111 Me. 365 | Me. | 1914
Bill in equity, heard before a single Justice, the parties agreeing that such hearing “was to be final save the right of appeal.”
In 1897 Sabra B. Carll was the owner in fee simple of certain real estate in Saco. On May 5th of that year she mortgaged the premises to the Saco Savings Bank for two hundred dollars. On March 8th of the following year she mortgaged the same property to the same Bank for one hundred dollars. The Bank assigned the two mortgages, and the notes which the mortgages were given to secure, to Rena L. Carll on September 25th, 1908, and the same were assigned by Rena L. Carll to the defendant, Theodore Kerr, on September 10th, 1910. All the mortgage deeds and assignments were duly recorded. Sabra B. Carll' died leaving the mortgage notes unpaid and the premises were conveyed to the plaintiff, Cora B. Carll, by Guy Carll, administrator of the estate of Sabra. The date of the death of Sabra and the date of the conveyance to the plaintiff do not appear in the record. The administrator’s deed to the plaintiff contained no reference to the mortgages, and the plaintiff claims that she had no actual knowledge of their existence until September
The plaintiff now brings this bill, alleging that through accident and mistake injustice has been done and prays that she may be allowed to redeem the mortgages by the payment of all sums found justly due the defendant, and that defendant be ordered to give her a deed of the premises. The decree of the presiding Justice who heard the case declared that there had been accident and mistake as alleged in the bill and that justice and equity required the granting of the several prayers in the bill.
But the respondent, in his appeal, claims that the decree below was error in law, and that on this ground it should be set aside and the bill dismissed.
These mortgages were in the form customarily used in this State and provided that the right of redeeming the mortgaged premises should be forever foreclosed in one year next after the commencement of foreclosure proceedings. One of the methods of foreclosure provided by statute is that of publication and the Legislature has declared that the year of redemption should begin with the date of the first publication which, in this case, was November 3, 1911, and close one year later. Has this court in equity power, under the circumstances in this case, to extend the time thus fixed by statute ? We think not. In McPherson v. Hayward et al., 81 Maine, 329, which was a bill in equity to redeem a mortgage, our court has said: “The duration of 'the mortgagor’s right to redeem is clearly defined by law, and one the court cannot abridge or enlarge by a single day.”
In Rockland v. Water Co., 86 Maine, 55, we find the following: “The statute of 1891, chapter 91, specially giving equity jurisdiction over the foreclosure of mortgages, may not mean more than to declare the law and make it plain in such matters. That is, given an equitable remedy where the nature of the case requires special aid from the equity side of the court, to make the remedy complete and save the parties, perhaps from irreparable loss. Manifestly the statute periods of redemption are not repealed or otherwise modified.”
Our attention has been called to Cameron v. Adams, 31 Mich., 426, which seems to be much in point. In that case the complainant, during the year in which the equity of redemption was running, became dangerously ill, was unable to attend to business, and was delirious much of the time. He invoked the aid of the equity court because of this misfortune which, he claimed, prevented him from
The plaintiff, in the case at bar, complains that the respondent “negligently and inequitably and contrary to law,” refused and refrained from answering the letter of September 20, 1912, asking for information as to the amount due on the mortgages. Upon this contention, we refer to Sanborn v. Dennis, 9 Gray, 208, where the complainant contended, in a proceeding like the one at bar, that the neglect of the respondent to render an account had unfairly prevented redemption and that the time of redemption should therefore be extended, but the court overruled the contention.
Under the facts in this case, the plaintiff is without equitable remedy, and the mandate should be,
Appeal sustained.
Bill dismissed' without costs.