179 Mass. 77 | Mass. | 1901
1. As to the allowance of $50 for counsel fees. The bill when filed contained a prayer for injunction against a sale, and this expense was incurred by.the mortgagee in preventing or removing an injunction. It was a part of the expense of the foreclosure proceedings, was reasonably necessary, and was therefore rightly allowed.
2. As to the allowance of $277, paid to the auctioneer for services in selling the property. Upon this the master reports that it appeared in evidence that this charge, being at the rate of one per cent on the purchase price, was the ordinary and customary charge of auctioneers in Boston for such services in
8. As to the question of interest. The master allowed interest on the face of the note from its date to the time of the sale, at the rate of eighteen per cent per annum, in accordance with its terms. The plaintiffs contend that interest should not be computed upon the note before September 7, 1897, the time of its delivery, and then only upon the payments made, and from their respective dates, and that no interest should be allowed upon money not lent or set apart by the mortgagee.
The note contains an absolute promise to pay in three months from its date the sum of $30,500, with interest thereon at the rate of one and one half per cent per month ; and it is secured by a mortgage of real estate upon which the mortgagor was about to erect a block of buildings. The consideration for the note is to be found in the contemporaneous written agreement. The note, mortgage and agreement, all form part of one and the same transaction ; and, by reference to the latter, it is seen that the money was to be delivered by Fallon only by instalments. The times and the amounts of the several payments are therein set forth, and the mortgagor could not insist upon receiving the money save in accordance therewith. The note called for interest payable monthly, while it was apparent from the
Bjr the agreement Fallon had bound himself to lend Kenerson certain sums of money up to the full amount named in the note, with the proviso that he should not in any case be liable to make any payment after the foreclosure of the mortgage. It does not appear, upon the facts found by the master, that Fallon was released from his promise before that time, although it is found that at some time subsequent to April 27, 1898, he entered upon the premises for the purpose of foreclosing the mortgage. If the full amount named in the agreement had been advanced in accordance with its terms, then the full consideration for the note would have been paid, and the mortgagor would have been indebted the full amount. It is not suggested that Fallon was not at all times ready to comply with the terms of his agreement. It was clearly the understanding of the parties that the interest was to be payable monthly on the whole sum named in the note, for four such payments are indorsed upon the note. We think that the legal effect of the contract was that Fallon should have interest upon the full amount of the principal of the note, so long as he was under an obligation to furnish the money, whether formally set apart or not. Lewin v. Folsom, -171 Mass. 188. Upon the facts found by the master that obligation seems to have ceased with the foreclosure on August 24, 1898, and it does not appear to have ceased before.
But it is insisted by the plaintiffs that, inasmuch as the mortgage, neither in itself nor by reference to any recorded instrument, shows what the rate of interest is, it, should not be allowed as against these plaintiffs at a rate greater than six per cent per annum. It is urged that a mortgage note is a private document, to which the public have no rightful access, and that a mortgage deed which states the rate of interest on the debt only by reference to a private, unrecorded document, does not in that respect comply with the registration laws, since the amount of the encumbrance cannot be ascertained from the
The condition of the mortgage is that there shall be paid a certain sum with interest “as expressed in the note hereby secured.” The mortgage deed gives notice that some interest is to be paid, and that the rate and the times of payment are set out in the note; and this was sufficient to put the plaintiffs upon inquiry; Richards v. Holmes, 18 How. 143 ; and, being put upon inquiry, they must be held to know the facts which in the absence of fraud would be disclosed to them upon such inquiry. See May v. Gates, 137 Mass. 389. This is not a case where the amount expressly named in the mortgage is less than that named in the note, as in Frost v. Beekman, 1 Johns. Ch. 288, and similar cases.
The result is that all of the exceptions of the plaintiffs to the report of the master are overruled.
As to the mortgage deed to Ellen P. Kenerson, it seems upon the findings made by the master to have been fraudulent as against these plaintiffs. The master has made no specific finding that it was delivered to the mortgagee. No note was given with it, and it was intended to secure a prior indebtedness to the mortgagee. It cannot affect the plaintiffs’ rights to the surplus.
The master having found that, from the date of the foreclosure sale, Fallon has kept no special deposit of the balance in his hands after satisfying his claims, and there being nothing to show that he has not used it in his business, he should be charged interest upon it from the date of the sale, the time he received it.
The result is that the surplus proceeds of the sale, amounting to the sum of $390.31, with interest from August 24,1898, is to be decreed as belonging to the plaintiffs, and is to be apportioned among them according to their respective interests as they may appear.
So ordered.