283 Mass. 391 | Mass. | 1933
This is a bill to reach and apply property of the defendant Sarah Waldman, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, to the satisfaction of a debt alleged to be due from her to the plaintiff. The case was heard by a master and comes to this court on the appeal of the defendant from a final decree in favor of the plaintiff, entered on the master’s report. The plaintiff was the holder of a first mortgage and the defendant the holder of a second mortgage on certain real estate in Lynn. In early January, 1930, the mortgagors were in default of the conditions of both mortgages. The plaintiff started foreclosure proceedings under the power of sale in his mortgage. Before a sale was held, the defendant, who desired to forestall the foreclosure of the plaintiff’s mortgage and to take title herself subject to the mortgage held by the plaintiff through a
The defendant orally agreed with the plaintiff that she would make the payments required by the terms of the note which the plaintiff held. In turn the plaintiff agreed to give up for a time his right to foreclose his mortgage. The result of the transaction was that the plaintiff relinquished the present exercise of a right which he possessed and the defendant acquired the benefit which she sought, that is, the foreclosure of her second mortgage and the acquisition of title and possession. There was legal consideration for the plaintiff’s promise. Boyd v. Freize, 5 Gray, 553. Lane v. Flint, 217 Mass. 96. Manson v. Flanagan, 233 Mass. 150. Dondis v. Lash, 277 Mass. 477, 486. The fact that in the foreclosure proceedings which had been begun by the
The defendant has pleaded the statute of frauds (G. L. [Ter. Ed.] c. 259, § 1, Second). The mere fact that there was an adequate consideration for the defendant’s promise does not take the case out of the operation of the statute. Washington & Devonshire Realty Co. Inc. v. Freedman, 263 Mass. 554, 559. The obligation of the original debtor, the maker of the note held by the plaintiff, was not extinguished by the transaction of the parties and if in making her promise the defendant was simply furnishing security for the payment of the original debt she made a promise to answer for the debt of another. Ames v. Foster, 106 Mass. 400, 402. Nelson v. Boynton, 3 Met. 396, 400. Here however the controlling purpose or direct object of the defendant was not the furnishing of her credit to the obligation of the original debtor but was the prevention, for her own benefit, of the foreclosure of the mortgage held by the plaintiff and the immediate opportunity of acquiring title in fee to the real estate subject only to the plaintiff’s mortgage. “The defendant’s promise . . . was to pay a debt for which the property could have been held, and, the plaintiffs’ forbearance to press the right of foreclosure having been a sufficient consideration to support the promise, the ruling that the contract was independent of the statute was right.” Manning v. Anthony, 208 Mass. 399, 403. See v. Downey, 256 Mass. 47, 51-52. Paul v. Wilbur, 189
The plaintiff’s bill as amended alleges a guaranty by the defendant of the debt secured by the mortgage held by the plaintiff, and facts found by the master warrant the finding that such a guaranty was made. The defendant however argues that she has solely the status of an indorser for the accommodation of the plaintiff and that therefore under the negotiable instruments law she is not liable to the plaintiff. The section of the statute on which she relies formulates the rules of liability of one indorsing an instrument in blank. It excludes liability to the payee of an indorser for the payee’s accommodation. But that section in terms applies only to the situation “Where a person, not otherwise a party to an instrument, places thereon his signature in blank before delivery.” G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 107, § 87. Section 90 reads: “Where a person places his endorsement on an instrument negotiable by delivery he incurs all the liability of an endorser.” The word “endorsement” must there be given the meaning of “endorsement completed by delivery,” that is by “transfer of possession, actual or constructive, from one person to another.” G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 107, § 18. There was here no such delivery. The defendant wrote her name on the back of the note more than seven months after it was signed by the makers, for her own and not for their benefit or advantage, as a result of a new and independent contract founded on a new consideration, furnished by the plaintiff. She was not the kind of indorser the character of whose liability is declared by said § 87 or elsewhere defined in the negotiable instruments law. Apart from that statute, in this Commonwealth, where a thud party pursuant to a new and independent contract of guaranty not within the statute of frauds made on good and sufficient consideration furnished by the holder
Decree affirmed.