152 Mass. 108 | Mass. | 1890
By accepting his deed from the plaintiff, the defendant assumed and agreed to pay two mortgages, of which one was then overdue, and the other was payable by instalments to become due in the future. It was a single but divisible contract, containing a promise, first, to pay one mortgage immediately, and, secondly, -to pay the other when it should become due. In proceedings to recover damages for a breach of the contract, each part of it should be considered separately. It is agreed that there has been no breach as to the second mortgage, and damages can be recovered in this action only for, neglect to assume and pay the first mortgage. The plaintiff claims damages of two kinds: first, those resulting from the defendant’s failure to relieve him from personal liability on the mortgage debt; and, secondly, those growing out of the defendant’s neglect to obtain a discharge of the first mortgage, whereby the plaintiff has been deprived of a benefit which should have resulted to his security for the payment of the second mortgage. If he can recover only for the failure to relieve
One who assumes a mortgage in such an agreement takes upon himself the burden of the debt or claim secured by the mortgage, and there is no doubt that, as between him and his grantor he becomes the principal, and the latter merely a surety for the payment of the debt. It is said in many cases, that primarily the mortgage is a charge upon the land, but it would be more accurate to say that it is made primarily a charge upon the purchase money reserved by the grantee to pay it. Thayer v. Torrey, 8 Vroom, 339. The relation of the parties and the nature of the contract are the same as if the entire consideration had been paid to the grantor, and he had then taken a part of the money sufficient to pay the mortgage, and had intrusted it to the grantee upon his promise to carry it to the mortgagee and pay it over in satisfaction of the mortgage. Performance of the promise would cancel the mortgage, and leave the estate discharged from the lien. If, as a part of the contract, another portion of the consideration had been paid by giving a second mortgage on the property, the discharge of the first mortgage by payment of the money as agreed might be a very important part of the arrangement, without which the second mortgage would be valueless.
In assuming the mortgage, the grantee undertakes to relieve the mortgagor, not only from personal liability for the debt, but also from all liability under the mortgage. If the mortgagor were released from the debt, while the mortgage was allowed to remain a binding contract enforceable against the land, he
In the case at bar, the plaintiff suffered no actual damage by reason of his liability upon the debt, for that was paid by a sale of the mortgaged premises; but under the second mortgage he had security on the property for his liability named in that, and he was interested in having the first mortgage satisfied and discharged for the improvement of his security. As a direct result of the breach of the contract, he was deprived of that security. The damage which he has suffered is not too remote, but must be presumed to have been contemplated by the parties when they made their contract.
The only remaining objection to his recovery of this damage is, that it is uncertain whether he will ever be required to pay the debt covered by the second mortgage. But there is much
The principle involved is the same as that in Furnas v. Bur-gin, 119 Mass. 500, and other similar cases. In that case it was uncertain whether the plaintiff would ever be called upon to pay any part of the money which he recovered, for the note might be paid by a sale of the land under the mortgage. We are of opinion, therefore, that the plaintiff was rightfully allowed to recover damages for the loss of his security, caused by the defendant’s neglect to perform his contract.
The defendant cannot maintain his declaration in set-off. The action was brought to recover unliquidated damages for a breach of contract, and the claim sought to be set off is of the same kind, and is not within the statute. Pub. Sts. c. 168, §§ 3-7. Judgment affirmed.
It is conceded, in the opinion of a majority of the court, that the debt secured by the first mortgage had been fully paid, before the suit was brought, out of the proceeds of the land, which had been sold under the power contained in this mortgage, and that neither the interest nor any part of the principal debt secured by the second mortgage had, when the suit was brought, become payable. The contention is that the promise
This contention seems to me to be founded upon a misconception of the nature of the contract of the defendant. It was, I think, a personal contract by the defendant with the plaintiff, that he would pay to the mortgagees, respectively, the mortgage debts when and as they should become payable, so that the plaintiff, who had parted with all his interest in the land, should not be called upon to pay them, but should be discharged from all personal liability. The plaintiff might have taken security from the defendant for the performance of this contract, but he took none. The promise which is implied by the defendant’s acceptance of the deed did not convey to the plaintiff any interest in the land. If the plaintiff paid the mortgages, he would be subrogated to the rights of the mortgagees against the land, in addition to his rights against the defendant on the promise, but this right of subrogation he would have had if the defendant had made no promise to assume and pay the mortgages, but had taken a deed subject to the mortgages. This contract of the defendant with the plaintiff, under our law, gave no additional rights to the mortgagees; they could not sue the defendant upon it in their own names, nor could they, without the plaintiff’s consent, bring suit in his name. Prentice v. Brimhall, 123 Mass. 291. Coffin v. Adams, 131 Mass. 133.
The contract of the defendant with the plaintiff contained in effect two promises; namely, to pay to two different persons two separate debts due to those persons from the plaintiff, and payable at different times. If these debts were paid, when they became payable, out of the proceeds of the land, or by the defendant out of any other property, the plaintiff would
Before the decisions in Furnas v. Durgin, 119 Mass. 500, and Locke v. Homer, 131 Mass. 93, it was a question whether a grantor must not first pay the mortgage debt before he could sue his grantee upon such a promise as is contained in the deed in this case. It was decided in those cases that this need not be done, but that the grantor could recover the amount of the mortgage debt if it was payable, because, as between the parties, it was the duty of the grantee to pay it. But the grantee would have the right to have the money which he was compelled to pay to the grantor applied to the payment of the mortgage debt, and whether this payment would operate as a discharge of the mortgage would depend upon the relation of the grantee to other persons having interests in the land subject to the mort
On the contract of the defendant implied from the acceptance of the deed, the plaintiff had the same rights of action which he would have upon a similar contract made upon a valuable consideration by a third person, and he would also, if he were compelled to pay the mortgage debts, be subrogated to the rights of the mortgagees against the land, in the same manner as if he had conveyed the equity of redemption subject to the mortgages, but without any promise on the part of the defendant to pay them. The damages for a breach of the promise to pay the debt secured by the first mortgage could never have been greater than the debt itself, and as this had been paid out of property which the defendant had a right to have appropriated to its payment before this action was brought, there were no damages for this breach, and there was when the action was brought no breach of the promise to assume and pay the second mortgage. See Gaffney v. Hicks, 124 Mass. 301.
I think that there should be judgment for the defendant. Mr. Justice Devens and Mr. Justice William Allen concur in this dissenting opinion.