128 Mass. 102 | Mass. | 1880
Personal property in the possession of the principal defendants, but subject to a mortgage to Samuel L. Parsons, was attached by the plaintiff, and under the provisions of the statute Parsons was summoned in the same action as trustee of the defendants. Gen. Sts. o. 123, §§ 67—71.
The validity of the mortgage was established by the verdict of the jury in a trial on issues framed by the court. It is made the duty of the court, in such case, to ascertain the amount due, and to fix a time within which the attachment shall become void and the property be restored, unless the plaintiff pays or tenders to the mortgagee the amount found due.
Two exceptions were taken in the course of the trial before the jury. One was to the admission of a writing which was signed by the defendants and also by Parsons, when the mortgage was made, and as part of the same transaction, by which it was declared that Parsons held the mortgage for himself and in trust for two others, to secure them severally from loss on account of their indorsements of the defendant’s notes, a schedule of which was thereto annexed. But this evidence was clearly admissible, as showing the actual consideration for the note and
The other exception taken at the trial was to the refusal to rule that the mortgage was void as against the plaintiff, if it was given to indemnify Parsons for indorsing notes of the defendants which had not then matured and which did not mature and were not paid until after the attachment. But it is well settled that a mortgage given to indemnify one against his outstanding liabilities as an indorser for the mortgagor is a valid security for such liabilities, and cannot be defeated by an attachment made before the liability becomes absolute and has been paid by the mortgagee. The mortgagee is entitled to the full benefit of his security, as against the attaching creditor.
In Haskell v. Gordon, 3 Met. 268, where there was a simple attachment, without the trustee process, of personal property, mortgaged to secure the mortgagee from liabilities assumed as indorser for the mortgagor, it was said that there were great practical difficulties in carrying out fully the provisions of the statute, in cases of mortgages given to secure the performance by the mortgagor of future collateral acts, or to secure future contingent liabilities; and that these difficulties might be such, in peculiar cases, as to render it impossible for the creditor so far'to comply with the duty devolving on him, after demand by the mortgagee, as to be able to retain his attachment of the property. But it was added, that this objection could not operate to prevent the attachment being made. And, when made, the creditor must pay or tender the amount for which the property is liable, when demanded, or lose his attachment. The statutes do not authorize the substitution of any other security for protection against a future contingent liability, and the only mode in which the creditor can retain his attachment is by paying or tendering the amount for which the property is contingently liable. Bicknell v. Cleverly, 125 Mass. 164. Codman v. Freeman, 3 Cush. 306. All this is equally applicable to attachments made under the statutes first above cited, when the mortgagee is summoned as trustee; the validity of the mortgage is tried by the jury; and the sum justly due is ascertained by the court,
At the argument of this case, the plaintiff called attention to the fact that the record, as disclosed by the bill of exceptions, does not show that the court found the exact amount due on the mortgage, and then ordered the creditor to pay the same within a time named. But no such point appears .to have been made at the trial, and the exceptions taken related to the specific rulings already considered, and not to the general conclusion discharging the trustee. Exceptions overruled.