170 Mass. 311 | Mass. | 1898
It is expressly stated in the report that the only question presented at the hearing on the motion and petition of the respondent and savings bank respectively was whether any equity was disclosed in favor of the bank to set up its mortgage against the claim of the petitioners, and whether the mortgage took precedence of the claim of the petitioners if they should establish a lien. The court ruled that no equity was disclosed in favor of the bank, and that its mortgage did not take precedence of the claim of the petitioners. To this ruling the respondent and the savings bank excepted, and we understand that the only question presented by the report is as to its correctness. We think that it was correct.
At the hearing no evidence was offered by the respondent or the savings bank in respect to certain allegations contained in the motion and the petition, and included in brackets.
The savings bank concedes that it was not entitled to notice of the petition filed by the petitioners. Howard v. Robinson, 5 Cush. 119. Assuming that the bank would have a right to be heard, it is manifest that it was bound to present its application seasonably. The petition was filed in March, 1896. The respondent duly appeared and answered. The case was sent to an auditor, who heard the parties for seven days in April, 1897, and filed his report on June 21. On June 28, when the case was ready for trial, this motion and this petition were filed. No reason was stated in the motion filed by the respondent why it was not made earlier. In the petition filed
Judgment for the petitioners.
The motion alleged that, prior to the making of the contract described in the petition, the respondent went to the bank to ascertain if the bank would make a further loan on the real estate to enable the petitioner to erect the structure mentioned in the contract and petition ; that the respondent and the bank, which was the holder of a mortgage for $4,000, arranged that the bank was to lend and the respondent to borrow on a mortgage of the real estate the further sum of $16,000, the first mortgage to be discharged
The petition, in addition to the allegations of the motion, alleged that the petitioners knew that the loan was to be made by the bank, the purpose for which it was made, and all the $16,000 was paid to and received by the petitioners from time to time as the work progressed; that the petitioners have received the whole consideration of the mortgage except the sum of $1,000, which was a prior mortgage and lien upon the premises at the time of the execution of the contract between the petitioners and the respondent; that the bank was in equity entitled to have its mortgage declared to be a prior lien upon the premises as against the alleged lien of the petitioners; that after the mortgage was executed and after the money on account of the same was advanced, the contract between the petitioners and the respondent was by parol changed and greatly modified, without the knowledge or consent of the bank; and that by the terms of the contract it was to have been completed on March 1, 1895, but was not completed until January, 1896, or later.