28 Mo. App. 308 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1887
This case presents the single question, can the assignee of a debt, secured by chattel mortgage, without an assignment of the mortgage itself, maintain, in his own name, the action of replevin for the recovery of the possession of the mortgaged property ? The court below held that he could not.
At first impression this question seemed easily answered. But in the absence of any direct adjudication by our Supreme Court, I find it, on examination of.
Most of the cases, which I have been able to find, where the assignee was allowed to maintain the action in his own name, is where the mortgage itself was assigned in writing. In such case the assignee, without question, holds the legal title. In Langdon v. Buel (9 Wend. 80), the action was trespass de bonis asportatis, brought in the name of Langdon, who was the mortgagee, but’ who had previously transferred the note, secured by the mortgage, to one Pitcher. Spencer, C. J., said: “A mortgagee of personal property, upon the failure of the mortgageor to perform the condition of the mortgage, acquires an absolute title to the chattel. The notes which this mortgage was given to secure appear to have been assigned or transferred to one Pitcher. When they were so transferred does not appear * * * Did not the mortgage pass with the notes as incident to them, and should not the action have been brought in the name of Pitcher instead of Langdon % I do not perceive how such conclusion is to be resisted. A mortgage of real or personal estate is but an accessory or incident to the debt, or the security which is given as the evidence of the debt. The assignment of the security passes the interest in the mortgage. The mortgage cannot exist as an independent debt. If, by special agreement, it does not accompany the security assigned, it is, ipso facto, extinguished, and ceases to be a subsisting demand. If the notes were endorsed or assigned to Pitcher before they became due and before the mort
In Woodruff v. King (47 Wis. 261), the action was replevin by an assignee of the debt; and his right to maintain the action passed unchallenged by counsel and court, with the observation, that the note being negotiable, and in the hands of the plaintiff, was presumptive evidence of ownership ; “ and the transfer of the note carried with it the mortgage security,” citing Rice v. Cribb (12 Wis. 182), in which it is said : “ The transfer of the notes carries with them the interest in the mortgage.”
In Crow, McCrery & Co. v. Vance (4 Ia. 440-441) the court say: “It is the settled doctrine in equity, that the assignment of a promissory note, secured by mortgage, carries the mortgage with it; and the assignee may maintain an action upon it in his own name, to enforce the lien. Mortgages are not considered as conveyances of land, * within the statute of frauds. The right of the mortgagee is a mere chattel interest inseparable from the debt it is intended to secure, and transferable by a mere assignment of the debt, without deed or writing. The debt is the principal thing. The right of the mortgagee in the land is an incident of the debt, and ceasing when the debt is discharged. This doctrine rests upon the well-established principles of courts of equity, which, under circumstances closely analogous, entitle a surety, who pays the debt, to every remedy which the creditor has against the principal debtor to enforce every security and all means of payment. By the assignment of the debt, the assignee is entitled to use all the remedies the assignor might have used, to enforce the lien of the mortgage against the
It seems to stand to reason that, as the debt and the security are inseparable, so they cannot reside at the same time in different parties, and he who controls the debt also controls the mortgage, the assignee of the debt should acquire the same rights and have the same remedies, both as to the debt and the security, which the mortgagee — his assignor — had at the time of the transfer, or the maturity of the debt had he then held it. It is the well-settled law that the mortgagee, after the maturity of the debt, has three independent remedies open to him, which he may pursue successively. He may reduce his debt to judgment against the mortgageor, or foreclose the mortgage and sell the property, or bring action for the recovery of the possession. That the assignee of the debt may pursue in his own name the first two remedies no court questions. Why, then, make a distinction as against the third remedy, and as to that break the unity of right and remedy % The only answer made is, that the mortgage is only equitably assigned. The same objection, it occurs to me, might with equal force be alleged against the foreclosure proceeding in the name of the assignee. It is conceded, in Ramsdell v. Tewksbury {supra), that such equitable interest may be enforced in a possessory action in the name of the assignor — the mortgagee — to the use of the assignee. Our practice act (sect. 3465) provides that, “ every action shall be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest,” allowing to administrators, executors, and trustees of express trusts the right of action in their names. I am unadvised as to whether a corresponding provision exists in the statutes of Maine, and those states maintaining the doctrine in Bamsdell *. Tewksbury. But I understand that one of the very objects in the enactment of this provision of the code was to obviate the useless form of employing the name of an assignor in an action, who' had no real interest in the subject-matter of litigation, and who, when the judgment was obtained in his name,
In City of St. Louis to use v. Rudolph (36 Mo. 465) the plaintiff sued as assignee of certain tax bills issued by the city to Ursula Buol. The court said: “Her assignment of the bill may be regarded as an assignment of the cause of action, and it vested in him the whole equitable interest in the demand. He thus became the real party in interest.”
In Edgell v. Tucker (40 Mo. 531) the court again seem to recognize the principle that, where there is an equitable assignment of the thing, the beneficiary may maintain the action, quoting from Tindall, C. J., in Crowfort v. Gurney (9 Bing. 372): “These circumstances amount to an equitable assignment of the debt due from Gurney to Streather, for Solly might have gone into a court of equity to ’compel a formal assignment, and no answer could have been given to such an application.”
Certainly, where a court of equity would compel the depositary of the naked legal title to assign the instrument to the assignee, under our code, he must be the real party in interest. And it does seem to me that the’ spirit and object of the statute will be best expressed and executed in allowing this plaintiff to proceed in his own name, immediately, to enforce his possessory right under the mortgage, rather than to compel him either to resort to the circumlooution of a bill in equity to-compel an assignment of the legal title, or to bring replevin in the name of the mortgagee.
The cases to which counsel for respondents refer in his brief are mainly instances of deeds of trust on real estate made to a trustee. In such case the legal title is vested in the trustee, mutually selected by the parties as such depositary, to hold in trust for both parties. His is a naked power, not transferable, and he alone can maintain action for the possession. Pickens v. Jones, 63 Mo. 199; Siemers v. Schrader, 84 Mo. 20-23; Meyers v. Hale, 17 Mo. App. 205.
It follows that the judgment of the circuit court is-reversed and the. cause remanded.