61 N.J. Eq. 94 | New York Court of Chancery | 1900
The object of the bill (which was filed February 8th, 1896) is to foreclose a mortgage given on the 1st day of May, 1845 (nearly fifty-one years before the bill filed), by John I. Duncan and wife to Kenneth Applegate, to secure $3,000.
The complainant claims title through (1) the will of Apple-gate, (2) the will of his widow and universal legatee Gertrude Applegate, and (3) an assignment from one Wyckoff, the executor of Gertrude.
The mortgage covers two tracts of land, one, presumably farm land, containing thirty-three acres, and the other containing three and twenty hundredths acres, upon which was situate a mill and mill-site at Cranbury, in the county of Middlesex.
Complications have arisen in the case from the fact that the tract of thirty-three acres has been conveyed away by the-mortgagor and released from the mortgage,- and the mill tract of three and twenty hundredths acres has also been conveyed away by the mortgagor and subdivided, and three small tracts sold from it, one of which has also been released from the mortgage. These lots contained forty-five hundredths, forty hundredths and ten hundredths of an acre respectively, making ninety hundredths of an acre in the aggregate, and leaving two and twenty-five hundredths acres remaining in the mill lot proper.
Two of the tracts so sold off have not been released and are owned by the defendants Conover and Silvers, respectively.
Neither included any part of the mill or 'pondage, which latter at the time of the filing of the bill was owned by the defendant Mrs. Wilson. She did not answer. Decree pro confesso was taken against her, and after hearing all parties an order for sale pendente Hie of the mill -tract of two and twenty-five hundredths acres was made, and that sale produced a sum insufficient to pay the amount claimed by the complainant to be due on his mortgage.
The contest in the cause is whether or not the complainant may now resort for the balance to the several lots owned by Silvers and Conover which are part of the original mill tract and have never been released from the mortgage.
Two grounds were relied'upon by both Silvers and Conover
Bearing this in mind we will state the order of events in regard to the several conveyances and releases.
The first conveyance made by Duncan, the mortgagor, was of the whole mill tract (three and twenty hundredths acres) in March, 1847, to one James Prall. The conveyance of this tract contains covenants of ownership, power to convey and general warranty, and there is in it no mention of the complainant’s mortgage. The result of this, standing by itself, would be at once to cast upon the thirty-three acre tract the burden of being first sold to pay the amount due on the mortgage.
Duncan and wife in 1859—twelve years later—conveyed the thirty-three acre tract for the consideration of $4,000 to one Chamberlain. That conveyance also contained covenants of ownership, power to convey, quiet possession and against all encumbrances and general warranty. No mention is made therein of the complainant’s mortgage.
Prall—the owner of the mill tract—died in 1854, and on October 16th, 1855, commissioners in partition, by order of the orphans court of the county of Middlesex, conveyed to Elizabeth Prall, widow of James Prall, two and seventy-five hundredths acres, part of the mill tract of three and twenty hundredths acres, and containing the mill and pondage. No mention is made in this conveyance of the complainant’s mortgage.
Mrs. Prall, by deed dated October 20th—four days later— conveyed to Hamilton Jones two and thirty-five hundredths acres out of the two and seventy-five hundredths acres so conveyed to her. This deed contains full covenants of ownership, power to convey, and general warranty, and no mention is made of the complainant’s mortgage.
So far there is nothing on the record to indicate that the equity arising out of the original conveyance from Duncan to Prall in favor of Prall as against the thirty-three acre tract had been affected or released. J ones and Conover were clearly entitled to the benefit of that equity, so far as the record shows.
Then Mrs. Prall, coincident in time with her conveyance to Jones, to wit, October 20th, 1855, conveyed forty hundredths of an acre out of the two and seventy-five hundredths acres conveyed to her by the commissioners, to Henry "Vanderwater; and on October 23d, 1855, Mrs. Applegate, then the holder of the complainant’s mortgage, released to Vanderwater the forty hundredths of an acre so conveyed to him.
