1 Colo. 205 | Colo. | 1870
Lead Opinion
This was a bill in chancery to foreclose a mortgage filed by the appellee, as the assignee of one Jacob B. Carpenter. The mortgage was given to secure a negotiable note. The mortgage bears date March 5th, 1867, and is payable to Jacob B. Carpenter or his heirs or assigns, and was by him assigned to the complainant on the 20th day of July, 1867. The assignment was properly recorded on the 7th day of February, 1868. The defendant, in her answer, denies all knowledge of the assignment, and avers that at the date of said mortgage, she, in addition to the said mortgage security, delivered to the said Jacob B. Carpenter, as collateral and further security for the payment of the said sum of money, specified in said note and mortgage, one hundred and thirty sacks of good merchantable wheat flour, then of the value of $1,236, and seven thousand five hundred pounds of wheat of the value of $450, which she alleges said Carpenter agreed to sell and apply to the payment of the sum due him on said note and mortgage, or, if not sold, to be returned on payment or tender of payment of said note and mortgage. She further charges that said Carpenter sold said flour and wheat, and appropriated the sum to his own use, and refuses to account to her for the proceeds. This cause has been ably argued by counsel, and has received great consideration from this court., The principle involved has never been before adjudicated in this territory, and in the States where it has received judicial notice the decisions are in direct conflict. It is claimed by the appellee that the note secured by the mortgage is a negotiable note, that it was negotiated before due, and that the assignee being a bona fide purchaser of the note without notice, took it and the mortgage freed and discharged from all equities and defenses that existed in favor of the mortgagor and against the mortgagee. There is no evidence showing that B. Platte Carpenter had, before or at the time of the assignment of the note, any knowledge of the wheat and flour given by Mahala Longan as further security to Jacob B. Carpenter.
It is contended by the appellant, that, having taken
The mortgage, to foreclose which this bill was filed, was
This doctrine, so clearly enunciated by Chief Justice Catón, is re-asserted and enforced by Chief Justice Walkek in the case of Walker v. Dement, 42 Ill. 273. In delivering the opinion in this latter case he says, that while the purchaser of a note before maturity without notice will be protected against all defenses to the note, still, if it is secured by mortgage or other collateral security, the assignment will not cut off prior equities against the mortgage or collateral fund, although they might be secret and latent. There are many cases in which assignees have been protected against latent equities of third persons, whose rights and even names do not appear upon the face of the mortgage, and the reason
In the case of Merry v. Sylburn, 2 Johns. Ch. 441, Chancellor Kent said:
“ It is a general and well-settled principle that the assignee of a chose in action takes it subject to the same equities it was subject to in the hands of the assignor. But this rule is generally understood to mean the equity residing in the original obligor and not an equity residing in some third person against the assignor.” In Westfall v. Jones, 23 Barb. 10, the court said :
“Does the plaintiff, being a bona fide purchaser and assignee of the bond and mortgage, stand in any better condition than the person from whom he derived his title % It is a well-settled principle that the assignee of a chose in action takes it subject to all equities which existed against it in the hands of the assignor.’ ’ The same rule is laid down in Pennsylvania in Mott v. Clark, 9 State, 399, and in Prior v. Wood, 31 Penn. St. It maj^ be objected to these decisions, that the mortgage in each of the cases was given to secure a bond, and that the bond having no commercial character, the party taking an assignment would, as a matter of course, take the mortgage burdened with infirmities which the statute prescribes shall not apply to negotiable notes transferred before due.
