50 Wis. 450 | Wis. | 1880
The appellant alleges that the learned circuit judge erred, first, in refusing instructions asked by the defendant; and second, in instructing the jury, in substance, that the defendant would have no right to take possession of the property described in the mortgage unless some part of the amount of the notes, the payment of which was secured by the mortgage,
Unless we were disposed to overrule several decisions of this» court, as we certainly are not, this instruction should have been given. The defendant in her answer alleges that she took possession of the property described in the mortgage because she deemed herself insecure for the balance due for the first year’s rent, as well as that to become due for the second year; and on the trial she swears that she took possession because she deemed herself insecure, and she gave some evidence to justify her in that opinion, and there is no evidence to contradict her on this point. Upon the evidence and the pleadings it is very clear that under the decisions of this court the instruction asked should have been given. Cline v. Libby, 46 Wis., 123; Huebner v. Koebke, 42 Wis., 319; Frisbee v. Langworthy, 11 Wis., 375; Welch v. Sackett, 12 Wis., 243, 244; Saxton v. Williams, 15 Wis., 292; Cotton v. Watkins, 6 Wis., 629. Whether, in any case of possession taken before the debt secured became due, by a mortgagee under a mortgage containing a clause of this kind, it would be competent for the mortgagor, in an action at law to repossess himself of such property, to show that the mortgagee did not take possession because he deemed himself, insecure, 'but .for some other or entirely different cause, it is unnecessary to decide, as
The learned circuit judge not only refused to give the instruction asked, but instructed the jury, without any qualification, that the plaintiff was entitled to recover in the action unless the jury found that some part of the money secured by said mortgage was actually due and unpaid when the defendant toolc possession of the property. This was in effect an instruction to find for the plaintiff unless some part of the rent for the first year was due and remained unpaid when the defendant took possession. If there could be any distinction made in favor of the mortgagor, under a claim of this nature, when, as in this case, the mortgage is given to secure the payment of money at a future day as rent for the use of the real property of the mortgagee, and if in such case the mortgagee could not take possession of the mortgaged property until the i-ent was earned and became actually due, still the instruction was wrong, for the reason that it was admitted that a large part of the first year’s rent was unpaid long after it became due, and there was a dispute on the evidence whether it had all been paid when defendant took possession. Still, the judge charged upon this point that if the jury found the defendant had agreed, when the new mortgage was given, to extend the time for the payment of the money then past due, until after sheep-shearing time, the defendant would have no right to take possession of the mortgaged property, or any part thereof, to secure the payment of the sum so remaining unpaid on the rent, which, by the terms of the lease, had become due long before. This instruction is clearly in conflict with the decisions of this court. The money for the first year’s rent having become due and payable by the plaintiff to the defendant, the debt was not, in its nature, different from any other debt arising upon contract; and if no mortgage had been given to secure it before it became due, there was certaiply no objection to the plaintiff’s securing it by mortgage; and if, to
"Whether, in a case of this kind, when a chattel mortgage is given to secure the rent of real estate, to become due at a future day, a court of equity would interfere to prevent the mortgagee from asserting his right to the possession of the mortgaged property before the rent was due or earned by the actual use of the property leased, when the assertion of such right was, in fact, not necessary to the security of the mortgagee, and highly detrimental to the rights of the tenant mortgagor, is very questionable (see Cline v. Libby, 46 Wis., 123); but that he may assert such right in an action at law, when the legal title to the property is alone in question, is fully established by the decisions of this court above cited.
We think the court was mistaken as to the damages the defendant would have been entitled to recover in case the verdict and judgment had been in his favor, and a return of the' property could not be had. In such case the defendant would not be entitled to recover the value of the property, if it exceeded the whole sum due upon his mortgage, but only the amount so due thereon at the time of the trial.
By the Gourt. — -The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.