Eight and a half years later, namely, on the 19th of April, 1864, Mrs. Applegate, still the holder of the complainant’s mortgage, released to Chamberlain the thirty-three acre lot previously—in’ 1859—conveyed to him by Duncan and wife. It is upon this release that the defendants mainly rely in support of their first defence..
The mill tract, containing two and thirty-five hundredths acres, passed by various conveyances until it became vested in one Nutt, and on the 28th of April, 1865 (thirty-one years before the bill was filed), Nutt and wife conveyed a small corner to one Dey, and the tract so conveyed to Dey became vested in the defendant Silvers.
We now come to facts which tend to destroy the equity between the owner of the mill-lot of two and thirty-five hundredths acres and the owner of the thirty-three acre tract.
The name of the owner mentioned as Hamilton Jones was James H. Jones, and he was examined as a witness. He swears that when he purchased the property from Mrs. Prall, shortly after the conveyance to her by the commissioners in 1855, and
This arrangement sworn to by Jones indicates that when' Prall purchased the mill property from Duncan, the mortgagor, he verbally assumed as part of the consideration to pay the complainant’s mortgage in destruction of the equity which would otherwise arise out of the covenants of the deed in his favor as against the thirty-three acre tract retained by Duncan,
Jones further swears that Mrs. Applegate, the owner of the mortgage, lived on the main street of Ilightstown, about a mile and a half from the mill, and that Thomas Applegate, a nephew, was her agent and took charge of her business. The mill was not insured, and its destruction by fire substantially ruined Jones, but, as we have seen, he took title back from.his assignees, and swears that he rebuilt the mill and tried to go on, but was unable to pay the interest on the mortgages, and, for that reason, in November, 1858, conveyed the property to William A Shreve, the brother of Mrs. Prall and one of the executors of her husband.
In the list of creditors annexed to the deed of assignment by Jones to assignees in insolvency, which is dated May 22d, 1857, appears the following: “Mortgage to Applegate, $3,000; mortgage to Elizabeth Prall, $5,500.” -
In the deed from the assignees back to Jones, dated September 25th, 1857, the consideration is expressed as follows: “Eifty cents over and above encumbrances, which are two mortgages and the interest, amounting to $9,062.”
In the deed from Jones and wife to Shreve is found the following language:
■ “Said William A. Shreve does assume to pay two mortgages ou said property, one held by the widow of Kenneth Applegate for $3,000, one held by Elizabeth Prall for $5,000, and the interest due on said mortgages.”
Shreve conveyed the mill property to Nutt, and that deed is made subject to a mortgage to Elizabeth Prall for $3,250. And Nutt and wife, in December, 1870, conveyed the premises to one Snedecker subject to a bond and mortgage held by Gertrude Applegate for $2,900, which is the amount of principal claimed by complainant on his mortgage.
The mill property subsequently became vested in Charles H. and Henry Smith, and they, on December 29th, 1879. conveyed the premises to the defendant Eliza A. Wilson, subject to the Applegate mortgage for $2,900.
This statement shows that the defendant Silvers and the defendant Conover stand in a different position so far as relates to the equity against the thirty-three acre tract. Conover cannot be held to be affected either by the verbal agreement which it is fair to infer must have existed between Prall and his grantor, Duncan, the mortgagor, that Prall should assume the payment of the Applegate mortgage, or by the verbal agreement proved to have existed between Mrs. Prall and Hamilton Jones that the complainant’s mortgage should be assumed by him and taken as a part of the consideration money of her conveyance to him. Both of them were latent equities, not appearing on the record, and there is no proof that, Conover had any notice of them, nor is he bound by the actual assumption of the mortgage contained in the deed from Jones to Shreve, for it was made subsequent to his purchase, while Silvers, grantee of Dey, is or may be affected by that assumption.
