285 Mass. 459 | Mass. | 1934
This case comes up on appeal from a final decree after the sustaining of demurrers to a bill which alleged the following facts. One Stober, owning real estate in Boston, had mortgaged it for $85,000 to one Clisby, and the mortgage and mortgage note had been assigned to the defendant Boston Penny Savings Bank as collateral security for a loan of $60,000 to Clisby. Clisby also had made a second assignment of the mortgage and mortgage note, subject to the preceding assignment, to the plaintiff Broadway National Bank of Chelsea as collateral security for a loan of $25,000 to Clisby. The equity of redemption in the real estate had passed from Stober to the defendant Hayward as trustee of the Glenwood trust.
With matters in that situation, Hayward proposed to the plaintiff on September 3, 1931, that it release its interest in the first mortgage and mortgage note, and accept instead a second mortgage for $25,000, payable in five years, securing a note to be signed by Hayward as trustee of the Glenwood trust; that Hayward pay to the Boston Penny Savings Bank $10,000 and obtain from that bank a reduction of the first mortgage to $50,000 and an extension of it for three years; and that Hayward personally
The plaintiff asserts that the Boston Penny Savings Bank has two securities or funds to which it may resort, (1) the land itself, and (2) the personal covenant of the defendant Hayward, whereas the plaintiff can resort to only one of them, the land. The plaintiff claims the right to have these securities or funds marshalled so that the Boston Penny Savings Bank will have to exhaust the one which it has alone before resorting to the one which it holds in priority to, though in a sense in common with, the plaintiff. It prays that the defendant Hayward be ordered to cure the breaches of the condition of the first mortgage and to perform its covenants, and that the defendant Boston Penny Savings Bank be restrained from foreclosing the first mortgage until it has exhausted its remedies against Hayward on his covenant.
Hayward, on the other hand, contends that as guarantor of the first mortgage his equity is superior to that of the second mortgagee. He contends that he is the one entitled to be subrogated to the first mortgage upon payment of it, and that if any marshalling is to be done the real estate should be applied to the first mortgage debt before calling on him to pay. Whether his contention is correct, depends upon the construction of the contract with the plain
“The equitable doctrine of marshalling rests upon the principle that a creditor having two funds to satisfy his debt, may not by his application of them to his demand, defeat another creditor, who may resort to only one of the funds.” Sowell v. Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, Texas, 268 U. S. 449, 456, 457. Beckman v. Alberts, 346 Ill. 74. In such a case, the junior creditor having the single fund may pay off the senior creditor having both the funds, and be subrogated to his security. Washburn v. Hammond, 151 Mass. 132, 139. Schaefer v. Metzger, 105 N. J. Eq. 307. Subrogation and marshalling are often different manifestations of the same equity, but where subrogation remedies injustice (Westinghouse Electric & Manuf. Co. v. Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Maryland, 251 Mass. 418), marshalling prevents it. Marshalling gives the junior creditor the additional right of compelling the senior creditor to resort in the first place to the fund which he alone holds. The present case is hardly a typical case of the doctrine of two
If we assume, without so deciding, that the relations of the parties in this case are such that the securities could be marshalled as the plaintiff desires, it does not follow that a decree for the plaintiff is required. Marshalling is not an absolute right. The defendant Boston Penny Savings Bank has both the underlying first mortgage on the land and the personal covenant of Hayward, and has the right to enforce either or both until it shall have received full satisfaction. At law it is no defence to a surety that the creditor has collateral security belonging to the principal which has not been applied to the debt. Mercantile Guaranty Co. v. Hilton, 191 Mass. 141. Miller v. Levitt, 226 Mass. 330. Sheldon, Subrogation, (2d ed.) § 115.
Though marshalling is denied, the plaintiff will, not be without remedy, if it is correct in its contention that its equities are superior to those of Hayward. The extension of the first mortgage, unlike the statutory condition of the mortgage as originally written (G. L. [Ter. Ed.] c. 183, § 20), contains a provision for acceleration at the option of the mortgagee in case of default. But if that option ' is not exercised the plaintiff may stay the foreclosure of that mortgage by repairing the existing breaches of the condition. Hawkinson v. Banaghan, 203 Mass. 591. Charlestown Five Cents Savings Bank v. Zeff, 275 Mass. 408. Upon foreclosure of its second mortgage, the plaintiff would be entitled to retain out of the proceeds of the foreclosure sale the amount paid by reason of default in the performance of the condition of the first mortgage. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 183, § 27. As to taxes paid, a special remedy is provided. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 60, § 59. St. 1932, c. 2. Dillon v. Lange, 280 Mass. 427. If the first mortgagee should insist on full payment under the acceleration pro
But these remedies do not satisfy the plaintiff. Its bill appears to be an ingenious attempt to prevent the foreclosure of the first mortgage at a time when, as the bill itself declares, "said mortgaged estate is likely to be sold for not more than enough to satisfy the lien of said defendant the Boston Penny Savings Bank,” and to postpone foreclosure indefinitely while the first mortgagee pursues what, for all that is alleged in the bill, may be a will o’ the wisp. Without taking any risk or investing an additional dollar, the plaintiff seeks to preserve for an indefinite time the chance that an improvement in the real estate market may make its second mortgage of value. For that purpose a bill for marshalling does not lie. The demurrer of the Boston Penny Savings Bank was rightly sustained.
What has been said may dispose of the bill in its practical aspect, but the question remains whether it may be maintained as a bill by a quasi surety to compel the defendant Hayward personally to exonerate the land from the burden of the first mortgage. Cotting v. Otis Elevator Co. 214 Mass. 294. Fitcher v. Griffiths, 216 Mass. 174. Browne v. Bixby, 190 Mass. 69. Bellows v. Lovell, 5 Pick. 307, 310, 311. Cruse v. Paine, L. R. 4 Ch. 441. Ascherson v. Tredegar Dry Dock & Wharf Co. Ltd. [1909] 2 Ch. 401. In re Mitchell, [1913] 1 Ch. 201. See also Evans, Coleman & Evans, Ltd. v. Pistorino, 245 Mass. 94. But in the cases in which exoneration has been enforced, there was no present remedy at law. At law, in the absence of special contract, a surety cannot bring an action against the principal for indemnity or reimbursement until he has satisfied the obligation. Williams v. Mercer, 139 Mass. 141, 143. Locke v. Homer, 131 Mass. 93, 95. Williston, Contracts, § 1274. In the
Interlocutory decrees affirmed.
Final decree affirmed, with costs.