These cases are made to rest on another and different ground, namely, that the proceeding was on the mortgage itself, and there being no express statutory provision authorizing the assignment of the mortgage. But it may be urged that the mortgage is accessory to the note, that it is attached to it, and being so attached, it is, and must remain, inseparable. This is true as long as both instruments remain in the hands of the mortgagor. But when he assigns the note there is in law a separation. The assignee can take his note
It is true that the principles governing and controlling a court of chancery are as fixed and certain as are those which control a court of law, and one of those principles governing a court of chancery is, that he who invokes its equitable powers must be ready to do equity. But this discussion has already been protracted to a sufficient length. What was the equity of the mortgagor in this case ? What relation did Jacob B. Carpenter sustain to the wheat and flour received by him as security in addition to the mortgage, and how far is the complainant affected thereby? We think it was a pledge. The contract of pledge is a bailment or delivery of goods and chattels of one man to another, to be holden as a security for the payment of a debt or the performance of an engagement, and upon the express or implied understanding that the thing deposited is to be restored to the owner as soon as. the debt is discharged or the engagement has been fulfilled. The con
For the failure of the court below to allow credit on the mortgage for the wheat sold prior to the assignment of the note, this case.must be remanded and reversed. It is accordingly reversed, with costs, for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. Mahala and Jesse B. Longan made their negotiable promissory note of date March 5, 1867, payable to J. B. Carpenter six months after date. To secure this note Mahala Longan mortgaged to J. B. Carpenter certain lands in Jefferson county, and the note and mortgage having been assigned to the appellee before the maturity of the note, this bill was filed to foreclose the mortgage.
The defense set up by the appellant in her answer is, that at the time the note and mortgage were given she pledged to J. B. Carpenter certain wheat and flour, and that at the maturity of the note she tendered the amount due upon it at the Colorado National Bank, where it was left for collection, and demanded the note and mortgage, as well as the wheat and flour.
The answer was put in without oath, the verification being waived by the complainant in his bill according to the statute, and therefore evidence is required to support its averments. In the first place it is to be observed, that the evidence does not support the allegation that the appellant gave to J. B. Carpenter the wheat and flour as security for the payment, but shows on the other hand, that this wheat and flour was pledged by William and Jesse B. Longan. It is true that William Longan testifies that the appellant gave the personalty as additional security, but this statement is overborne by the other testimony in the case. Upon the
Accepting these facts as if they were well pleaded, and assuming, what is by no means clear upon the evidence, that the amount due upon the note was tendered at its maturity, how was the appellant entitled to demand the possession of the personalty upon the payment of the note? Surely upon the extinguishment of the note the property would revert to the pledgors, William and Jesse B. Longan, and the appellant would be no more entitled to the possession then than before the pledge was made.
Again, the rule which makes the assignment of a mort gage subject to the equities existing between the mortgagor and mortgagee is expressly confined to such equities only, and cannot be extended to equities existing between the
In this case the personalty was pledged by Win. and Jesse B. Longan, and whatever their rights against J. B. Carpenter, the appellant is a stranger to them. This doctrine is recognized by the court in this case, but I do not perceive that any attempt has been made to apply it. It is true that there is evidence in the record tending to prove an agreement, respecting the wheat and flour, between the pledgors and the pledgee, to the effect that the property might be sold to the pledgors by the warehousemen and the proceeds applied to the payment of the note, and, also, that some of the property was sold according to this agreement. If J. B. Carpenter was responsible for the money thus received, probably this was a payment upon the note which, according to the view of my brethern, would inure to the benefit of the appellant. But conceding this, the appellant should have set up the payment in her answer. She has pleaded a tender of the whole amount due upon the note, and complains that the pledged property and the note and mortgage were not surrendered to her when the tender was made, and to this defense she must be confined. If, under such an answer, a party may show payment, every other defense is equally open, and the rule which requires correspondence between proof and allegation may as well be annulled.
I come now to consider, whether the innocent holder of negotiable paper secured by mortgage may recover, upon the mortgage the amount due upon the note in his hands, or is limited to the amount which might be recovered by the mortgagee if the suit were instituted by him. Upon this question there is some conflict of opinion, but I think that the weight of authority and the better reason are opposed to the views of my brethren in this case, and therefore I reluctantly proclaim my dissent from the opinion of the court.
The nature of a mortgage and its relations to the indebtedness it is intended to secure are pretty well understood at
“A mortgage is a charge upon the land, and whatever will give the money will carry the estate in the land along with it to every purpose. The estate in the land is the same thing as the money due upon it.”
