3 Johns. Ch. 459 | New York Court of Chancery | 1818
The cause stood over for consideration until this day.
After an attentive examination of the cases, and of the course and practice of the court, I am satisfied that the plea must be overruled, and that the plaintiffs, as representatives of the younger mortgagee, ate enti - tled to redeem against Field, the purchaser.
It was the duty of Gardner to have made the younger mortgagee a party to his bill; and all incumbrancers existing at the commencement of the suit are entitled to be parties, for they have an interest to be affected, and ought to have an opportunity of paying off the prior incumbrances. The injustice that would be produced if they were to lose their rights, because they are not made parties, is very apparent. The rule, therefore, has been well settled, and uniformly supported, that the subsequent incumbrancers must be parties, and if omitted, the decree will not bind their rights.
In this case, the purchaser had notice, at and prior to the sale, of the mortgage of the plaintiffs, and of their claim, and the lot was put up and sold, and, no doubt, purchased by the defendant, Field, subject to the equitable claim of the plaintiffs. This was clearly established by the testimony, and there can be no doubt of their just claim in this case, in opposition to the plea.
But I think, that the title of the plaintiffs to redeem would have existed, independent of the fact of notice; and for the better understanding of this point, the decisions must be examined.
In Draper v. The Earl of Clarendon, (2 Vern. 517.) there was a bill by a prior against a subsequent mortgagee, and the court said, that the defendant must redeem
This'decision seems to admit the rule, that the subsequent mortgagee is entitled, and must have the opportunity to redeem, and that the incumbrancers who are not made parties will not be bound.
The next case, of Godfrey v. Chadwell (2 Vern. 601.) was a suit to redeem, brought by the second mortgagee against the first, and the latter put in a demurrer, and also a plea of a decree of foreclosure upon his mortgage, without notice of the second mortgage, and the plea and demurrer were overruled.
This decision settles the point more directly, that the subsequent mortgagee must be a party; that he is not bound, if he be not a party, and that his rights are not affected by the want of notice of them.
In Morrel v. Westerne (2 Vern. 663.) the first mortgagee had a decree of foreclosure, and then subsequent judgment creditors filed their bill against him to redeem, and for an account of rents and profits. The decree of foreclosure was pleaded in bar of any new account, and notice of the subsequent incumbrances was denied, yet the plea was overruled.
All these were decisions by Lord Chancellor Cowper, in the beginning of the last century, and I think they settle the rule decisively in favour of the rights of the junior incumbrancer, whether he be such by mortgage or byjudgment,
The same doctrine was' held by Lord King, in Hobart v. Abbott. (2 P. Wms. 643.) A. made a mortgage of a term to B., who assigned it to C, reserving a right to himself to redeem on paying a certain sum. B. dies, and G. brings his bill to foreclose against A., without making the representatives of B. parties; and it was held to b.e a
In the modern case of Fell v. Brown, (2 Bro. 276.) there was a bill by a second against a first mortgagee to redeem, but as the heir of the mortgagor, who was dead, was absent, and the personal representatives not before the court, Lord Thurlow ruled, that there was a want of parties, and that the mortgagor, or his heir, must be a party, because he is interested in taking the account, and that the natural decree was, that the second mortgagee redeem the first mortgagee, and that the mortgagor redeem him, or stand foreclosed. The same rule was after-wards laid down in Palk v. Clinton, (12 Vesey, 48. 59.) and the Master of the Rolls in that case avoided the general question, whether it was necessary to make all incumbrancers parties, and only decided that you could not agitate the question of redemption as between two mortgagees, without making the mortgagor a party. In the ease of The Bishop of Winchester v. Beavor, (3 Vesey, 314.) the subject was fully discussed. That was a bill by the first mortgagee against the mortgagor, and the second mortgagee, to foreclose, and the answer of the mortgagor stated a judgment against him, between the first and second mortgages. The second mortgagee objected at the hearing, that the judgment creditor was not a party, and it was urged, on his part, that a judgment creditor had a right to come to foreclose, as a mortgagee; that in all bills of this kind there was an interrogatory, whether there were any, and wiiat incumbrances, and if the answer-stated any, the practice was to make them parties; that all judgment creditors and mortgagees must be parties, because interested in the account to be taken, but that judgments confessed by the mortgagor pendente lite would not be regarded. The Master of the Rolls admitted, that a judgment confessed after a bill filed, would not create any equity, and observed, that" the general course of the court
One of the points in this case, on which Lord Mvanley gave an opinion, was again considered and established in The Bishop of Winchester v. Paine, (11 Vesey, 197, 198.) where it was held not to be necessary, on a bill to foreclose, to make incumbrancers, who became such pendente lite,, parties; But this very ease strongly implies;, that all other incumbrancers, not within that exception, must be parties.
