192 Mass. 244 | Mass. | 1906
This is a petition brought under R. L. c. 182, § 15. This section, originally enacted as St. 1882, c. 237, was entitled “ An Act relating to the settlement of titles to real estate.” As it now appears with additions and amendments in the Revised Laws, it gives one whose record title to land is incumbered by an undischarged mortgage a right to have his title perfected if certain facts appear. If he has been in uninterrupted possession of the land for twenty years after the expiration of the time limited in the mortgage for the full performance of the condition thereof, and if, at a hearing upon his petition, after due notice, this fact appears, and no evidence is offered of a payment on account of the debt secured by the mortgage within twenty years after the expiration of the time limited for the performance of the condition, or of any other act within said time in recognition of its existence as a valid mortgage, he may have a decree entered reciting these facts. This decree may be recorded in the registry of deeds within thirty days after its entry, and it then becomes a bar to the maintenance of an action to enforce a title under the mortgage. At the common law, possession of mortgaged premises by the mortgagor and those claiming under him for twenty years, without recognition of the mortgage or of a debt secured by it, is presumptive proof of payment of the mortgage. In Cheever v. Perley, 11 Allen, 584, it is said that, to rebut the presumption of payment, “ some positive act of unequivocal recognition, like part payment or a written admission, or at least a clear and well identified verbal promise or admission, intelligently made within the period of twenty years, is required.” See Kellogg v. Dickinson, 147 Mass. 432. In Brintnall v. Graves, 168 Mass. 384, 387, the question was raised whether under this statute the court could properly enter a decree for the petitioner in any case in which it appeared that there was a valid mortgage the condition of which had not been performed. Without deciding it, the court said: “ There is much force in the argument that
We are of opinion that the object of the statute is to provide for the removal of such a cloud, and to make twenty years’ possession by the mortgagor without recognition of the mortgage, if availed of in these proceedings, an absolute statutory bar to all claims under the mortgage. If the conditions stated in the statute are shown at the hearing the decree is to be entered. The statute has been construed liberally whenever it has been before the court. Short v. Caldwell, 155 Mass. 57. Tarbell, petitioner, 160 Mass. 407. Brintnall v. Graves, 168 Mass. 384, 387.
In the present case the petitioner showed his record title, the incumbrance by an undischarged mortgage, and his possession for twenty years without payment upon the mortgage or recognition of it in any way. These facts bring him within the statute and entitle him to a decree.
We do not intimate that, upon the facts appearing, he would -.not be entitled to have his estate relieved from the mortgage •under other provisions of law. But it is enough for this case that it is within the statute relied on.
Exceptions overruled.