1 Curt. 223 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine | 1852
The first and most important question in this case is, whether the execution in the name of the Portland Bank could lawfully be levied on
To say that the creditor has agreed that the debtor may have three years to redeem, is to assume the very point in controversy. He has placed himself in a position, in which, if he seeks to foreclose the right to redeem, three years are required to complete that remedy, but if he extend his execution on the land, only one year is required to give him an absolute title. And the debtor may as well be supposed to have agreed to the latter, as the creditor to the former. Besides, this supposed agreement would be inconsistent with the right of the creditor to seize other property of the debtor on the execution, for the debt secured by the mortgage; because this proceeding compels a redemption within the term of three years. Cushing v. Hurd, 4 Pick. 253. The truth seems to me to be, that without resorting to any implied agreement, the debtor, by giving the mortgage, subjects his land to all such rights as the law confers on mortgagees; and by giving his promissory note for the mortgage debt, he subjects his person and property, generally, to the remedies which the law affords to compel its payment at maturity. Whether one remedy or the other will most speedily extinguish the equity of redemption, must depend upon the course of the courts, and the time required to obtain a judgment; in which it is by no means a case beyond experience, to obtain a judgment at law, levy the execution, and wait a year for the right
Two other objections are taken to the form of the levy. The first is, that the statute, in force when the execution was extended, required the appraisers to set out the land by metes and bounds, and they have only described the land generally, and then given a reference to a deed recorded in the registry of deeds for the county. Whatever might have been thought of this objection if the-question were new, I am of opinion that it is foreclosed by the decision of the supreme court of Massachusetts, in Boylston v. Carver, 11 Mass. 515, decided in 1814, while Maine was a part of that state. When, after the separation of this state, it enacted the same statute here, I must consider that it was intended it should be expounded here according to the construction which had already been given to it.
The remaining question arises upon the-officer’s return on the execution. The part objected to is as follows:
“I have this day levied the within execution thereon, and I have delivered seisin and possession of said estate to the said attorneys and assignees of the creditors, John Warren and Nathaniel Warren; to have and. to hold the same to them and to their heirs and assigns forever, in full satisfaction of this execution, and all fees and charges of levying the same; which charges amount to-eighty-four dollars and eighteen cents. I therefore return this execution satisfied in full. Jere. Martin, Deputy-Sheriff.”
“May 16, 1840. Received of Jeremiah Martin, deputy-sheriff, seisin and possession of the above described premises, in full satisfaction of the within execution, and the charges of levying the same.
“John Warren,
“Nathaniel Warren.
“Attorneys and Assignees of the Within-Named Creditors, but for Our Own Use- and Benefit.”
It is a fair presumption that the officer intended to make a legal extent and return, and therefore if his language fairly admits-of a construction which will make the return legal and sufficient, it should be so construed. There is no doubt John and Henry Warren were duly authorized to receive seisin as attorneys for the creditors. The return of the officer declares he delivered seisin of the estate “to the said attorneys and assignees of the creditors.” If they were attorneys, it is of no importance that they were also assignees, and mentioning that has no effect. The return proceeds “to have and to hold the same to them and their heirs and assigns forever, in full satisfaction of this execution.” The last antecedent to “them” is “John and Nathaniel Warren,” but the context shows they were not the persons meant, because the holding is to be in full satisfaction of the execution, and this could only be by the execution creditors having the land; setting it off to the attorneys would not satisfy the execution. I think that, taking the whole return together, the meaning is, that the land was set off to the execution creditors, and not to the attorneys, and this title of the creditors was subsequently conveyed to the defendants. Some objection was made to the receipt of seisin, the attorneys declaring therein, that it was accepted by them as attorneys and assignees