44 A.2d 437 | Md. | 1945
William H. Austraw and his wife allege in their bill of complaint: (1) That on November 2, 1929, they acquired title to certain real estate at Twin River Beach by a second mortgage from Mary Gliesman and her husband to secure the sum of $1,900; (2) that on November 19, 1930, John F. Oyeman, attorney named in the mortgage for purpose of foreclosure, instituted foreclosure proceedings, and he sold the mortgaged property subject to the first mortgage; (3) that on March 2, 1936, after the auditor's report showed that the proceeds of sale were not sufficient to pay the mortgage debt, Oyeman filed a petition for a decree inpersonam, whereupon the court directed the clerk to issue a subpoena to the mortgagors to answer the petition and show cause why the decree should not be entered; and on April 22, 1936, after the sheriff had summoned Mary Gliesman and she failed to answer, and it appeared that her husband was dead, the court entered a decree in favor of Oyeman, attorney named in mortgage, for $1,962.45; (4) that Mary Gliesman had abandoned the use of her real name without legal right and had been using the name of Mae Martin for the purpose of fraudulently evading her liability under the mortgage; and that she had married John H. Dietz and subsequently acquired real estate under the name of Mae Martin; and (5) that Oyeman had died and that they are the proper holders of the decree. Complainants pray that the decree be entered to their own use, and against Mae Martin and Mae Martin Dietz. The chancellor took the view that the court had acted without authority in entering the decree in favor of the attorney named in the mortgage. From his decree sustaining defendant's demurrer and dismissing the bill, complainants bring this appeal.
In the early days of the State the court of chancery in a foreclosure proceeding decreed that, unless the mortgage debt was paid by a certain day named in the decree the equity of redemption would be closed and the mortgaged property would become the absolute property *248
of the mortgagee. Usually this form of strict foreclosure resulted in great hardship to the mortgagor. In addition, it was a tedious procedure and made mortgages unattractive to investors. Chancellor Kent said that, even if a sale were decreed in a foreclosure suit, a court of equity had no inherent power to enter a deficiency decree against the mortgagor, because such a suit is an action in rem and not in personam. Dunkley v. VanBuren, 3 Johns. Ch. 330; Wilhelm v. Lee, 2 Md. Ch. 322; Rasstv. Morris,
In 1785 the Maryland Legislature undertook to remedy the defects of the law by authorizing the court of chancery *249 to order the sale of the mortgaged property for the satisfaction of the debt and, if the proceeds of sale did not satisfy the debt, to enter a decree against the mortgagor, or his heirs or personal representatives, for the amount of the deficiency. The statute applied only to actual loans of money "by any foreigner to any citizen of this State." It was intended to encourage non-resident capitalists to invest their money in Maryland. Acts of 1785, Ch. 72; Boteler v. Brookes, 7 Gill J. 143, 151. The statute was later broadened so as to apply to any suit to foreclose. Acts of 1875, Ch. 327. The present statute regulating formal foreclosure provides that if the net proceeds of sale in any foreclosure suit shall not suffice to satisfy the mortgage debt and accrued interest, the court "may, upon the motion of the plaintiff, * * * enter a decree in personam against the mortgagor, or other party to the suit, who is liable for the payment thereof; provided, the mortgagee would be entitled to maintain an action at law upon the covenants contained in said mortgage for said residue of the said mortgage debt * * *." Acts of 1939, Ch. 507, Code, 1939, Art. 16, § 241.
In order to foreclose under the statute, however, it was necessary to file a formal bill of complaint to give the mortgagor an opportunity to show cause why the foreclosure should not be decreed, and in the event of the mortgagee's death it was necessary to make both his heirs and his personal representatives parties to the suit. Worthington v. Lee, 2 Bland 678, 684. This procedure was cumbersome and unsatisfactory, and it became the practice to insert in mortgages a provision conferring upon the mortgagee or some person named therein the power to sell the mortgaged property upon default without obtaining previous authority from the court. While there may still be formal foreclosure in a proper case, that procedure has been generally abandoned in favor of the simpler and more convenient remedy.Hanover Fire Insurance Co. v. Brown,
The chancellor, in declaring the court's deficiency decree null and void, said that the statute authorizes a deficiency decree only when "the mortgagee or his legal or equitable assignee would be entitled to maintain an action at law upon the covenants contained in the mortgage," and that an attorney named in the mortgage is not entitled to maintain an action at law. But the statute does not say that the plaintiff must be entitled to maintain an action at law. When the Legislature provided that the right to a deficiency decree should exist only where the mortgagee could have maintained an action at law upon the covenants contained in the mortgage, it meant that the right should exist only against the proper parties to the proceeding and such parties as were bound by the covenants and could have been sued at law thereon. Hence, as stated in Kushnick v. LakeDrive Building Loan Ass'n,
It is true that the statute authorizing the entry of deficiency decrees should be strictly construed because it is in derogation of the common law. Gross v. Ben. Franklin Building LoanAss'n,
In this case the bill of complaint alleges that, after the auditor's report showed a deficiency, the court passed an order directing the issuance of a subpoena, and the order was served upon the surviving mortgagor but she failed to answer. The chancellor remarked that there was no question that the mortgagor owed the full amount of the deficiency, and he acknowledged that his decision to nullify the decree would cause manifest injustice by depriving the mortgagees of the right to collect a legitimate indebtedness. Even though the sale was made in 1930 and ratified in 1931, the mortgagees would not necessarily be barred from relief in equity on the ground of laches. In a case in New York, where there was no statutory time for the filing of a deficiency decree, the court held that it could be filed even after more than ten years had elapsed since the time of the report of sale.Brown v. Faile,
We will therefore reverse the decree appealed from, and remand the cause for further proceedings, with instruction to the court below that the personal representative *253 of Oyeman, deceased attorney, be made a party defendant and be given an opportunity to assert any interest in the decree.
Decree reversed and cause remanded for further proceedings,with costs.