11 A. 59 | N.H. | 1887
For the purposes of this case it is agreed that the value of the Massachusetts lands was much less than the amount of the mortgage debt, and that the plaintiff purchased the equity of redemption for a nominal sum at the auction sale by the *391
mortgagor's assignee in insolvency, "because he believed that to be the least expensive way of foreclosing his mortgage." Under these circumstances, and as against those lands, the union of the titles of the mortgagor and mortgagee undoubtedly became perfected in the latter, and his remedy exhausted, but the mortgage debt was neither satisfied in fact nor extinguished in law. To hold otherwise would obviously be inequitable, and in such case it is held that the union of titles will not of itself he considered a merger so as to operate as payment or satisfaction of the mortgage debt; and this is the rule both at law and in equity. Walker v. Baxter,
A foreclosure upon that property would have had this effect (Smith v. Packard,
Such, also, is the weight of authority. "The purchase of the equity of redemption by the mortgagee at a sale by the mortgagor's assignee in insolvency or on execution is not at law a satisfaction of the mortgage debt, and the mortgagee is not estopped from claiming that the property is of less value than the amount of the debt." 2 Jones Mort., s. 950; Murphy v. Elliott, 6 Blackf. 482; Johnston v. Watson, 7 Blackf. 174; Speer v. Whitfield, 2 Stock. 107; Lydecker v. Bogert,
The plaintiff may therefore maintain this action, and if no other means are or have been taken to ascertain the value of the Massachusetts lands embraced in his mortgage, it may be proved on the trial under the plea of nul disseizin. Green v. Cross, supra.
Case discharged.
CARPENTER, J., did not sit: the others concurred. *392