20 Vt. 388 | Vt. | 1848
The orator, having paid off a mortgage to Marshall, an incumbrance existing prior to his mortgage, and prior to Bowen’s attachment, claims to stand subrogated to all the equitable rights of Marshall as against the defendants. Whether he has this right, or not, is the only question in the case. There is no ground for saying, that the orator was a mere volunteer, assuming a debt, which he was under no obligation to pay and had no interest in paying. As a subsequent mortgagee, it was clearly his right to discharge that incumbrances, with a view to the protection of his own. He was made a party defendant to Marshall’s bill of foreclosure, and properly so; he was under a necessity, then, of paying the debt to Marshall, on neglect of Fox to do so, or of losing all right under his own mortgage.
It now seems, it was really no object for him to do this, inasmuch as the land was not of sufficient value to satisfy that debt, and also the judgment of Bowen, — both of which took precedence of his own. As a matter of expediency, therefore, it would have been quite as well to have submitted quietly to the foreclosure of- Marshall, without redemption, since by redeeming he could not render available security for his own debt, which was ineffectual by reason of prior incumbrances, and could, at most, as against the defendants, acquire a right to be reimbursed the amount advanced for that purpose. This is all he now seeks to do.
Possibly the orator may have imagined,, that, under the English doctrine of tacking securities, the attaching creditor would be under the necessity of redeeming both mortgages, although the last was subsequent to his attachment; or, more probably, the orator supposed the estate to be of sufficient value to satisfy all the claims upon it.
As against Fox, no question is made. The debt was his, and he neglected to pay it; he does not question the orator’s right to carry forward Marshall’s lien for his own benefit. As to Bowen, indeed, the matter is presented under a different phase. He owed neither of the debts provided for by the two mortgages; and though he has appropriated the land, no obligation results to pay the last mortgage, — being subsequent to his right. The last mortgagee would, however, have a right to redeem the land, by paying the judgment.
In Addison county, some years since, this court decided, that a grantee of real estate, who neglected to record his title deed, by reason of which a creditor of the grantor levied upon the same land as the proper estate of the grantor, was entitled, on a hill filed for that purpose, to recover of the grantor the amount of the debt thus paid out of property, which, as between them, was the property of the orator, notwithstanding there was negligence on his part, in not recording his deed, as well as on the part of the defendant, in noi otherwise paying the debt, for which the land was taken.
These broad principles of natural justice are obvious to every honest mind, and apply fully to the case before us. Indeed, laying out of the case the question of substitution, which can only be eh fected in a court of equity, perhaps, upon those equitable maxims which control the action of indebitatus assumpsit, the orator could recover of Bowen, at law, the amount he paid. However that may be, the orator’s right in equity to reimbursement is unquestionable. It only remains to be considered, whether he can carry forward tin benefit of the original lien, as Marshall might have done.
At the time Marshall brought his bill of foreclosure, Bowen’s demand against Fox had not ripened into a judgment, though an attachment had been made; it was not necessary, or proper, therefore, to make Bowen a party defendant. Marshall’s decree, if it had not been prevented from becoming effectual by the orator’s interference, would have foreclosed him, but not Bowen. He would still hart
Had the orator taken an assignment of Marshall’s mortgage to himself, it would probably not have been doubted, that he might have kept it on foot, as against Bowen. Though no formal assignment was made, and no express contract is shown, that the orator should stand substituted to him in respect to the security he held to enforce payment, natural justice requires, on the part of the first incumbrancer, as it does on the part.of creditors in respect to sureties, an assent to the use of all securities in his hands, to compel payment by him, who is ultimately liable. Such assent will therefore be presumed, when it is necessary for the purposes of justice. The doctrine had its origin in the civil law, or rather in the eternal principles of right, recognized alike by that law and our own law. 2 Story’s Eq. 480; 1 lb. §§ 493, 499. Hodgson v. Shaw, 3 Mylne & Keen 183, 193. Cheesboro v. Millard, 1 Johns. Ch. R. 413. Avery v. Patten, 7 Ib. 211. 3 Kent 124.
It has not been suggested in this case,* that Bowen is insolvent; although Fox probably is. If both were so, the urgency of the occasion for the principle adverted to would be more manifest; but it by no means rests on that ground. The defence here has not been placed upon any distinction of that kind. With these defendants, if they are to be charged with this claim, it is probably a matter of indifference as to the form in which it is done.
The case of Payne v. Hathaway, 3 Vt. 212, is not only an authority for charging the defendants with this debt, but, in several points, it is a much stronger case than the present. Hitchcock and Aldis had levied their execution on the lands of Silas Hathaway, and paid off a previous incumbrance to Simeon Hathaway. To do this they borrowed the money of the orator, securing him therefor by a mortgage of the lands extended upon. The levy proved to be defective, and consequently the orator’s mortgage invalid; yet the defendant, an assignee of the premises from Silas Hathaway, was
Safford, having purchased the judgment in favor of Bowen against Fox and others, and taken a regular assignment thereof, and hav» ing, for his own benefit, in the name of Bowen, levied on the lands mortgaged to Marshall, as well as other lands, succeeded to all the rights of his assignor, and, having notice, was affected by the same countervailing equities. He was, therefore, properly included in, the decree.
The decree of the chancellor is affirmed ; and, as the time limited for the payment of the sum due the orator has expired, the chancellor will fix such farther time as may be reasonable for that purpose, and the orator’s costs in this court will be taxed against the defendants Bowen and Safford.
The chancellor’s decree as to the other defendants is affirmed.