311 Mass. 442 | Mass. | 1942
The defendants’ demurrer to the plaintiff’s
Material allegations of the declaration are that one Camp conveyed to the defendants’ testate William Bloom, hereinafter referred to as Bloom, certain land in the State of Florida; that by the terms of the deed (annexed to the declaration) and, as a part of its consideration, Bloom assumed and agreed to pay “all outstanding obligations on this property consisting of first mortgage amounting to $26,250.00 dated June 8, 1925 and covered by three notes of $8,750.00 each, due June 8, 1926, June 8, 1927 and June 8, 1928 respectively, said mortgage being filed for record . . .”; that, at the time of this conveyance, there was a mortgage on the property dated May 23, 1925, amounting to $20,650, and also a “further” mortgage in the amount of $26,250 dated June 8, 1925, from said Camp to one Smith; that the “identification” in the deed of all outstanding obligations on the property as “consisting of first mortgage amounting to $26,250,” was due to an inadvertency and mutual error on the part of Camp and Bloom; that it was their intention, that Bloom, by acceptance of the deed, assume a total aggregate mortgage indebtedness of $26,250; that the mortgage, dated June 8, 1925, from Camp to Smith, however, through inadvertence and error, and contrary to the intent of the parties to this mortgage and also of Bloom, stated its principal amount as $26,250, whereas it was the intent of all three parties that this amount be expressed as $5,600, which, when added to the “said existing mortgage” of $20,650, would bring the total aggregate mortgage indebtedness at the time of delivery of the deed to Bloom to $26,250. The declaration further alleges that to correct said “inadvertency and error and to effect the intention aforesaid of the parties,” the $26,250 mortgage, at Bloom’s request and by his direction, was dis
The declaration, somewhat in detail, also alleges that, at the time of the acceptance of the deed by Bloom, it was the common law of Florida, and is now, that where a deed poll contains a clause that the grantee assumes the outstanding obligations on the. property conveyed, he is effectually bound by accepting the deed to pay any existing mortgage indebtedness on the said property as though it were an indenture deed between the parties, and that the grantee becomes, as to the mortgagee, the principal debtor; that, by the law of Florida, the grantee’s obligation under the assumption clause, so called, to pay such mortgage indebtedness is construed as a covenant under the hand and seal of the grantee which entitles the mortgagee to maintain a direct action at law thereon against the grantee; that where a mortgage is given as security for a promissory note, the note constitutes the principal obligation, the mortgage being regarded as ancillary, so that the transfer of the note carries with it the mortgage, and the holder of such note succeeds to the same rights that were available to the mortgagee. There is a further allegation that “Under the law of Florida the defendant is directly liable to the plaintiff, under the assumption contained ... [in the deed to
We are of opinion that the declaration, in effect, alleges as the cause of action, that, by reason of the language contained in the deed poll to and accepted by Bloom, he assumed the outstanding obligations on the property which, although recited in the deed to be a first mortgage amounting to $26,250, in fact amounted to a total obligation of $26,250 made up by one mortgage of $20,650 and another mortgage of $5,600.
Nothing appears to show, and it has not been suggested, that the nature of the contract obligation in the case at bar and its interpretation are not governed by the law of Florida. See Thomas G. Jewett, Jr. Inc. v. Keystone Driller Co. 282 Mass. 469, 475, 476. The law of another State is a question of fact, McCarthy v. Hawes, 299 Mass. 340, 342, and G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 233, § 70, relative to courts taking judicial notice of foreign law, so called, did not change this. This statute merely changed the method by which such law is brought to the attention of the court by substituting judicial notice for proof by evidence. Seemann v. Eneix, 272 Mass. 189, 195, 196. The allegations of the declaration in the case at bar, in so far as they relate in detail to the obligation under the law of Florida arising out of the assumption clause, so called, are much more extensive than was the allegation in the case of Richards v. Richards, 270 Mass. 113, 117, which was described as of the most general nature (page 118), although the concluding allegation in the case at bar as to the law of Florida is very much like that general allegation in the Richards case.
The defendants contend that the allegations in the plaintiff’s declaration do not bring the plaintiff’s case within the law of Florida as alleged, relative to the grantee’s obligation under an assumption clause, in that, by the assumption clause contained in the deed poll, Bloom’s undertaking was to assume an obligation consisting of a “first mortgage amounting to $26,250.00 dated June 8, 1925 and covered by three notes of $8,750.00 each.”
The declaration, however, as already pointed out, contains a further allegation that “Under the law of Florida the defendant is directly liable to the plaintiff, under the assumption contained in said deed ... in an action at law as upon a covenant, for the amount of the said mortgage indebtedness evidenced by said mortgage notes . . . totalling $5600 . . . .” Earlier allegations in the declaration describe the mortgage securing “said mortgage notes” as the mortgage that was substituted for the $26,250 mortgage “as an outstanding obligation on the said property as of the time of the delivery” of the deed to Bloom. This general allegation we take to be an allegation of the substantive law of Florida. The detailed allegations in the declaration of Florida law do not touch this general allegation which is comparable in its generality to the allegation of the bill in Richards v. Richards, 270 Mass. 113, 117, where it was said, at page 118: “There was enough in the
The order sustaining the demurrer must be reversed, and an order entered overruling the demurrer.
So ordered.