41 Miss. 258 | Miss. | 1866
delivered the opinion, of the court.
The defendant in error, as president of the Bank of Camden, South Carolina, filed his original bill in this case, praying the foreclosure of a mortgage executed by the plaintiff in error, for the payment of two promissory notes, each for the sum of $25,000, made by the plaintiff in error to the bank. Subsequently an amended bill was filed, changing, in material respects, the case as made by the original bill, and presenting the matters of controversy which were decided in the court below, and which are here presented for our determination.
The amended bill disclaims all right to recover upon the latter of the two notes for $25,000, and offers to cancel it; and it claims to recover on the former of those notes to the amount of $15'000 only, with interest; and to that extent it claims that the mortgage is a security, and prays a foreclosure and sale of the mortgaged property for the payment thereof.
The pleadings and proofs in the record are voluminous, and are not necessary to be stated in detail. So far as they are material, they present the following state of facts :
It appears that, in the summer of 1857, Adams, who was then engaged in the business of a private banker in this State, proposed to obtain a loan of fifty thousand dollars from the Bank of Camden, in South Carolina, in the notes of that bank, to be put into circulation in this State by him, in his banking business ; and that the bank acceded to his proposition upon the following terms — that he should execute to the bank his two promissory notes, each for $25,000, one payable on the 15th of March, 1858, and the other on the 15th of April, 1858, bearing • five per cent, interest, payable in New Orleans; which notes were to be secured by mortgage or deed of trust, on property, real and personal, in this State, worth more than fifty per cent, over the amount of the notes, the value of the property and the security to be approved by Gov. McWiUie, a friend of the officers of the bank; and Adams was to agree to keep the banknotes to be received by him, and which were to be marked by him, in circulation, by redeeming them, as they should be returned to the bank and sent to him at Grenada, in this State, at
It is distinctly stated, in the answer of the president of the bank to the cross-bill of Adams, that the bank refused to accept the mortgage as a compliance with the engagement of Adams. The witness Conner states, substantially, the same thing; and that, upon receiving the mortgage, the bank referred it back to him to have it.corrected or amended, so as to conform to the agreement, or to get other and satisfactory security. The answer of Adams to the amended bill also states that the mortgage was not accepted as a compliance with his agreement, and that the bank refused to treat it as such.'
As to the purpose for which the bill of exchange for $15,000 was given to the bank, the amended bill states that after the loan of the $50,000 had been agreed on, Adams desired the bank to advance him $15,000 on the faith of the agreement to execute the notes and mortgage and as part of the $50,000, and offered to place in the hands of the bank the bill of exchange as security and indemnity that he would, in good faith, execute the mortgage according to the agreement; and it admits, in terms, that the bill of exchange was to become inoperative and to be returned to Adams, upon the execution of the mortgage according to the agreement. Adams states, in his answer, that the bill was given to secure the $15,000 advanced to him, until he should execute a satisfactory mortgage for the $50,000. Mr. •Conner states, in his deposition, that the bill was left with the bank by Adams, when he received the money, to represent the $15,000, until Adams furnished the bank his mortgage, in ac
The matter of controversy presented by this record is solely whether the bank is entitled to hold and enforce the mortgage as a security for the bill of exchange for $15,000. And the first question that arises is, whether it was intended by the parties that the bill was to be secured by the mortgage.
Both the pleadings and the proof appear to place this point beyond all possibility of doubt. They all show that the bill was intended to be a distinct security from the mortgage, and a pledge and indemnity for the faithful execution of the mortgage. It was to take effect and be in force, as the security of the bank for the money advanced, in .case Adams should fail to execute the mortgage according to the agreement, but to be inoperative and be returned to Adams upon the, due execution of the mortgage. This is the explicit admission of the amended bill; and the witness Conner states, that the bank held on to the bill until the mortgage should be made satisfactory, and that it was intended to represent the $15,000, until Adams furnished the bank his mortgage according to the agreement. When the mortgage should be made, the money due by the bill was to be a part of the debt secured by the mortgage, and the bill was to be delivered up to Adams; but until that was done, it was to be an independent security for the debt. Instead, therefore, of the mortgage being a security for the bill, it is plain that the bill was intended to be a security for the due execution of the mortgage, and to become inoperative when the mortgage should be executed. It is clear that the bank was satisfied with the security of the bill and letter of credit for the $15,000 advanced, and that the parties intended that that should be the security for that sum, in the event of failure to execute a mortgage according to the agreement.
The next question is, whether, the money due by the bill being a part of the sum intended ultimately to be secured by
It fully appears that the mortgage was not executed according to the agreement of the parties ; and it is clear that it was rejected by the bank for non-compliance with the agreement. For it was not only not accepted by the bank, but she refused to carry out the agreement to be performed on her part, by advancing the balance of $35,000, as she would have been bound to do if it had not been rejected upon being tendered. The evidence showing that it was referred back to Mr. Conner for correction or amendment, can only mean that it was rejected by the bank as it stood; and though she did not desire or intend to abandon the enterprise, yet she refused to accept the mortgage as offered, and referred it back to Mr. Conner, that it might be made to conform to the agreement, or that he might take such other security as was satisfactory to him; and that the contemplated loan of her money in a remote section of the country, which she considered advantageous, should not fail, nor her security therefor be precarious. It was not corrected or amended, but remained in its original form and condition. If it was not made in compliance with the agreement, the bank had the right to refuse acceptance of it. If she rejected it, the transaction was at an end, and it ceased to have any force or effect whatever; and, in that event, it was not competent for her to hold and treat it as a security for any part of the money embraced in the arrangement with Adams, unless he consented to the modification. Her rejection of it, as a full compliance with the agreement with Adams, absolved him from all obligation under it; for he had the right then to consider it at an end, and it would have required an express consent on his part, after such rejection, to modify its effect, and to render it a partial compliance with the agreement, and a partial security for the money intended to be loaned to him.
But there is no evidence whatever in the record of any such consent on his part; and hence it follows that the mortgage must be considered as at an end.
There is, therefore, no mortgáge in existence to stand as a
If the bill of exchange and letter of credit had not been given, to stand as the security until the mortgage should be given, and .the matter had stood merely upon the agreement to' execute a mortgage, which Adams had failed to perform in conformity to the agreement, a court of equity might have held the insufficient mortgage tendered to be a security for the money advanced. But this rule cannot apjfiy here, because the mortgage was never accepted, to any extent, by the bank, and no notice was given to Adams that it was, or would be, partially accepted; and, on the contrary, the steps taken by the bank clearly indicate that it was wholly rejected, and the effort was to have it corrected and amended, so as to be fully in accordance with the agreement. The legal effect of this course is to remit the bank to the security of the bill of exchange, which was intended to constitute the security until a due mortgage should be executed; which having failed, the bank is bound by the security which she took and which was to operate as her security in that contingency.
It is insisted, in behalf of the defendant in error, that, inasmuch as the $15,000 was advanced with the understanding, between the parties, that that sum was to be embraced by the mortgage when executed — and which the plaintiff in error wrongfully failed to execute in compliance with the agreement —the mortgage as executed should be enforced and the decree sustained, on the ground that the bank was entitled to a specific performance of the contract, to execute a mortgage. But to this view there are several insuperable objections: 1. The bill is not framed with any aspect of specific performance of an unexecuted contract, or of the re-formation of an instrument not executed according to the contract of the parties. 2. It seeks the enforcement of the mortgage, as validly made, and available
It follows, from these views, that the decree extending the mortgage to the bill of exchange, and ordering a foreclosure to the amount thereby secured, is erroneous; and the decree must be reversed, and the bill dismissed.