11 Mich. 265 | Mich. | 1863
The bill in this cause was filed to foreclose a mortgage made by Henry II. Brown and wife to complainants, in November, 1847, conditioned for the payment of “all sums of money now due or hereafter to become due." The bill averred a bond of previous date, conditioned for the payment of $11,200 and interest. The bill was filed July 20th, 1859. To this bill Brown interposed the Statute of Limitations as a defense, and Barker averred in his answer that, on the 21st day of July, 1859, the day after the bill was filed, he purchased the premises from Brown for a valuable consideration (the amount of which was not set forth) without notice of the mortgage, which was, however, on record. He claimed that the mortgage was invalid because not for a sum certain set forth on its face.
The mortgage and bond set forth in the bill were proved as exhibits before the’ commissioner, and are returned as a part of the record. But defendants claim they should be excluded, on the allegation that they were excluded in the Court below, as not filed in season. Affidavits are filed on both sides.
We have no doubt the proofs are properly in the case. They appear distinctly to have been regularly taken on
It is claimed by defendant Barker that this mortgage is invalid for want of certainty in the amount secured. As the complainants do not seek to recover any advances made after Barker’s purchase (nor, indeed, any debts accruing after the date of the mortgage), none of the questions in regard to intervening equities arise. The only question presented is whether a mortgage to secure all debts existing, is good without specifying them. Upon a review of the cases which were cited on the argument
The defendants claim, however, that the mortgage is ban’ed by the Statute of Limitations. We do not think this ground is tenable. The Statute of Limitations is confined to actions or suits to enforce payment of the contract as a personal demand. Equity follows the analogies of' the law in all cases where an analogous relief is sought upon a similar claim. But where the relief sought is in its- nature one of equitable and not of legal cognizance, and the remedy is of a purely equitable nature, equity follows its own rules. The foreclosure of mortgages is one of the ancient equitable remedies. Its object is simply
The bill under the statute seeks a personal decree against Brown. The power to grant such a decree is not one originally possessed by courts of equity, but is purely statutory, and is given in order to avoid circuity of action-by a resort to a suit at law on the debt in addition to-a suit in equity to foreclose. It is therefore a mere substitute for a legal action; and must -be governed by the rules which would apply at law* The statute allows a personal decree for the balance remaining unsatisfied after sale, “in the cases in which such balance is recoverable at law." If barred at law, it is barred in equity.
The bond in the present suit was due more than ten years before suit was brought. Although payments are-indorsed as made within ten years, the statute expressly denies to such indorsements unexplained any weight as evidence of payment, for the purpose of charging the debtor by treating them as an acknowledgment, so as. to take the case out of the operation of the law. Comp. L. § 5377. In the absence of other testimony, therefore, the statutory bar is complete, and no decree can be made against Brown for the balance which may remain unpaid.
The decree below dismissing the bill must be reversed. A decree must be entered in the usual form, requiring defendants within sixty days to pay ^he sum of $3,050, with interest from October 1st, 1849, at seven per cent, per annum, and with costs of both courts, and in default of such payment directing a sale in the usual manner, and ordering that such decree be transmitted to the Court below for execution. No personal liability clause for the debt itself will be inserted, as there can be no claim unless the mortgaged premises are inadequate to pay the costs, and then it must be confined to those.