Taking up the case of Conover on the question of the effect of the release of the thirty-three acre tract, the only difficulty arises out of the question whether, when Mrs. Applegate in 1859 released the thirty-three acre trapt to Chamberlain, she was chargeable with notice that the commissioners of Prall, or somebody claiming under him, had conveyed to Conover the forty-five hundredths of an acre tract from the mill property to Conover.
To sustain that position Conover’s counsel relies on several
“Lot which the said Henry Vanderwater purchased of Elizabeth Prall, situate, lying and being in the township of South Brunswick, county of Middlesex and State of New Jersey, butted and bounded as follows: beginning on the northwesterly side' of the main street or road in the village of Cranbury and Une of Tyler D. Oonover; and from thence running on said road north forty-six degrees east seventy-six links or fifty feet; thence north forty-four degrees west four chains and thirty-four links to the mill race; thence down the same south eighty-five degrees west eighty-six links to Tyler D. Conover’s line; thence along the same south forty-three degrees and forty-five minutes east four chains and seventy links to the place of beginning. Containing forty-hundredths of an acre, be the same more or less.”
It is worth while to stop to say that the original mill tract was in shape approximately an isosceles triangle, with an acute apex. The brook ran along and near to the west side, and the road along the east side. The Conover lot is composed of a slice taken—not by a straight line—from the base of the original lot, and the Vanderwater lot (which was released) was taken off just above it. So that the Conover lot was separated by the Vanderwater lot from the mill-lot as it remained after those conveyances. The Dey lot was taken from the northwest side.
In this connection let us turn to the allegation of the bill. That sets forth all these conveyances and releases, not, however, with absolute accuracy in each case, and we find in it no allegation of any recognition of the complainants mortgage, or any claim on the part of the complainant against the owner of the Conover lot for the payment of interest, except so far as it may be inferred from the allegation in the bill that $100 of prin
The clear proof—in fact, the written admission of the parties—is that both Conover and Dey, directly after the several ■conveyances were so made to them, took actual possession of their several lots, fenced them in and built dwellings upon them, and have ever since had exclusive, actual and open possession •of them.
It is claimed that from this possession of the Conover lot, .and failure to demand interest from the owner, an inference may be drawn that Mrs. Applegate and her agent must have had actual notice of the conveyance to Conover, and such notice would make the release by her of the thirty-three acre lot inequitable as against Conover. And it is further alleged that the verbiage of the release of the Vanderwater lot is of itself such notice.
This position is not without strength, but I find it unneces-' sary to come to a conclusion upon it, since, for other reasons,
I think complainant’s claim must fail, not only as against the Conover lot, but also against the Dey lot, in whose favor no such facts exist.
The proof is clear, as we have seen-—in fact, it is admitted— that both Conover and Dey have been in the full, exclusive, open .and actual possession of their respective lots- for more than thirty years before the filing of the bill, and during all that time neither ever admitted in any manner the title of the mortgagee, by payment of interest or otherwise, and no claim for either principal or interest was ever made against either of them. Their possession was open and visible to the holder of the mortgage, who lived in the immediate neighborhood, and it was beyond all question, as it seems to me, adverse to the mortgagee’s claim. And I am of opinion that the fact that the interest on the debt was paid (not by the obligor, but by the owner of the mill tract proper), with reasonable punctuality, up to the year 1894, does not save the lien of the complainant’s mortgage upon the two lots of Conover and Dey.
