10 Vt. 293 | Vt. | 1838
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
It is insisted by the defendants, that, by the release of Whiton to Hinsdell, the mortgage title, as well as the equity of redemption, were merged in the fee ;— that the original mortgage being thus extinguished, the defendants, who held by mortgage from Hinsdell, are mortgagees in fee, and will hold in preference to the orators, and, at all events, as the assignment of the original mortgage to the orators was never recorded, that the subsequent mortgagees, relying upon the absolute estate of Hinsdell, apparent of record, and having no notice, in fact, of the assignment, are to be considered as bona fide purchasers of the estate, without notice of the incumbrance, and as entitled to priority.
The second point is susceptible of more doubt. Did the law require the recording of such assignment, as necessary to its validity, the defendants’ position would, doubtless, be tenable, t But it is now well understood, that, to the purposes of foreclosure in equity, recording is not necessary. This court, regarding the mortgage as a mere incident of the debt, and as accompanying and following the debt, wherever that may be ássigned, it follows, as a necessary consequence, that, as the debt may be assigned by parol, the mortgage security may be transferred in the same way. Whether such an assignment would enable the assignee to sustain an ejectment, at law, is a different question. Probably, to the purpose of that action, it would be necessary that an assignment should be recorded. But in this court, it is clearly not necessary. Such being the case, the defendants were bound to take notice that such assignment would be valid, without being recorded, and they were not justified in assuming, from the absence of an assignment of record, that none had been made. They purchase at their peril, and can have no equitable claim to be preferred to the orators.
Decree for the orators.