' The necessity of making the subsequent incumbrancers parties, or holding their rights unimpaired, appears to be much stronger, and is indispensable to justice, in cases of •decrees for sales, according to our practice; for otherwise •the mortgagor would take the surplus money, or the cash value of the equity of redemption, and defeat entirely ■the lien of the subsequent creditor. But their rights can-pot be destroyed in this way, and the purchaser will take only a title as against the parties to the suit, and he cannot set it up against the subsisting equity of those incumbrancers who are not parties. This is the necessary doctrine resulting from the cases which have been mentioned ; .and that of Sherman v. Cox, (3 Ch. Rep. 46.) is still more in point. R. mortgaged his estate to S., and then to P., and then to the plaintiff, and then to B., who buys in the first two mortgages. The plaintiff' brings his bill against the mortgagor and B., and no proceedings were had, but B. had notice of the plaintiff’s title. Then, B. files his HU against the mortgagor, who was in possession. He
This last point, as to the account not being opened, had been so ruled before, in Needler v. Deeble, (1 Ch. Cas. 299.) and the general doctrine established in this case, appears to me to be well founded, and to have been handed down unimpaired to this day. In a recent case before the House of Lords, (Gore v. Stacpoole, 1 Dow. 31.) Lord Eldon said, that in order to make a foreclosure valid against all claimants, he who had the first estate of inheritance must be brought before the court, and that the intermediate remainder-men ought to be brought before, the court, to give them an opportunity of paying Off the mortgage. The case of Mondey v. Mondey, (1 Vesey & Bea. 223.) shows the modern practice on the point That was a bill against the infant heir of the mortgagor and egainst prior mortgagees, praying-that the-plaintiff might be permitted to redeem the prior mortgages, and the heir decreed to redeem the whole, and that such of
After such a long and uniform practice of the court, making every incumbrancer existing at the filing of the bill a party, and seeing it is founded on such weighty reasons of justice, there can be no hesitation as to the right of the plaintiffs in the present. case to redeem. A reference must accordingly be had, to ascertain the amount due to the plaintiffs upon their bond and mortgage; and the amount of the debt ascertained and declared in the decree in the former suit, and the value of the permanent and usefal repairs made ,by the defendant Field on the mortgaged premises since his purchase, and prior to his plea, and that the Master report, &c.
Order accordingly.
[In the case of M'Kinstry v. Mervin and others, the plaintiff owned a bond and mortgage, registered the 13 th 1815, and the defendant owned a bond and mort§a8e uPon the same lands, registered the 14th of March, 1816, and the plaintiff owned a judgment against the mortgagor, docketed 11th óf November, .1816, and under which he had sold, and become the purchaser of the mortgagor’s equity of redemption. Under these circumstances, the plaintiff filed his bill to compel the .defendant, by a day certain, to discharge his mortgage and judgment debts, or
The case being submitted, upon the bill and answer, the Chancellor, (September 10th, 1H18,) held, that the lands bound by the incumbrances in the pleadings mentioned, were chargeable, (L) for the mortgage debí of the plaintiff, (3.) for the mortgage debt of the defendant, (3.) for the judgment debt of the plaintiff, and that the debts were to be paid according to the order of time in which the respective liens attached, and that the plaintiff was not en» titled to require of the junior mortgagee to pay the judgment debt before he could redeem. It was, accordingly, decreed, that it be referred to a Master, to compute the amount of principal and interest due on the first mortgage, and that the defendant pay the same, with interest and costs, in six months from the confirmation of the report, or be foreclosed. The six months was the usual allow*anee in such cases of bills for a strict foreclosure. (1 Maddocks’ Ch. Rep. 287. 17 Vesey, 382. 407. Cooper’s Eq. Rep. 28. 2 Desausseur’s S. C. Rep. 144.)]