delivered the opinion of the Court.
Leisure Campground & Country Club Limited Partnership, mortgagor in a purchase money mortgage transaction involving a 154-acre tract of land located near Ocean City, appeals from an order ratifying the foreclosure sale of that property. The appellant’s exceptions to the sale, and hence this appeal, rest on the ground that a portion of the property should not have been included inasmuch as the mortgage contained a clause entitling the mortgagor, at its request and in consideration of $75,000 already paid, to have forty acres of the land released from the mortgage. The
The purchase money mortgage executed on August 4, 1972 by the appellant to Leisure Estates secured a $175,000 debt — the balance of the purchase price after payment of $75,000, made by the time of settlement, for future release of forty acres.
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The appellant, which planned to develop the land in stages as a campground, paid accumulated interest to February 4, 1974 on February 21 of that year, but made no subsequent payments of interest or principal; consequently, it should not have been surprising to the mortgagor when, on June 4, 1975, the mortgagee instituted foreclosure proceedings in the Circuit Court for Worcester County. By telegram and letter to counsel for Leisure Estates, the appellant on July 17 for the first time requested release of forty acres, but did not specify their location. In addition, it sought a court order that day to stay the foreclosure sale. This petition was denied by the circuit court the following day, and the sale took place as scheduled on July 19. The appellant’s exceptions, filed on August 13, 1975, were overruled and the sale was ratified, the circuit court concluding that the mortgagor, having defaulted on its obligation under the mortgage, was not entitled to a partial release, and that, in any event, the court could not supply a
Although the appellee does not raise the question, we pause to consider whether the appellant’s failure to file a bond pursuant to Maryland Rule 1017, to stay execution of the final judgment pending appeal, renders its claim for the forty acres moot. The general rule is that the right of a purchaser to receive property acquired at a judicial sale cannot be affected by the reversal of an order ratifying the sale where a bond has not been filed,
Lowe v. Lowe,
The mortgagee’s primary contention in this action is that the mortgagor’s failure to request the forty acres until three days prior to the foreclosure sale divested it of its release right. We consider first the mortgagee’s suggestion that our decision in
Gerber v. Karr,
Here, although it is true that the mortgagor defaulted, it is obvious that it made full payment for the release of the acreage prior to that time. The total consideration for the
Since the mortgagee cannot avoid compliance with the terms of the release clause by virtue of the timing of the mortgagor’s request, we come to the question whether the provision is sufficiently definite to permit of enforcement. At the risk of being redundant, we refer once again to the language utilized: “[T]he Mortgagor is entitled from and after the date hereof, at its request, in consideration of the monies paid to the Mortgagee on account of the purchase price, to have released, without further payment, forty (40) acres of the property secured by this Mortgage ....” (Emphasis added.) We conclude, after careful consideration of the particular circumstances of this case, that the parties intended the mortgagor to select the acreage to be released; this being so, the provision, otherwise sufficiently definite in its terms, is not so uncertain as to preclude enforcement by a court of equity.
In discussing the reasons for our conclusion in this case that the instrument is enforceable, we preliminarily set
The mortgage is not only a security instrument, it is also a contract between the parties. It is in the province of the court to determine if the agreement is susceptible of a clear and definite understanding and, if so, to state the clear meaning. [When] we find the contract clear .. ., its construction is therefore a matter for judicial interpretation.
Where the language used in a mortgage is clear and unambiguous, we will interpret it according to what reasonable persons in the position of the parties would have thought it meant,
Chesapeake v. Rolling Hills,
While it is certain that the parties could have been more explicit, we believe the language of the release clause here — viewed in light of the fact that the mortgage was executed for the purpose of facilitating a land development venture to be undertaken exclusively by the mortgagor — clearly and unambiguously entitles the mortgagor to request and have released forty acres of its choice. Under these circumstances,
While the mortgagee seemingly accepts our construction of the provision, it nonetheless contends that the clause is unenforceable because it does not specifically designate the location of the forty acres. Although we are cognizant of the fact that a court could not grant specific performance of the mortgage release until the mortgagor designates a particular forty acres, we do not agree with the appellee’s assertion that the clause is too indefinite to be enforced at some time in the future. This Court recently expressed its views in
Martin v. Michaels,
[T]he description [of the land in the contract must] be such as to enable the court to determine with certainty, with the aid of such extrinsic evidence as is admissible under the rules of evidence, what property was intended by the parties to be covered thereby. The description need not be given with such particularity as to make a resort to extrinsic evidence unnecessary. Reasonable certainty is all that is required.
