108 N.J. Eq. 542 | N.J. Ct. of Ch. | 1931
The facts which give rise to the present controversy are fully set forth in a previous opinion filed by me in this cause and reported in
The evidence submitted at the hearing on this petition showed that out of the proceeds of the $600 mortgage the following sums were paid in satisfaction of the prior $2,800 mortgage, and of taxes, a lien on the premises and properly payable by the mortgagee:
Balance of principal and interest on mortgage .. $161.60 1925 taxes and interest ........................ 139.51 1926 taxes and interest ........................ 126.30 _______ $427.41The balance of the proceeds was applied to purposes not referable to the mortgaged premises. Upon payment of these sums the $2,800 mortgage was marked "paid" upon the books of the building and loan association; but the bond and mortgage were retained by the ascociation, or its solicitor, uncanceled of record, although, as a matter of fact, the mortgage was sent to the solicitor of the association for cancellation but was not canceled. After the execution of the $600 mortgage by Mrs. Dancy, the association's solicitor certified that it was a first lien on the premises. As stated in my former opinion, the petitioner claims that as the $2,800 mortgage had been paid, and as the $600 mortgage was a lien, if a lien at all, only on the widow's unassigned right of dower which terminated on her death, the complainant had no right to foreclose these mortgages; that the foreclosure and sale were wrongful and fraudulent as to these petitioners, and that, therefore, the building and loan association is accountable to the petitioner for the full value of the premises at the time of the foreclosure sale. The only questions here involved are those respecting the accountability of the association for the alleged wrongful foreclosure, and the alleged liability of the purchaser at the sheriff's sale to account for his profits in the transaction. *544
No doubt the right to foreclose a mortgage is terminated by its payment, and a mortgagee wrongfully foreclosing or exercising a power of sale, is accountable to the injured party for the full value of the property sold. Melick v. Voorhees,
As to the $600 mortgage, it is argued both that it is void and valid, on the authority of Morris v. Glaser,
Counsel for the petitioners claims, however, that the right of subrogation, if any, was in the widow because it was her money, obtained upon the security of her mortgage, which was used to pay the prior mortgage. The widow was undoubtedly entitled to subrogation. Becker v. Carey, 36 Atl. Rep. 770; Woods v.Wallace,
There being no fraud either in the inception of this transaction which resulted in the $600 mortgage, or in the foreclosure, the question of liability of the purchaser at the foreclosure sale to account for the profits on his resale does not arise.