59 N.J. Eq. 126 | New York Court of Chancery | 1899
This is a suit brought to foreclose a. mortgage. The statute of limitations is set up as a bar to recovery. The facts are these: On January 3d, 1863, Nathaniel Dole mortgaged land in Weehawken to William W. Niles to secure his bond of $17,000. The principal sum was payable with interest on January 3d,. 1864. Niles, by deed of assignment dated on the same day, assigned to Jane Van Horn, whose surviving executor, on September 29th, 1882, assigned to complainant. The land mortgaged was conveyed by Dole, the mortgagor, to Delacroix, who, on December 31st, 1870, conveyed to the Weehawken Ferry Company. The deed from Dole to Delacroix contained no-
The title remained in this company until July 9th, 1884, •when it was conveyed by a master to one Simpson, who conveyed to one Symes, who conveyed to Chauncey M. Depew, the present owner. The last payment of interest was made by the Weehawken Ferry Company on December 22d, 1876. The bill was filed December 18th,. 1896.
The case is distinguishable from Blue v. Everett, 11 Dick. Ch. Rep. 455, in the circumstance that, except for a part of the years 1863 and 1864, the obligor resided in the State of New York, where he died in 1891. The eighth section of the Limitations act provides that if any person against whom there is or shall be any such cause of action as, inter alia, is mentioned in the sixth section of the act (the section referring to obligations conditioned to pay money) shall not be resident in this state when such cause of action accrues or shall remove from this state after the same shall accrue and before the time of limitation is •expired, then the time during which such person shall not reside in this state shall not be computed as part of the limited period within which such action is required to be brought.
Blue v. Everett lays down two propositions — -first, that where ■the legal remedy on both debt and mortgage has been barred by the statute and where no independent equity appears, a suit to foreclose cannot be maintained; second, “ that so long as the debt remains the right of the creditor to resort to the land for payment of the debt also continues, even though by the statute the legal right of entry is barred.”
As the case at bar comes within the second of these two propositions, the complainant would undoubtedly be entitled to recover were it not for the existence of another fact. That fact is that, on January 7th, 1868, it was adjudged by the district court of. the United States, for the southern district of New York, that Dole, the obligor,
*128 “be forever discharged from all debts and claims, which, by the said act (the Bankruptcy act of 1867), are made provable against his estate, and which existed on the twenty-fifth day of June, 1867.”
The effect of this decree was to discharge the debt on the bond, but not to impair the mortgage.
For several years after this discharge, interest was paid by the Weehawken Ferry Company, the grantee of the land, to the assignee of the mortgage, the last payment being made December 22d, 1876. In 1871, Dole, the obligor, who was the president of the ferry company, made the following endorsement on the bond:
“In consideration of the extension of time of pay’t of this bond after its maturity, it is understood and agreed that the rate of interest from this date shall be seven per cent, per annum.
“New York, Jan’y 3, 1871. Nathaniel Dole. [Seal.]”
There can be little question but that the person who paid the' interest at this time was the Weehawken Ferry Company, and the agreement that was really intended was no doubt'that this-company would pay seven'instead of six per cent. In Whyte v. McGovern, 22 Vr. 360, Mr. Justice Depue says: “A discharge-in bankruptcy, unlike the bar of the statute of limitations, is a positive extinguishment of the debt, liability or demand to which it applies. Nothing less than an express promise to pay can renew or revive the bankrupt’s liability, and by statute the promise must be put in writing and signed by the party to be charged therewith.” Other cases to the same effect are Briggs v. Sutton, Spenc. 582, and Stewart v. Reckless, 4 Zab. 427. If we look at the stipulation in question as an independent contract, deriving no support from the prior but now extinguished obligation, it is impossible to say that it contains a promise by Dole to pay $17,000. Dole’s jiersonal obligation is therefore extinct. What, then, is tile legal situation? It is, plainly, that after the year 1868, the payments made by the ferry company are to be regarded as payments made with reference to the mortgage security and not with reference to the bond.
