Tne opinion of the Court was drawn up by
It is very clear that all the issues except the first, are immaterial, and that the first was found for the defendant against all the evidence in the case which could legally bear upon it. The mortgage deed produced by the demandant entitled him to a verdict on the first issue, there being no payment or tender of payment of the money due according to the condition, until four years after the condition broken, so that the demandant’s title at law was perfect, sub-
If judgment should be rendered on the verdict in favor of the tenant, the demandant would be entirely deprived of his security,
Whether a ténder or any fact equivalent was proved, is wholly unimportant, as the tenant’s right at that time subsisted wholly in equity, and he could no otherwise enforce it than by a bill in equity.
trial, for the tenant’s right to tender did not exist until 'ong after a tender could have defeated the demandant’s title et. law. Admitting that payment tendered and received after condition broken and before foreclosure, would be a sufficient defence to an action brought by the mortgagee for possession,
The proper course in this case is for the plaintiff to recover the conditional judgment, as in case of mortgage, unless the tenant has a better defence than is shown by the report of the case.
Verdict set aside and a new trial granted.
Notes
It is held in New York, that if a legal tender is made of the money due on a bond and mortgage, to the mortgagee, or his assignee or attorney, which is refused, the land is discharged from the mortgage, though the debt remains. Bowers v. Crafts, 18 Johns. R. 110. See Willard v. Harvey, 5 N. Hamp. R. 252; Bailey v. Metcalf, 6 N. Hamp. R. 156; Patchin v. Pierce,
As to the time when a tender may be legally made of a sum due on a contract for the payment of money, in Massachusetts, see ante, 108 n. 1.
See Maynard v. Hunt,
In New Hampshire, after a tender of the whole amount secured by a mortgage, the mortgager may maintain a writ of entry against a mortgagee, if he retains possession. Bailey v. Metcalf, 6. N. Hamp. R. 156.
In New York, a tender of the money after forfeiture does not operate to re-invest the title in the mortgager, but a tender and acceptance has that effect, Patchin v. Pierce, 12 Wendell. 61
If it appears, that a debt secured by a mortgage has been paid, the mortgagee, in a writ of entry upon his deed, cannot have judgment ibr possession of the land. Vose v. Handy, 2. Greenl. 322. See Gray v. Jenks,
A tender on a mortgage debt made according to the provisions of the statute to lay a foundation for a bill to redeem, if not accepted, shall not prevent the foreclosure of the right of redemption, unless a suit thereon be commenced within one year after the tender is made. Revised Stat. r 107 § .7.
