Maloney v. Finnegan

Decision Date27 December 1887
Citation38 Minn. 70
PartiesMICHAEL MALONEY <I>vs.</I> ANDREW J. FINNEGAN and others.
CourtMinnesota Supreme Court

Thomas Canty, for respondent.

DICKINSON, J.

Demurrer to the complaint. The plaintiff shows title to the land in question derived by purchase at a mortgage foreclosure sale in December, 1885. It also appears that the defendant Andrew J. Finnegan is the assignee of a judgment recovered in a justice's court against the mortgagor, subsequent to the recording of the mortgage, and subsequently docketed in the office of the clerk of the district court; that such judgment was in fact rendered without any jurisdiction having been acquired over the person of the judgment debtor, no summons having been served, and no return of any service having been made; that the judgment debtor had tendered full payment of the same, which had been refused; that Finnegan, having filed notice of his intention to redeem from the foreclosure sale, within the proper time for making such redemption, fraudulently produced to the sheriff a certified copy of the docket of the judgment, paid to the sheriff the sum of money necessary to make redemption, and procured from the sheriff, and caused to be recorded, a certificate of such payment, and of the fact that Finnegan claimed "title to said premises in fee-simple under said redemption, and has exhibited to said sheriff satisfactory evidence of his title thereto, and of his right to redeem the same;" the certificate, however, setting forth no other facts. It is further alleged that no affidavit was ever made nor produced to the sheriff showing the amount due, or claimed to be due, upon the judgment, and that Finnegan never had or claimed any right to redeem, except under that judgment. The prayer of the complaint is that the pretended redemption be adjudged void; that the defendant be barred from claiming any title or interest; and for general relief.

The action is in the nature of a suit in equity to remove a cloud upon title, and not one under the statute to determine adverse claims, and the question whether, upon the allegations of the complaint, the action can be maintained, must be determined upon the principles applicable to such suits. The certificate of redemption to remove which, as a cloud upon the title, is the principal object of the action, is claimed to have been invalid because it did not state, as required by statute, upon what claims such redemption was made, nor the amount claimed to be due upon the lien under which the redemption was in fact attempted to be made. These defects, however, are apparent on the face of the certificate itself, and there is no other instrument evidencing the attempted redemption. For that reason, unless we are to now depart from the rule which has hitherto prevailed in this state and generally in the American courts, such an instrument will be deemed not to be a cloud upon the title, and, in general, such an action as this will not lie to remove it. Weller v. City of St. Paul, 5 Minn. 70, (95;) Scribner v. Allen, 12 Minn. 85, (148;) Conkey v. Dike, 17 Minn. 434, (457, 463;) Baldwin v. Canfield, 26 Minn. 43, (1 N. W. Rep. 261;) Gilman v. Van Brunt, 29 Minn. 271, (13 N. W. Rep. 125.) It is, perhaps, questionable whether the better reason is not in favor of a different or modified rule; but however this may be, the law is so well established by the great weight of authority and the statutory action to determine adverse claims is so available a remedy in such cases, (whenever the action of ejectment will not lie,) that there seems to be no sufficient reason why we should not adhere...

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