So, also, Kent, C. J., in Jackson v. Willard, 4 Johns. 43:
“Until foreclosure, or, at least, until possession taken, the mortgage remains in the light of a chose in action. It is but an incident to the debt, and in reason and propriety it cannot and ought not to be detached from its principal. The mortgage interest, as distinct from the debt, is not a fit subject of assignment. It has no determinate value. If it should be assigned, the assignee must hold its interest at the will and disposal of the creditor who holds the bond. Accessorium non ducit sed sequiter principales
To the same effect are all the authorities and no one can now be found to question the doctrine that a mortgage is a !'mere incident to the indebtedness it is intended to secure, ^inseparable from it and incapable of existence without it. It is a truism of the law that a mortgage is a security for indebtedness accompanying the latter through all hands, and ultimately sharing the same fate. This rule which identifies the security with the indebtedness in my opinion •requires, that the remedy upon the security shall be coextensive with the demand. When this is denied the mortgage is divested of its character as a security to the extent of such denial. By the mortgage contract a lien is given upon property for the payment of certain indebtedness, and if the indebtedness be withdrawn from the lien, or if the existence of the lien be denied for causes dehors the mortgage, that instrument is divested of its essential quality in the face of its express provisions. That is no security for indebtedness which will not come up to the point of contributing to its payment, and a mortgage intrinsically good, which falls short of the measure of its principal, is a paradox unknown to the law. To illustrate, let us look for
In this conziection I will ask attention to the language of the supreme court of Wisconsin upon this subject.
“ The doctrine that an assignee can enforce the mortgage for no znore than is justly and actually due between the mortgagor and the znortgagee had its origin at a time when the practice of giving mortgages as collateral security for the payment of negotiable paper was wholly unknown, and was made to rest upon the ground that such would be the
Another consideration of great weight ought not to pass unnoticed. It is conceded that the appellee may recover in an action at law, upon this note, that portion of his demand which is denied to him in this proceeding. It was said by Hosmer, C. J., in Clark v. Beach, 6 Conn. 159: “ The equitable doctrine concerning the rights of mortgagor and mortgagee has gradually been naturalized in the common-law code, and by the adoption of principles long established in chancery, and tenaciously adhered to, the suitors are not driven from one bar by increased litigation and expense to obtain infallible relief at another.”
The policy of the law here defined has not, I think, been
“The note itself, though secured by a mortgage, is still commercial paper, and when the remedy is sought upon that, all the rights incident to commercial paper will be enforced in the courts of law. But when the remedy is sought through the medium of the mortgage, when that is the foundation of the suit, and the note is merely used as an incident to ascertain the amount due upon the mortgage, then the courts of equity to which resort is had must pause and look deeper into the transaction, and see if there be any equitable reason why it should not be enforced.”
Upon this I submit that a foreclosure is founded upon the indebtedness as well as the mortgage. A court of equity will not, and in the nature of things cannot, permit a mortgagee to recover unless he is the holder of the indebtedness secured by the mortgage. 1 Hill, on Mort., ch. 11, § 5.
Whether the proceeding be at law or in equity, the indebtedness is the principal thing, for both remedies are designed to enforce payment of the money. I concede that the remedy at law is upon the note alone, but it is equally plain that the suit. in equity is founded upon the note and mortgage, and that each is essential to the right of recovery. The indebtedness is the incumbrance and the mortgage is the means by which the incumbrance is attached to the estate. If either be removed, there is nothing remaining upon which the court can act. In a proceeding to foreclose a mortgage it is the duty of the court to ascertain the amount of the indebtedness, as well as to enforce the lien upon the mortgaged property for its payment, and while, the mortgage will show the lien it is rarely evidence of the
The supreme court of Illinois say that the notéis “merely used as an incident to ascertain the amount due upon the mortgage,” but it is'plain that no such use was made of the note in that case. The note called for the amount expressed upon its face, but the court refused to recognize the demand. The mortgage referred to the note as the standard of indebtedness, but the court rejected the note in violation of the express language of the mortgage. And this was done for the avowed purpose of protecting the mortgagor from making payment to the innocent holder of negotiable paper. I am not able to perceive that the former occupies a higher position in a court of equity than the latter, or that there is any reason for setting aside the rules of law applicable to commercial paper in cases of this kind.
The opinion of that court as well as that announced by this court is open to other criticism, but I think that I have shown that the ruling of the district court was correct, and that the decree of that court should be affirmed.