Fed. Trust Co. v. Nelson

Citation260 N.W. 341
Decision Date02 April 1935
Docket NumberNo. 41782.,41782.
PartiesFEDERAL TRUST CO. v. NELSON et al.
CourtUnited States State Supreme Court of Iowa

260 N.W. 341

FEDERAL TRUST CO.
v.
NELSON et al.a1

No. 41782.

Supreme Court of Iowa.

April 2, 1935.


Appeal from District Court, Harrison County; Earl Peters, Judge.

Action at law, after foreclosure, to recover deficiency on notes secured by mortgage. The notes and mortgage were Nebraska contracts. Defense was made that an extension agreement had released the mortgagors and that the notes were usurious. Judgment was against the defendants for the full amount of the notes, from which they have taken this appeal.

Reversed.

William P. Welch, of Logan, for appellants.

Ginsburg & Ginsburg, of Lincoln, Neb., and Robertson & Wolfe, of Logan, for appellee.


RICHARDS, Justice.

[1] This was an action at law and was tried to the court. Defendants had executed to plaintiff fourteen promissory notes, and a mortgage upon certain Nebraska real estate securing the notes. The Nebraska real estate had been exhausted by foreclosure of the mortgage, leaving a portion of the notes unpaid, to recover which this action was commenced. The notes and mortgage were Nebraska contracts and the substantive rights of the parties are to be determined by the laws of that state. The notes became due November 1, 1927, prior to which date defendants had conveyed the mortgaged real estate to a third person, who, as part of the consideration, had assumed and agreed to pay the mortgage indebtedness. On November 10, 1927, plaintiff-mortgagee entered into a written contract with the said grantee of the mortgaged premises, extending for a term of years the time for payment of said notes, without the consent or knowledge of the defendants. Defendants pleaded in defense to said notes that, under the laws of Nebraska, the execution of said extension agreement released defendants from personal liability on the notes, and they also pleaded that said notes were usurious. The district court held the defendants had not been released, that the notes were not usurious, and entered judgment against defendants for full amount of the notes including interest, from which judgment this appeal was taken.

The errors relied on by appellants are, first, that the court erred in entering judgment against them, because, as appellants claim, they were released from personal liability, by reason of the execution of the extension agreement, and, second, the court erred in including in the judgment any interest on the notes, appellants claiming that the notes were usurious, and that under the laws of Nebraska interest is not collectible upon a usurious contract.

[2][3] Anent the...

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