101 Mass. 422 | Mass. | 1869
Upon this agreed statement, no question is raised as to the title of any of the parties except that of Cutter. The surplus proceeds of the sale under the first mortgage must be disposed of according to the title of the respective parties in the land itself. The holders of the second mortgage having aban doned all claim, the third mortgagee is next entitled to have his debt satisfied, before anything can be claimed either by the mortgagor or by the purchaser of the equity. The consent of Easter that the whole surplus shall be paid to Cutter, if Cutter’s title should be held to be valid as against Brown, will not authorize such payment without discharging Easter’s debt. Cutter purchased only Brown’s right to redeem all the mortgages; and Brown is entitled to have all of the mortgage debts satisfied out of the proceeds of the sale of the land, before anything is paid over to Cutter. We infer, from Brown’s joining in the submission of the case upon these facts, that be assents to the withdrawal of the claim under the second mortgage.
As there may be a balance beyond what is necessary to satisfy Easter’s mortgage debt, it is necessary to determine the validity of the sale of the equity to Cutter. It appears that the execution, upon which the sale of the equity to Cutter was made, was issued upon a judgment rendered in favor of the Taunton Oil Cloth Company upon one of six notes given by Brown to Easter, and included in the Easter mortgage.
The counsel for Brown contends that the sale was void, upon the authority of the decision in Atkins v. Sawyer, 1 Pick. 351, In that case the mortgagee himself brought a suit upon the mortgage note, attached the equity, and became the purchaser upon the sale on execution. It was held that he could not thus deprive the mortgagor of the right to redeem the estate according to the conditions which the statute imposed upon his mortgage title. The mortgagee, holding the whole legal title as incident to his debt, was not allowed to use the same debt as the means of working a foreclosure of the security to the prejudice of the debtor. But it was suggested in the same case, that be might have levied upon and become the purchaser of the
In Johnson v. Stevens, 7 Cush. 431, it was held that the first mortgagee of land may sue his mortgage debt and levy his execution upon the mortgagor’s right to redeem a second mortgage of the same land. It is true that in this case the second mortgage included larger interests than the first mortgage. But the principal grounds stated for the decision were irrespective of that consideration, and indicate that the doctrine of Atkins v. Sawyer is limited by the special reasons upon which it was based.
In Crane v. March, 4 Pick. 131, the indorsee of one of two notes secured by mortgage recovered judgment and levied upon the equity of redemption. The purchaser under the sale on execution afterwards took up the other note from the hands of another indorsee, and took from the original mortgagee an assignment of the mortgage. It was held that he had acquired a good title. The suggestion that the indorsee may have taken the note “ without any knowledge that it was secured by mortgage ” could not have been of material influence in the decision. The real ground upon which the decision stands is, that, by the form of the note, the mortgagor authorized its transfer to other parties than the holder of the mortgage, with all the incidents and legal rights which pass with the transfer of such securities. Such other parties are not to be deprived of these usual incidents and rights because they may, if they see fit to seek it, have an equitable resort to the mortgage security. By levying upon the equity, they elect to rely upon their legal right. The lebtor is not harmed, for be may redeem from the sale without redeeming the mortgage; and if he should suffer some degree of prejudice, it is only the natural result of what he has himself authorized.
The principle of the restriction established in Atkins v. Sawyer has reference to the mode in which the mortgagee deals with the mortgage estate. It is based upon the contract contained in, and the relations created by, the mortgage deed, and not by those which spring from the notes. It applies, therefore, only to
It might be otherwise if it should appear that the indorsement and levy were by collusion, and for the purpose of effecting a foreclosure for the benefit of the mortgagee, and that the purchaser was chargeable with notice of such collusion. But it is not necessary to determine that question. The agreed facts present no such case ; and we are not warranted to infer that it exists here, merely from the fact that the attaching creditor might have known, and probably did know, that his note was part of the mortgage debt, and the fact that Easter now consents that the whole fund may go to Cutter.
The result is, that Cutter is entitled, as purchaser of the equity, to whatever amount may remain of the fund after satisfying the Easter mortgage and discharging Brown from the mortgage debt. If there should be any disagreement as to the amount properly due under that mortgage, a master may be appointed to determine it. Decree accordingly.