110 Mich. 508 | Mich. | 1896
The bill in this case alleges that the complainant was the owner of a piece of land in the township of Hartford, Nan Burén county, upon which there were two mortgages, — one made to August N. Spaulding, in the sum of $100, and one running to S. S. Rockwell, in the sum of $450; that on the 20th day of October, 1894, being desirous of borrowing sufficient money to pay off the two mortgages, she applied to one George E. Breck, and sought and obtained a loan of $840, and executed a certain note or bond in the sum of $840, and five interest coupon notes, and secured the same by a real-estate mortgage upon the same property, which notes and mortgage were delivered to Breck; that the consideration for the making and executing of the notes and mortgage was:
“First, $40 to Breck for his services rendered your oratrix, and for effecting said loan; second, said Breck was to pay off and take up and discharge the Spaulding mortgage; third, he was to pay and cause to be discharged the Rockwell mortgage; fourth, he was to pay the balance, namely, $200, in money.”
That he paid the money at the time, caused the Spaulding mortgage to be discharged, but failed to procure a discharge of the Rockwell mortgage. The bill further alleges that the defendant Crane claims to be a purchaser of the note and mortgage executed to Breck, and avers that he is not a bona fide purchaser, for the reason that the note is not a negotiable note, and alleges that complainant is entitled to set off, as against the Breck note and mortgage, the $450 mortgage due to Rockwell, but
The note given to Breck was in form precisely like that considered in Walker v. Thompson, 108 Mich. 686, and this case must Be ruled by that, unless the contention of defendant’s counsel be admitted upon one or both of the following propositions: First, that, inasmuch as the stipulation to pay taxes assessed upon the mortgagee’s interest was made at a time when there was no statute authorizing an assessment of taxes upon a mortgagee’s interest in land, it adds nothing to the obligation of the payor, and hence that the amount of the note is certain; second, that, under the allegations in the bill, it should be held that Breck was constituted the agent of complainant in negotiating the note in question, and that complainant is therefore estopped to deny the validity of the note.
The order overruling the demurrer will be affirmed, with costs to complainant, and the cause remanded.