This result is contrary to what was decided by Vice-Cham cellor Emery in Longstreet v. Brown, 37 Atl. Rep. 56., and by
Prior to the publication of the opinion in Blue v. Everett, this court had always ignored the question as to whether the mortgagee was barred by lapse of time of his right to maintain an action at law to recover his debt; had, in fact, to some extent, ignored the effect of the statute of limitations, and had confined itself to the single and simple inquiry, Has the debt been actually paid? It it had not been paid, then, no matter how old might be the mortgage, the title was still maintained as security for the debt. It is proper to say, however, that this court did not entirely ignore the statute of limitations, but used it by way of analogy, and presumed that the debt had been paid if its existence had not been acknowledged by the mortgagor or his' grantee within twenty years; and it held that payment on account by the holder of the title was such an acknowledgment. In the application of this rule, so called, the question arose whether such presumption was conclusive or not, so as to preclude proof that the debt had not, in fact, been paid. This question was discussed and settled by Vice-Chancellor Emery in Blue v. Everett, when that case was before him, as reported in 10 Dick. Ch. Rep. 329.
The court of errors and appeals, in affirming the decree so advised by the learned vice-chancellor, went further, and laid down a new rule, whieh, as I interpret it, declared the law to be that, after twenty years from the default in payment by the mortgagor, the mortgagee, in order to have relief in equity, must show a right of action at law to recover his debt which was not barred by the statute of limitations. If he had a sealed instru
It is true that this statement of .the law was made by the single judge who gave the reasons of the court for the decree of affirmance. But the language used therein indicates that he thought at least that he was speaking for the whole court. Eor it is to be observed that after stating the grounds relied upon by the learned vice-chancellor in the court below, he says: “Without-considering the questions decided below, we think the decree should be affirmed on broader grounds.” And then proceeds to state with elaboration the doctrine -above stated and its foundation, and closes as follows: “The complainant’s rights, under both his bond and his mortgage, are purely legal in their nature, and as they have been barred, that under the bond by the lapse of sixteen years since the last payment was made, and that under the mortgage by the lapse of twenty years since the breach of tho condition, they should be denied in equity as well as at law.”
This statement of the doctrine startled the profession, and provoked the plea interposed in Colton v. Depew. There, more than twenty years had elapsed since the pay day named in the mortgage, and the action on the bond was barred by a discharge in bankruptcy, as well as by the statute1 of limitations, no payment having been made within sixteen years, but a payment had been made by the owner of the mortgaged premises just within twenty years. TJpon these facts the complainant seemed to be barred by the rule laid down in Blue v. Everett.
Vice-Chancellor Stevens, when the ease was before him, distinguished it from Blue v. Everett and held that the payments made in that case, as in this, by the grantee of the mortgaged premises could not be treated as payments applicable to the bond, but must be considered as acknowledgments by the. holder of the legal title of the existence of the mortgage, and advised a decree for the complainant. 14 Dick. Ch. Rep. 126.
By that decision, as I interpret it, the payment of interest by the mortgagor or his grantee is treated as an acknowledgment of the title of the mortgagee and of his right to possession as such of the mortgaged premises, and that the possession of the mortgagor or his grantee is not adverse to the right of the mortgagee.
. The result of the doctrine thus established is, as it seems to me, that a payment on account of the debt, in order to be efficient to preserve the mortgagee’s right against lapse of time, must be made by the party in possession of and claiming title to the mortgaged premises. A payment by the bondsman after he has parted with the title and the possession of the mortgaged premises will not, necessarily, avail the mortgagee as an acknowledgment of his title, and may be entirely consistent with adverse possession of the premises by the assignee of the mortgagor. In like manner, as it seems to me, a payment by the owner of one distinct portion of the mortgaged premises, who, perhaps, has assumed payment of the whole mortgage debt, cannot, standing alone, be construed as an admission, by the owner of another distinct portion, of the title of the mortgagee to that distinct portion of the premises.
