125 Mass. 400 | Mass. | 1878
Two questions have been argued in this case. The first is, it being agreed that the defendant was known by the plaintiff to have signed the note in suit as surety for one Munson, whether the plaintiff had not by bis own neglect permitted certain securities, given by Munson to him at the inception of the note, to be so lost and rendered unavailable to himself or to the defendant, as surety for Munson, as to entitle the defendant to have deducted from the amount of his liability the value of such securities so said to be lost.
The ground upon which the defendant bases his claim is this: Munson gave to the plaintiff, as additional security, a mortgage of a parcel of land, describing it by metes and bounds, “ containing about six acres, more or less, with the factory buildings standing thereon, with the water-wheel, shafting, belting, machinery, tools and fixtures, contained in said buildings, to have and to hold to him, his heirs and assigns.” This mortgage was duly recorded in the registry of deeds, and nowhere else. The defendant contends that it was a mortgage of personal property as well as of real estate, and should have been recorded in the office of the clerk of the town, as a mortgage of personal property ; that the personal property referred to in the mortgage was
The question, therefore, first presented is, whether or not this instrument is a mortgage of personal property. To determine this, it is proper to look at the entire contents of the instrument. Taking the entire instrument, it will be seen that in form and substance it is a mortgage of real estate, that it is a grant to the grantee and his heirs, and that it contains covenants, not personal only, but covenants which run with the land, with the usual habendum in conveyances of real estate. So far, therefore, as the form is concerned, it is that of a deed of real estate. It becomes necessary, then, to inquire whether there is any language in the instrument which indicates that the parties intended to make the instrument an instrument of conveyance of personal property, in addition to the plain, obvious and primary purpose of a conveyance of real estate in mortgage.
In order to determine this question correctly, it is necessary to look with care at the precise language used, that we may see whether it is the natural and apt language to describe all such property as passes with the land, or whether it is intended to incorporate into the well known form of conveyance another new and substantial contract between the parties, of a different character. The words used are, “ with the factory buildings thereon standing, with the water-wheel, shafting, belting, machinery, tools and fixtures, contained in said building.” There is no word used in this description which may not of itself, taken alone, describe personal estate. But in the connection in which used, it would be scarcely less than absurd to say that the word
buildings ” was a description of personal chattels; and the same is true of the word “ fixtures,” which are the first and the last words used in the description of articles claimed to be personal property. Some of the other words used may, in their ordinary signification, when standing alone, be descriptive of personal property; but it would be an extraordinary use of lan •
In this view of the case, the instrument is in no sense a chattel mortgage, but simply a mortgage of the realty, with such articles as are attached to it in such manner as to be properly fixtures. It follows, of course, that it was neither the duty of the mortgagee to cause the instrument to be recorded as a chattel mortgage, nor would it have .been proper for him, upon any facts shown in the case, so to do. There was, therefore, no neg ligence on the part of the plaintiff, by Avliich the defendant las* any r’ght.
It is agreed that the description of the land in the mortgage deed to Felton, which refers to and adopts the description of the land in a mortgage from Munson to Metcalf, recorded in the registry of deeds, “ to which reference is hereby made for description,” is erroneous, by reason of the omission of one of the courses; and that, the description cannot be applied to the land.
It is not necessary for us to determine whether, taking the entire description together, there is not sufficient to identify the premises intended to be conveyed. Nor is it necessary to determine whether such deed might, by proper proceedings, be reformed, so as to express the real contract of the parties; nor to determine whether it is absolutely void. If, in the mortgage to the plaintiff, there was described any land which was not described in the mortgage to Felton, and which this plaintiff would be entitled to hold notwithstanding that mortgage, or if the mortgage to Felton was absolutely void, so that the plaintiff took the whole title to the land under his mortgage, or a title to a portion of it not covered by the mortgage to Felton, the land still remains, and, without regard to his security upon that land, the plaintiff has the right to demand payment of his note of the defendant. If there is collateral security in whole or in part, which may properly be applied to the payment of the note in suit, the right of the defendant to be subrogated to the rights of the plaintiff, in relation to such security, is in no manner affected by the decision of this suit.
The result, therefore, is that the plaintiff is entitled to recover the full amount of the note, and it is for the defendant to deter-nine whether, in law or in equity, he has any rights which may be made available to him under the mortgage to the plaintiff.
Judgment for the plaintiff.