178 Ga. 451 | Ga. | 1934
National Mortgage Corporation brought a suit against Mrs. J. B. Wells, J. B. Wells, and M. M. Bullard, to recover on an alleged indebtedness claimed to be due as a balance on promissory notes. Bullard interposed a general demurrer, which the court sustained, dismissing the petition as to that defendant, and the plaintiff excepted. The suit at first appeared to be a mere action at law, but was amended so as to seek the aid of the court as a court of equity for the recovery of a judgment against M. M. Bullard as one who had assumed the debt upon the purchase of certain property from Mrs. Wells. The petition alleged substantially the following facts: On September 1, 1926, Mrs. Wells as maker and J. B. Wells as indorser executed notes for a stated sum to Mortgage Guarantee Company of America, and in connection therewith Mrs. Wells executed to the payee a deed in which she conveyed as security for the indebtedness a described tract of land. The payee later transferred to the plaintiff the notes together with all rights under the security deed. On July F, 1930, Mrs. Wells sold and conveyed the property to M. M. Bullard, executing to him a warranty deed which contained the stipulation, that “the purchaser agrees to assume and pay the loan, dated September 1, 1926, recorded in deed book 1027, page 21, signed by Mrs. J. B. Wells in favor of Mortgage Guarantee Company of America, maturing September 1, 1931, for $17,000.” Upon a subsequent default in the payment of the indebtedness, National Mortgage Corporation elected to declare the entire amount due under an accelerative clause, and proceeded to exercise a power of sale contained in the security deed, the corporation being purchaser at the sale.
Bullard contends that his demurrer was rightly sustained, on the theory that under the law of this State he held the land as a trustee for the creditor; and that upon this theory alone is a suit in equity permitted in this jurisdiction against one in his position, insisting further that the creditor and security holder in causing the “trust property” to be sold under the power of sale has destroyed the res
The Supreme Court of the United States has sanctioned a proceeding in equity such as is permitted in this State. The decision in Keller v. Ashford, 133 U. S. 610 (10 Sup. Ct. 494, 33 L. ed. 667), states the applicable principles and the nature of the proceeding, as follows: “This result has been attained by a development and application of the ancient and familiar doctrine in equity that a creditor shall have the benefit of any obligation or security given by the principal to the surety for the payment of the debt. The doctrine of the right of a creditor to the benefit of all securities given by the principal to the surety for the payment of the debt does not rest upon any liability of the principal to the creditor, or upon any peculiar relation of the surety towards the creditor; but upon the ground that the surety, being the creditor’s debtor, and in fact occupying the relation of surety to another person, has received from that person an obligation or security for the payment of the debt, which a court of equity will therefore compel to be applied to that purpose at the suit of the creditor. Where the person ultimately held liable is himself a debtor to the creditor, the relief awarded has no reference to that fact, but is grounded wholly on the right of the creditor to avail himself of the right of the surety against the principal. If the person, who is admitted to be the creditor’s debtor stands, at the time of receiving the security, in the relation of surety to the person from whom he receives it, it is quite immaterial whether that person is or ever has been a debtor of the principal creditor, or whether the relation of suretyship or the indemnity to the surety existed, or was known to the creditor, when the debt was contracted. In short, if one person agrees with an
If there was a fair exercise of the power of sale, the holder of the security deed still had a remedy against the original debtor for the balance due; for as a matter of contract the exercise of the power of sale did not affect the debt except to reduce the same by the net amount at which the property was sold. Nor as between the debtor and the assumer is the obligation of the latter at all affected, except to the same extent. Despite the sale, the maker is still liable to the holder of the notes for the balance due, and the assumer is still responsible to the maker for its payment. Williams v. Moody, 95 Ga. 8 (22 S. E. 30); Spears v. Scott, 111 Ga. 745, 749 (36 S. E. 950); Skeen v. Glower, 174 Ga. 510 (162 S. E. 917), s. c. 45 Ga. App. 121 (163 S. E. 611). As between the two last named, the assumer was and is the person primarily obligated, it being necessarily true that the liability continues, since the sale in case of default was contractually in contemplation of each of these parties. If the sale has not discharged the obligation as between the parties to the assumption agreement, it is difficult to see why the creditor may not enforce the same, as before, in a court of equity. There has resulted no change in the relationships, and nothing has otherwise occurred except what each party must have foreseen as a result of a default, which event the assumer promised the debtor he would not permit to happen. His own breach and default having vitalized the power of sale, he can not profit by its exercise.
It is contended by the defendant in error that under the English rule a creditor can not sue a third person who has assumed the debt, unless the latter has become a trustee as to such creditor, and that
The court erred in sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the petition. Judgment reversed.