134 P. 608 | Utah | 1913
This is an action in equity. Respondent is the assignee of the Salt Lake Security & Trust Company, hereafter called trust company. It brought the action January, 1910, to foreclose a mortgage originally given for $10,-000. The mortgage in question was payable in monthly installments of $250 each, and it was provided therein that, in case an installment should remain unpaid for a period of thirty days or more, the payee might declare the whole debt due and enforce payment thereof in an action of foreclosure. It is alleged in the complaint that the maker was in default and that when the action was commenced there remained a balance due on the mortgage amounting to $5438.11. There were a number of defendants, some of whom we shall refer to later. The only one that is directly concerned on this appeal is the. University Investment Company, hereafter designated appellant. The district court made findings of fact and conclusions of law in favor of respondent for the
The findings of fact, conclusions of law, and judgment are vigorously assailed by appellant as being contrary to the evidence and the law. Numerous errors are assigned, and those that are deemed material will be considered in their order.
Owing to the great length of the findings of facts we shall not set them forth here, but shall confine our statement of the facts to such matters only as are deemed necessary to a full understanding of the points decided. In order to avoid unnecessary repetition, we shall state the facts in the opinion, and so far as possible shall do so in connection with the point decided.
The controversy arises out of the following transactions:
On the 14th day of March, 1907, the defendant John W. Carpenter, being desirous of erecting a building upon a certain lot owned by him, in order to accomplish his purpose, on that day entered into an agreement in writing with the trust company aforesaid whereby it was agreed that said company should “advance to said party of the first part (Carpenter) the sum of $25,000 towards the erection of the building aforesaid,” and said Carpenter agreed to secure the payment of said sum of money by executing and delivering to said trust company a bond and first mortgage on the lot and building aforesaid for $15,000, payable in five years, with seven per cent, interest and with the right to renew the same for another five years, and a second note and mortgage for the sum of $10,000, payable in sums of $250 “per month or more,” with interest at seven per cent, “to be adjusted semiannually.” In said agreement it was also provided that said Carpenter “agrees to let the contract for said building to O. M. Engdahl for the sum of $30,850.” On the 18th day of March, 1907, the bond for $15,000, the note for $10,000, and the two mortgages were duly executed and delivered by said1 John W. Carpenter and his wife, Martha J. Carpenter, to said trust company. The
Appellant’s connection with the transactions in question arose as follows: Some time after the building in question
The real controversy in the case arises in this way:
Upon this point the president, in referring to the “bonus,” testified: “Engdahl paid us; you see, it (the $4400) "was really added to the amount of the contract let to Eng-dahl.” After going over the matter at some length and in attempting to explain the item of $4400, the president was asked the following question which he answered as indicated: “Q. In other words, you wanted the $4000 or $4400 at all events? A. Well, now, I think that is just .about what I wanted.” The president also testified that
In a case where the original contractor turns over the contract to a subcontractor at a less figure than the original contract price, the original contractor may receive a fixed sum before the erection of the building is entered upon. But we have no such a case here, as is made clear by the president of the trust company. He was asked the following pointed questions : “He (Engdahl) was not in any sense your subcontractor ; that is, the company’s subcontractor ?” Hfs answer was: '“He was the original contractor.” There is much more evidence that might be quoted to the same effect. The statements of the president of the trust company are also in 'entire harmony with every written agreement entered into by the parties, and any other conclusion would be in the very teeth of all those agreements. Again, the trust company had already taken out of the loan a commission of '$500, and this, too, for services in lending what we must • assume were its own funds. It is beyond all cavil, therefore, that the building contract entered into by Engdahl was '“loaded” to the extent of $5298, out of which Birrell re•ceived his $8.98 and the trust company the sum of $4400. Engdahl, therefore, only received $25,552 upon the building contract which, it must be assumed, included his profits, if .any, upon the contract. The trust company, 'therefore, either never advanced the $4400 for the building ■or kept that sum out of what Carpenter paid into the building fund. The $4400 thus constituted a mere bonus — a .gratuity — which was kept by the trust company and for 'which Carpenter never received anything whatever.
“The purchaser is not allowed to defend against the mortgage-he has assumed to pay on the ground that it was made without consideration or that the consideration has failed and therefore is not valid against his grantor, for the latter having appropriated a portion of the purchase price of the land to the payment of a sum of money to a third person, and made it a charge upon the land, it does not matter whether there was any legal obligation upon him to pay it or whether it was at the time of the sale a lien upon the land; his grantee, having undertaken to pay it, is precluded from assailing its validity. The same rule applies to one who has purchased subject to a mortgage, the amount of which is deducted from the consideration paid. But it seems that the grantor may confer upon the purchaser the right to question the-validity of the mortgage.”
Furtber on in tbe same section the author says:
*85 “Even one who has bought subject to a mortgage, without assuming the payment of it so as to make himself personally liable, cannot contest the validity of the mortgage lien, for, when the amount of the mortgage has been deducted, from the amount of the consideration of the purchase, it is in effect an agreement that so much of the purchase money shall be paid to the person holding the mortgage.” (Italics ours.)
