105 S.E. 170 | N.C. | 1920
On 24 March, 1915, J. Hudson Williams executed his note and mortgage securing the sum of $2,000 to L. I. Jennings, and afterwards conveyed the land described in the mortgage to J. Manly Lyda, the latter agreeing to assume and pay, as part of the consideration of the deed to him by Williams, the mortgage debt due by Williams to Jennings, both Jennings and Lyda having since died, and being represented in this action by their administrators.
The jury having by their verdict found that the defendant, W. W. Lyda, administrator of J. Manly Lyda, is indebted to the plaintiff, W. C. Rector, administrator of L. I. Jennings, upon the note, in the sum of $2,000, the principal thereof, with interest, judgment was entered for that amount, but the court directed therein that no execution should issue until the mortgage should be foreclosed, and the amount of the deficiency ascertained for which execution should issue. Plaintiff excepted and appealed. *578
after stating the case: The learned judge followed the former rule in equity, but later decisions in this, and many other courts, have held that the plaintiff mortgagee is entitled to judgment and execution against the purchaser from the mortgagor, who has assumed the payment of the mortgage debt, without any such condition. The authorities thus state the old and the new rule. The doctrine of equity is that when the grantee in a deed assumes the payment of the mortgage debt, he is to be regarded as the principal debtor, and the mortgagor occupies the position of a surety; and the mortgagee is permitted to resort to the grantee to recover the deficiency after applying the proceeds of a sale of the mortgaged premises, and this by the equitable rule that the creditor is entitled to the benefit of all the collateral securities which his debtor has obtained to reinforce the principal obligation, though his right is strictly an equitable one, and its exercise at law has been refused. But the broad doctrine has since been laid down, that one for whose benefit a promise is made to another may maintain an action upon the promise, though he was not a party to the agreement or privy to the consideration thereof; and it was then held in unqualified terms that whoever has for a valuable consideration assumed and agreed to pay another's debt may be sued directly by the creditor, and that a mortgagee or other incumbrancer may maintain a personal action against a purchaser from the owner of the equity of redemption who has agreed with his grantor to assume and pay off the incumbrance, if the party with whom the agreement was made was himself personally liable upon the mortgage debt. Sheldon on Subrogation (2 ed.), pp. 128-129, sec. 85. We have in recent cases held that where a contract between two parties is made for the benefit of a third, the latter may sue thereon and recover although not strictly a privy to the contract. Mason v. Wilson,
It was said by Judge Pearson, in Threadgill v. McLendon, supra, that "the promise is binding and inures directly to the benefit of the creditor, because the promisor has received the consideration, and in justice should be made to perform his undertaking," and the same judge restates the same principle in Draughan v. Bunting, supra, where one bought property, and as part of the consideration for the purchase, expressly *579
promised to pay a debt of the seller, which is our case, and Voorhees v.Porter, supra, is also like it. In Lacy v. Webb,
The modern or present principle is thus stated by an able text-writer: The doctrine now generally accepted gives him (the mortgagee) the option either to proceed directly against the purchaser on the covenant or to enforce the latter's liability in a suit for foreclosure, and if he chooses the former he may sue the purchaser in an action at law, without the concurrence of the mortgagor; and the same right accrues to the assignee of the mortgage or to any one standing in the place of the mortgagee. 27 Cyc., p. 1351. It follows that J. Manly Lyda, having assumed the obligation, and having promised to pay the debt directly to *580 L. I. Jennings, the creditor and mortgagee, an action will lie by Jennings' administrator against Lyda's administrator, to recover it, before there is any foreclosure of the mortgage.
We do not see, in this case, how the assignee of Lyda can be prejudiced, for if the administrator pays the mortgage debt, it relieves the land, which is the same described in both the deed and the mortgage.
Plaintiff is entitled to an unconditional judgment, which may be enforced against the administrator of Lyda as the law directs.
The judgment will be accordingly modified.
Modified and affirmed.