One clause in the exhaustive opinion of Mr. Justice Depue in Colton v. Depew is significant: “The mortgagee has two securities for the debt—the bond and the legal estate in the mortgaged premises. A payment on the debt may be made by the obligor on the bond, or by the grantee of the mortgaged premises. Where the obligor has convejred the - premises, his
The practical effect of this new rule is that the mortgagee, in ■order to insure the safety of his lien after the lapse of twenty years from the pay-day named in the mortgage, must inquire who is the party making the payment upon which he relies— whether it he by the party in possession as owner of the mortgaged premises, or by some one liable for the debt merely. He can no longer rely upon the mere keeping alive of the mortgage ■debt. The payment must be made by the person in possession as ■owner; and I think that where the premises have been divided in title and open and visible possession taken by each of the ■several grantees, the mortgagee must inquire whether the payment which he receives represents all the owners. Such, as it seems to me, is the logical result of Colton v. Depew.
I perceive nothing in this result contrary to settled rules and established principles. It imposes no greater hardship or degree ■of vigilance upon the mortgagee out of possession than the law imposes upon every owner of land who is not in the actual possession of it. If such owner out of possession desires to preserve his title he must see to it that no person is in the actual possession not only of the whole, but also of any part of his land, under a ■claim of title adverse to him. The mortgagee must do the same. The division of a tract of land into portions and the occupation of such portions by different parties assuming varying attitudes towards a claimant of the whole is one of the ordinary incidents of such a state of things. The books record numerous instances where parties have succeeded in establishing title to portions of tracts by an adverse possession of such portion.
It seems to me plain enough that the possession of both Honover and Dey was adverse to the holder of the mortgage.
Eor these reasons it is difficult, under the circumstances, to see how the holder of the mortgage, at the time he filed his bill, could maintain ejectment against either of those defendants. And the right to maintain ejectment is the test of the right to equitable interference.
If it be asked how a mortgagee may retain his lien upon the whole of the promises in a case like this, and allow his mortgage to rest beyond twenty years, it seems to me that the question is quite aside from the problem to' be solved, and therefore need not be answered. But the proceedings to be taken by the mortgagee to protect himself, under such circumstances, seem to mo to be sufficiently obvious and simple. He could, in this case, before twenty years had elapsed, have called on the owners of the Conover and Dey lots and asked them whether they still acknowledged the lien of his mortgage, and if they answered in the affirmative, he could have required them to put their acknowledgment in writing. If they had declined to give such acknowledgment, then it was open for him to determine' whether he would retain the mortgage upon the security of the principal mill-lot, or would foreclose. If he was willing to-retain his mortgage upon the security of the principal mill-lot alone, he could do so and abandon the lien upon the other two lots. If he was not so willing, and Conover and Dey declined to acknowledge the lien of his mortgage, then, of course, he' would be driven to foreclose, precisely as he would if the owners of the principal mill-lot, as well as the others, had declined to acknowledge the lien of his mortgage by payment.
And it seems to me that there was no difficulty in the mort
In Longstreet v. Brown Vice-Chancellor Emery was dealing with a case like the present, where a part of the mortgaged premises had been conveyed away for value and without any assumption of the mortgage debt or any part of it, which had been kept alive by the payment of interest by the owner of the part of the premises retained by the mortgagor. The learned vice-chancellor held that such payment kept the mortgage alive as against the owner of the property sold off, on the ground that the payment was for his benefit; and the decision is, as I have stated, based wholly upon the debt itself being shown to be in existence within twenty years, and so not within the time required to warrant a presumption of payment. But the learned vice-chancellor distinctly points out that the question here involved, namely, "whether the possession of the mortgagor or his grantees for twenty years after default is to be considered a possession adverse to the mortgagee, so as to deprive the latter of the equitable remedy of foreclosure, has not been decided by our courts.” That question has now, as I conclude, been decided by our highest court in Colton v. Depew; for it seems plain to me, as before remarked, that the logical result of that decision is that a mere acknowledgment of the existence of the debt by one not interested in the land pledged to its payment cannot be construed as an acknowledgment of the right of the mortgagee in the land.
I do not find it necessary to state the unreported grounds of • Vice-Chancellor Reed’s decision in Mundy v. Smith, since that learned judge agrees with me that they cannot stand against Colton v. Depew.