee may enforce his security, but on conditions which would seem to protect the mortgagee from any loss and which in the end may be as beneficial to him as to the mortgagor.
It is suggested that an emergency arising from a financial and business crisis does not authorize emergency laws in the exercise of the police power or for the protection of the public welfare, because financial and business crises are recurring events and to be anticipated; that an emergency, for legislative purposes, must be one arising from some extraordinary and unexpected catastrophe, such as floods, earthquakes, and other disturbances in nature. The reason why a flood or an earthquake may create an emergency is not because they are catastrophes of nature but because of their widespread destruction of the property and homes of thousands of people, causing want and suffering to a great number of people and injury and danger to public welfare. The present nation-wide and world-wide business and financial crisis has the same results as if it were caused by flood, earthquake, or disturbance in nature. It has deprived millions of persons in this nation of their employment and means of earning a living for themselves and their families; it has destroyed the value of and the income from all property on which thousands of people depended for a living; it actually has resulted in the loss of their homes by a number of our people and threatens to result in the loss of their homes by many other people in this state; it has resulted in such widespread want and suffering among our people that private, state, and municipal agencies are unable adequately to relieve the want and suffering, and congress has found it necessary to step in and attempt to remedy the situation by federal aid. Millions of the people's money were and are yet tied up in closed banks and in business enterprises.
To say that economic crises are to be anticipated is no good ground for making any distinction. Floods are recurring events, at least in the Ohio and Mississippi valleys. Earthquakes are recurring events, at least on the Pacific coast. *Page 438 
The test of an emergency is not the cause thereof but the resulting public want, suffering, and danger. The cause, whatever it may be, produces the emergency, but is not itself the emergency. A disease may be caused by a germ, but the germ is not the disease. The disease is the effect on the human body caused by the germ. So the present emergency is not the business and financial crisis, but the widespread loss, suffering, and want of a great number of the people of this state and the impairment of and danger to the public welfare. The situation presented to the legislature was of unprecedented magnitude, duration, and disastrous effect on the people. Prior economic disturbances in this state were of comparatively minor importance. Prior to 1880 we had comparatively few people affected by such crises. There was no widespread loss of employment or of homes. There were great unused natural resources and great opportunities for people to start anew and regain their losses. It is not so today. Such crises since that date up to the present have been of comparatively short duration and not very widespread or serious. Much more could be said on the subject, but I believe what has already been stated is entirely sufficient to show that the legislature was confronted with a vital crisis and was justified, if not required, in enacting any needed laws to relieve the situation under its police powers and for the public welfare of the state. In so doing the legislature had power to impair the obligations of contracts to a reasonable extent, provided it did not deprive the contract holder of a reasonably adequate remedy or remedies for the enforcement of his contract. Whether this law does unreasonably impair the obligations of contracts and whether it fails to provide or preserve to the contract holder a reasonably adequate remedy or remedies for the enforcement of his contract are the questions here presented.
The case of Barnitz v. Beverly, 163 U.S. 118,16 S. Ct. 1042, 41 L. ed. 93, is not in conflict with these views. There was no emergency and no question of police power or general welfare legislation considered in that case. The case supports the views herein expressed, that to render a law unconstitutional on the ground that *Page 439 
it impairs contract obligations the law must seriously impair such obligations or leave to the contract holder no adequate remedy for the enforcement of his contract.