It is clear that the provision before us giving the mortgagor the right to select enables the court, with the aid of a sufficient description provided by the mortgagor as to the acreage so selected, to determine with certainty what property the parties intended to cover in the clause — under these circumstances, the tract to be chosen by the mortgagor
Moreover, our perusal of cases of our sister states involving mortgage release provisions claimed to be indefinite indicates that the result we reach is in no way unique.
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See, e.g., St. Louis Union Trust Co. v. Chicot County C.-A. Farm Co.,
We do not believe that the release agreement before us is so indefinite in description of the landto be conveyed (released) that the agreement is unenforceable. If the agreement itself shows that some particular tract was intended, then the release deed is admissible to show the location and boundaries of the tract mentioned. The fact that the tract to be released m.ust be found in the total acreage mortgaged is not of itself a showing that a particular part thereof was intended. But, when the lender agrees that whatever the borrower may choose or intend be released will be released, he also agrees that the lender’s intention as to the particular part to be released will be considered the same as that of the borrower and he should not be heard to say otherwise. The tract chosen under those circumstances by the borrower is the tract intended. [(Emphasis in original; citation omitted.)]
We note in concluding that the mortgagor, in its brief and at oral argument before this Court, agreed to submit its choice of the forty acres for approval by the trial court. Therefore, to effectuate this restricted right, the order of ratification of the entire 154 acres must be vacated, and on remand, upon submission by the mortgagor of its request, the chancellor should determine whether the selection is equitable under the circumstances of this case. If it concludes that the choice is reasonable, the court should order those forty acres released from the mortgage lien, and thereupon enter an order ratifying sale of the remaining 114 acres to the appellee. 8
Order of the Circuit Court for Worcester County vacated and case remanded to that court for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Costs to be paid by appellee.
Notes
. The security instrument contained clauses c&lling; for interest at the rate of seven percent per annum to be paid semi-annually and for repayment of the principal sum in three consecutive annual payments of $50,000 with a final payment of $25,000. The mortgagor was released from any personal liability for the mortgage debt.
. For two cases that apparently attach some significance, under different factual situations from the case before us, to the institution of foreclosure proceedings, see Chrisman v. Hay,
. Of course, should a mortgagor inexcusably delay the assertion of his right, such a delay might constitute laches. The defense cannot successfully be raised here, however, since the mortgagee has shown no prejudice or disadvantage arising out of the mortgagor’s delay in seeking enforcement of the release provision.
See, e.g.,
Anne Arundel Co. Bar Ass’n v. Collins,
. This Court rarely has had occasion to consider partial release clauses in any context. In addition to Gerber v. Karr,
. As the following statements from its brief indicate, the mortgagee never plainly disputes this aspect of the case:
No attempt was made by Appellant [when it requested release] to specify which 40 acres were to be released.
The release provision is ambiguous only in the description of what particular land is involved .... [(Emphasis added.)]
It is undeniable that until a formal request had been made, specifying which 40 acres were to be released, the entire 154 acres were security for the performance of the terms of the mortgage, and subject to sale at foreclosure.
Neither the [telegram] nor the letter [requesting the release] specified which 40 acres were to be released.
The mortgagee’s only suggestion to the contrary appears in its explanation of its refusal to accede to the mortgagor’s request for release, where the mortgagee observes that to have honored the request, which did not specify the forty acres, would have delayed the foreclosure proceedings “until the parties agreed, if they could, on the specific 40 acres to be released.”
. We are also aware of analogous lines of cases construing the sufficiency under the Statute of Frauds of designations of land in contracts of sale which give, or are construed to give, the right to select the tract to be conveyed to one of the parties, see Annot.,
. We are not unaware of the fact that in another case, McCormick v. Parsons,
In addition, we are cognizant of decisions of other courts, not relevant here, where specific performance of release clauses apparently otherwise definite enough to permit of enforcement was refused on the ground that such relief was unconscionable.
See, e.g.,
Lawrence v. Shutt,
. We point out that relief is available in this case even though the mortgagor has not yet selected a particular forty acres since the court obtained jurisdiction over the subject matter of this dispute pursuant to the foreclosure proceedings, and “once an equity court has assumed
