257 N.W. 712 | Mich. | 1934
Plaintiffs, husband and wife, executed a mortgage to defendant Schlee to secure the note of the husband. The mortgage was valid. LeMay v. Wickert,
Defendant Schlee indorsed the mortgage note to the defendant bank and later assigned the mortgage to defendant Zeleznik. Mr. Atwood paid some to the bank on the note and then gave his note in renewal directly to the bank for the balance due. The bank had no knowledge of the mortgage security. *324 Mr. Atwood was adjudged a bankrupt and the bank proved its claim on the note and it was allowed but no dividend ever paid. Thereafter defendant Zeleznik started to foreclose the mortgage by advertisement, and plaintiffs filed the bill herein to enjoin the foreclosure and have the mortgage discharged because of discount of the note it was given to secure and subsequent replacement thereof by the new note directly to the bank. The bank, learning of the mortgage, intervened, asked that it be adjudged the owner of the mortgage and have foreclosure thereof, and it was granted such relief, from which plaintiffs appeal. The bill was taken as confessed by defendants Schlee and Zeleznik and issue framed between plaintiffs and the bank.
What are the rights between plaintiffs and the bank?
Plaintiffs claimed that when the note, secured by the mortgage, was indorsed by Schlee to the bank and thereafter taken up by Mr. Atwood's note directly to the bank, Schlee was discharged and the mortgage retained by him was also discharged.
It is elementary law that the right to a mortgage, given to secure a note, passes by transfer of the note. Ladue v.Railroad Co.,
There is no claim of good faith on the part of Zeleznik. The bank was the equitable owner of the mortgage, but was unaware of the fact, when Mr. Atwood gave the renewal note and also at the time of the bankruptcy proceedings. The obligation the mortgage was given to secure has not been paid by Mr. Atwood.Molsons Bank v. Berman,
The Federal court order of discharge in bankruptcy very properly excepted "such debts as are by law excepted from the operation of a discharge in bankruptcy."
The mortgage lien was not discharged by such order or by operation of the bankruptcy act. See Hiscock v. Varick Bank ofNew York,
"It is a waiver of the security if made with knowledge of the facts; but even an express relinquishment of securities made in ignorance of facts may not be a waiver. And where no one has been caused to change his position thereby the claim may be withdrawn and one proving the debt as secured be substituted. And the creditor may be reinstated in the security so relinquished, where the estate will be left no worse off than if the security had not been originally relinquished. And a relinquishment made in ignorance or mistake of law also is not necessarily a waiver." 2 Remington on Bankruptcy (3d Ed.), p. 325, § 933.
Mr. Atwood's discharge in bankruptcy released him from personal liability for a deficiency, if any, upon foreclosure of the mortgage, but did not discharge the mortgage. SeeScott v. Ellery,
The decree is affirmed, with costs to defendant bank.
NELSON SHARPE, C.J., and POTTER, NORTH, BUTZEL, BUSHNELL, and EDWARD M. SHARPE, JJ., concurred. FEAD, J., did not sit. *326