The plaintiffs alleged in their bill of complaint that they gave on August 1, 1941, to the defendant and his wife a note, the payment of which was secured by a mortgage on real estate owned by the plaintiffs; that the grantees in said mortgage were “Mildred N. White and Earl R. White, husband and wife, as joint tenants”; that the note together with interest has been paid in full; that the note and mortgage have been surrendered to the plaintiffs by Mildred N. White; and that the latter has executed a release and discharge of the said mortgage but her hus- ' band, the defendant, refuses to join in said release and discharge. The bill prays1 that the defendant be ordered to sign and acknowledge a release and discharge of the mort- • gage. The defendant demurred on the ground that the discharge executed by Mildred N. White constitutes a valid discharge of the mortgage by virtue, of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 183, § 54. The plaintiffs appealed from an interlocutory decree sustaining the demurrer. The suit was also submitted to the judge upoi^ a statement of agreed
The proceedings in the Superior Court were irregular. A judge may hear a casej upon the merits before ruling on a demurrer. A hearing dn the merits may disclose that a plaintiff has not made out a case and a final decree may properly be entered without considering the demurrer. If a case is proved upon the merits, then an amendment to the bill may be permitted if necessary to conform to the facts proved. Pearson v. Mulloney,
A mortgage of real estate is, as between the parties, a conveyance in fee, defeasible upon the performance of the conditions therein stated. Brown v. General Trading Co.
A mortgage to husband and wife jointly creates a tenancy by the entirety, and the note and mortgage belong to the wife alone upon the death of her husband and his estate has no interest therein. Draper v. Jackson,
Such being the relative rights of the husband and wife in the property which they hold'as tenants by the entirety, we pass to the inquiry whether the wife alone during coverture can give a good release of a mortgage on real estate which she holds as a tenant by "the entirety. The defendant contended that such a release was valid under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 183, § 54. That statute provides that a mortgage may be discharged upon the margin of the record of the mortgage at the registry of deeds by one of two or more joint holders of the mortgage. A mortgage may be discharged by a written acknowledgment of payment or satisfaction by one of two or more joint holders and the “instrument shall have the same effect as a deed of release.” The defendant and his wife may in a sense be said to be joint holders of the mortgage, but their interests were not strictly those of joint tenants but were “one indivisible estate in them both and the survivor of them.” Wales v. Coffin,
We conclude that the instrument signed by the wife alone is not sufficient to release and discharge the mortgage. There was error in the decree sustaining the demurrer and in the decree dismissing the bill, and both decrees must be reversed.
So ordered.
