104 A. 887 | N.H. | 1918
The defendant sureties claim they are entitled to be subrogated to the rights of the mortgagee, Kelly, whose mortgage and liens were paid by the bank's money for which they were sureties, and which they have paid to the bank, while the plaintiff claims that his lien is superior to the defendants' mortgage, which ought not to be treated as a prior incumbrance or to occupy the position of the former mortgage which was discharged. Upon these evidentiary facts, which were reported by a referee, the court found that the defendants were entitled to subrogation in accordance with their claim. To this finding the plaintiff excepted.
The plaintiff's positions are that when the original Kelly mortgage was discharged his lien was thereby advanced and was no longer subject to that incumbrance, that the mortgage to the defendants, which is subject to the plaintiff's lien, was what they contracted for, *84 and that having no interest in the discharged mortgage, they are not equitably entitled to subrogation. In short, the claim is that in paying or furnishing security for the payment of the Kelly mortgage they were what is termed "volunteers" having no right to redeem from that mortgage, and consequently no right of subrogation.
It may be conceded that merely furnishing the money for the payment of a mortgage debt upon receiving a new mortgage as security for the money advanced does not entitle one to the benefit of the original security by way of subrogation. There is no equity in relieving one from the consequences resulting from his voluntary contract in such a case. AEtna Life Ins. Co. v. Middleport,
It is not disputed that the sureties signed the note in question at the request of Mayer upon his representation that upon the application of the money thus secured in payment of the claims of Kelly, the land would be clear of all incumbrances; in other words, that the mortgage he proposed to give them would be a first mortgage. The fact that there was another mortgage on the premises, which Mayer did not disclose, is unimportant in this case, as there is no contention in regard to it. It is clear that the arrangement was that as security for their liability on the note they were to have, in practical effect, the same rights in the land under their mortgage that Kelly had under his. And such would have been the result of the transaction, if it had not been for the plaintiff's lien, of the existence of which the sureties were ignorant and which rendered their mortgage worthless. Upon this state of facts the law seems to be well established that the sureties are not mere volunteers loaning their money to the debtor and taking a mortgage subject to all previous liens, but that they are entitled to subrogation to the Kelly mortgage as against the plaintiff's lien, whose existing, equitable rights are not affected thereby. His security is not lessened by the substitution. His position is the same it was before the Kelly mortgage was discharged.
In Hammond v. Barker,
The finding of the referee that the defendants were negligent in not discovering that the plaintiff had a lien upon the land when they took their mortgage does not constitute a reason why he should have the benefit of the money they advanced for the discharge of the Kelly mortgage. The effect of a failure to examine the records upon one's right to subrogation was a question presented by counsel in Hammond v. Barker, supra (see 131 Briefs Cases, 325, 351), but it was not considered to be of sufficient importance to defeat the application of the doctrine of subrogation. Indeed, in most of the cases upon this subject it is apparent that the mistake of the party claiming subrogation might have been avoided by reasonable investigation as to the state of the title. The absence of such investigation does not prejudice the second or subsequent lien-holder; for, if his lien were discovered, the party paying off the first mortgage by taking an assignment of it would be preferred to the lien-holder, while if it *86
were not discovered the latter suffers no damage in his security by a decree giving the former the rights of the first mortgagee by an assignment of it or, what amounts to the same thing, by an order of subrogation. The principle is that the lien-holder's equitable rights are not infringed, impaired or in any respect changed by the mere fact that the other party was negligent of his own rights in not discovering the existence of the lien. In Sheldon, Sub. s. 43, it is said that "the mere fact that the loss of the party seeking to be subrogated arose from his own negligence will not debar him from the right, unless its enforcement would be prejudicial to others who are not at fault." Equity does not require that the plaintiff should be enriched in consequence of the misplaced confidence of the sureties in the untrue statement of the debtor, or in consequence of their neglect to ascertain by independent research that it was untrue. Emmert v. Thompson,
Exception overruled: judgment for the sureties.
All concurred. *87