This brings me to the only doubtful question in the case,
It is said, in the opinion in Blue v. Everett, that until entry the mortgagor, according to the New Jersey doctrine, continues to be the legal owner of the land for all purposes. This, in general, is true. But as between the mortgagor and mortgagee, the statement is to be taken with certain qualifications. When the mortgagee is, for example, exercising his right to enter or to bring ejectment, he can do so only by virtue of the legal estate vested in him by the mortgage conveyance. That this is well-settled law is apparent from the cases cited in the opinion. Thus, in Montgomery v. Bruere, 1 South. 260, where it was held that the widow was entitled to dower in an equity of redemption, Chief-Justice Kirkpatrick, speaking of the legal status of the mortgagor, said: “ In short, he (the mortgagor) is to be considered as tenant of the freehold for all purposes and in all rela
Now, in view of all this, it seems plain that the legal estate will be regarded as subsisting, in so far as it may be necessary to secure the debt. I think it must be so regarded in the case of the mortgage under consideration. If the payments made after the bond became extinguished related to anything, they related to the mortgage estate. They were paid by the grantee of the mortgagor to the mortgagee only because that mortgagee still had as security for the money once due from Dole a qualified legal title to his laud. The payments made were not rent, but they were, in the most literal sense, the price of possession. The mortgagee having no personal remedy would, if those payments were not made, either eject the mortgagor or sell. It seems to me, therefore, that the language of Chancellor Kent (4- Kent Com. *156) is applicable to the present situation: “ What
The consequences of refusing to apply this doctrine to a case like the present would be this: The mortgagor or his alienee might pay interest up to the very day of the filing of the bill, and yet if (there being no personal liability) the statute of limitations began to run when the principal first became payable, and more than twenty years should have elapsed since it became payable, the security would be gone. So inequitable a result •could not be legally possible. In Blue v. Everett, it was, in principle, disclaimed when the court said that payments on the bond, made within sixtee.n years before suit commenced, would save the security, notwithstanding the fact that the right of entry might have accrued more than twenty years before. I think that while the mortgagor continues to make payments he must be deemed to hold “ by the sufferance or permission of the ■mortgagee under a tacit agreement which the mortgagee may ■determine at his pleasure.” Heath v. Pugh, 6 Q. B. Div. 359.
■ Special reference is made in Blue v. Everett to the right of •entry. I take it to be clear, however, that what the court intended to decide was that the bar of the statute would not ^attach to the equitable remedy of foreclosure and sale until it would attach to the legal remedy by ejectment. Entry was a species of redress by the mere act of the party injured. It was in former times of more practical value than at present. Where, for instance, the true owner had been disseized, he was, by the policy of the ancient law, prevented from conveying. A peaceable entry would terminate the disseizin and enable him to convey. 3 Bl. Com. *5, *175. The sixteenth section of our Limitations act regulates this method of redress. The other kind of redress, viz., that by suit or action in court, is regulated by sec
The .court of appeals, in Blue v. Everett, necessarily decided that the mortgagor’s possession was to be deemed adverse from the very day of the breach of the condition. They inferred this, I suppose, from the two facts of non-surrender and non-payment. Chief-Justice Abbott, in the case cited, did not think that that was the fair inference from those facts, and thought, too, that if, after the breach of the condition, interest had been paid, that “ would have been conclusive evidence of a continuing tenancy.” This was also denied in Blue v. Everett on the ground that payment of interest is referable to the bond and not to the mortgage, and it was held to be so referable not only in cases where the interest is paid by the mortgagor but also in cases where, as in Blue v. Everett, it is paid by the grantee of the mortgagor, who is under no personal liability to pay, and who would not have paid but for the presence of the mortgage. In view, however, of the grounds upon which the decision rests, it seems plain that where, as in the present case, the payments of interest cannot be referred to the bond but must be referred to the mortgage, the fair inference is that the mortgagor holds by permission and not adversely. I think, therefore, in accordance with the doctrine of all the cases, (1) that where the payments are properly referable to the mortgage they are an acknowledgment that the mortgagor, or his grantee, holds under or by permission of the mortgagee; (2) that the possession only becomes adverse when such payments cease; (3) that as the right to bring ejectment would continue for twenty years from the time of the last payment, so the right to foreclose continues for the same period.
As the last payment, in the present case, was made within twenty years before suit commenced, the complainant is entitled to a decree.