In most of the eases cited by counsel the decisions axe expressly based upon the fact that the purchasers had either deducted the amount of the mortgage from the purchase price or had expressly assumed or agreed to pay the amount remaining unpaid on the mortgage. While it is true that some of the cases seem to go farther than this, yet it is not .clear that they do so, since it is not clearly made to appear whether the amount of the lien was actually deducted from the purchase price or not. In the case at bar it was neither pleaded nor proved that any amount was deducted from' the purchase price. The only evidence in the record on that point is found in Mr. Carpenter’s testimony. When asked whether the amount of the mortgage was deducted from the purchase price for which he sold the premises to the Stewarts and Mrs. Taylor, he said that the matter was not considered at all. All we have, therefore, is the statement in one deed that it was given “subject” to certain mortgages and an admission to the same effect at the trial. That to purchase lands “subject” to a mortgage does not necessarily bind the purchaser to what may be claimed to be due thereon is clearly stated by the Supreme Court of Illinois in Crawford v. Nimmons, 180 Ill. 143, 54 N. E. 209. It is there held that under recording acts where the mortgage is recorded the purchaser takes subject to the mortgage whether it is so stated in the deed or not, and that merely to insert in a deed that it is subject to a mortgage legally amounts to no more. It is accordingly held in that case, and in our judgment the decision is supported by the great weight of authority, that unless the grantee in the deed assumed or agreed to pay the mortgage, or unless the amount of the mortgage was deducted from the purchase price, a purchaser who takes subject to the mortgage merely
It will be found that the .decisions in the foregoing cases are all based upon the fact that the grantee either assumed or agreed to pay the mortgage or had deducted the amount thereof from the purchase price of the mortgaged premises. It was under such circumstances that it was held that the purchaser was estopped from assailing the validity of the amount due upon the debt secured by the mortgage. It will also be observed that in all of the foregoing cases the facts which estopped the grantee were in most instances pleaded, and in all proved as other facts in the case. As we have seen, there is neither allegation nor proof, in this case, although the questions are argued in this court. It follows, therefore, that, unless a purchaser for some legal or equitable reason has estopped himself from protecting the interest he has acquired in incumbered premises, we can see no good reason why he should not be permitted to protect his inter
“It is frequently settled in general terms, perhaps oftener than otherwise, that a tender is a conclusive admission that the amount tendered is due, and that the party in whose favor the tender is made is entitled to that amount. While the tender is the admission, the foundation upon which the rule rests, yet the statement is inaccurate. It does not in fact become conclusive until the tenderer makes it a matter of record. The rule has been comprehensively stated thus: ‘A plea of tender is an unequivocal admission of the justice of the plaintiff’s claim to the extent of the sum tendered. So conclusive is the admission that if the tender is refused, and the party proceeds to trial, and it shall turn out that the plaintiff was not legally entitled to anything, the plaintiff shall have a verdict for the sum tendered.’ A verdict should not be against the admission, and a judgment entered on a verdict to the effect that the plaintiff had no cause of action, or if for a less sum than that admitted to be due by the plea will be reversed; but the judgment may be for more.”
Where a tender has been made, therefore, the party invoking it must be bound thereby unless he pleads and proves that he was misled or deceived in making it. Upon such proof, if pleaded, he may be relieved from the consequences of the tender; but, when there is no such claim and he pleads and relies upon the tender, he must assume the consequences of the admission -implied thereby. As the evidence now stands, therefore, even through appellant has not deducted the amount claimed to be due upon the mortgage from the purchase price, and although it be permitted to defend against the bonus of $4400 and the item of $32.96, for the reasons stated, yet it haying tendered the sum of $4500, judgment for that sum should nevertheless be entered against it. In such event no attorney’s fee nor costs, how
“A tender by a mere stranger will not discharge the lien of a mortgage. Where mortgaged premises are conveyed to a purchaser subject to a mortgage, but without any assumption of the debt by him, a tender by such owner of the equity of redemption will not discharge the lien. As between the mortgagor and the purchaser of the legal estate, the mortgage debt is part of the consideration, and the land is the primary fund for the payment of the mortgage debt. Hence a purchaser cannot be permitted to discharge the lien of the mortgage by a mere tender without payment. If he desires to pay the mortgage debt so as to free his land, and the mortgagee refuses the money, he has his remedy in equity to compel a discharge of the mortgage, and by keeping the tender good, and bringing the "money into court for the purpose of the payment, he stops the running of interest, and subjects the mortgagee to the costs of the suit. Or in a suit to foreclose he may plead the tender as a defense and bring the money into court with like effect.”
Tbe judgment is reversed, and tbe cause is remanded to tbe district court, witb directions to grant a new trial, to-permit tbe parties or either of them to amend tbe pleadings if so advised, and to proceed and determine tbe case in accordance witb tbis opinion. Costs to appellant.