39 Minn. 39 | Minn. | 1888
The principal questions in this case are, what constitutes “a mortgagee in possession,” and what are his rights? The facts, as found by the court, so far as here material, are that, one Edwin K. Benton being the owner of a tract of land containing 240 acres, he and his wife, defendant Elizabeth Benton, in December, 1857, executed a mortgage upon it to William and James Chaffee, to secure the 'payment of $1,000, in one year. Benton resided on the land until the fall of 1866, when he left the state, and went to the state of Connecticut, where he continued to reside until his death, October 3, 1878; his wife and children continuing, however, to reside on the premises until March, 1876. In July, 1874, W. B. Conant, the assignee of the mortgage, proceeded to foreclose by advertisement under a power of sale; and at the mortgage sale, August 22, 1874, bid in the land, and obtained a sheriff’s certificate of sale. No redemption having been made, in February, 1876, Conant demanded possession as owner under the mortgage sale from the defendant Elizabeth Benton, who, in compliance with the demand, removed from and vacated the premises in March, 1876. In February, 1876, Conant and wife had quitclaimed the premises to one Mills, who, on the same day, quitclaimed them to Mrs. Conant. On the 1st day of June, 1876, Mrs. Conant and family entered into possession of the
Defendants’ first position is that Conant, having elected to foreclose by advertisement, could not afterwards have foreclosed by action, and therefore that the mortgage was extinguished and dead before the Conants entered into possession, in June, 1876. That, the two modes of foreclosure are cumulative, and that a void attempt to foreclose by advertisement does not destroy the lien of the mortgage or cut off the right to resort to foreclosure by action, is too well settled to admit of discussion. Folsom v. Lockwood, 6 Minn. 119, (186;) Lash v. McCormick, 17 Minn. 381, (403.) Neither is there any
This brings us to the first important legal question in the case, viz., whether the right to foreclose by action still continued when the Co-nants went into possession, June 1, 1876. This cause of action accrued against Benton in December, 1858, and, under Laws 1870, c. 60, would have been barred September 8, 1870, unless saved from the operation of the statute by his departure from and residence out of the state. It has been determined that the exception in Gen. St. 1866, c. 66, § 15, from the time limited for commencing actions, of the time during which the defendant resides out of the state, applies to an action to foreclose a mortgage upon real estate. Whalley v. Eldridge, 24 Minn. 358. We need not here discuss the nature of the absence from the state on part of a defendant necessary to prevent the statute from running. The evidence abundantly justified the court in finding that in this case it was permanent in its nature, and that Benton resided in Connecticut from the time of his departure, in 1866, until his death, in 1878. The fact that he never returned during these 11 years, and that in his will, executed shortly before his death, he described himself as of Bast Windsor, Conn., abundantly justified the conclusion that his absence was a permanent change of residence, and, if so, it was of no legal importance that his family remained behind. The fact that Conant might, notwithstanding the non-residence of the mortgagor, have resorted to substituted service of the summons, would not take the case out of the statutory exception. The right to foreclose by action, therefore, still existed when the Conants entered into possession.
Though the foreclosure was ineffectual as such, yet, under the facts of this case, by the deeds from Conant to Mills, and from Mills to Mrs. Conant, of the interest apparently acquired by Conant as purchaser at the foreclosure sale, Mrs. Conant became the owner of the mortgage. Johnson v. Sandhoff, 30 Minn. 197, (14 N. W. Rep. 889;) Holton v. Bowman, 32 Minn. 191, (19 N. W. Rep. 734.) The ques
The law as to what constitutes “a mortgagee in possession” has not been so clearly defined by the decisions as it' might be. Sometimes the subject is referred to as if all that is necessary is that the mortgagee should be in possession in fact, regardless of the mode of acquiring it. Sometimes a mortgagee in possession is spoken of as one who has acquired possession “peaceably,” or, again, “lawfully.” At common law, a mortgage conveyed the legal title, defeasible upon payment of the mortgage, and upon breach of the condition the mortgagee became at once entitled to the possession of the mortgaged premises, and, having this right, could maintain an action of eject, ment. But this has been changed by statute, which provides that a mortgage of real property is not to be deemed a conveyance so as to enable the mortgagee to recover possession without foreclosure. Gen. St. 1878, c. 75, § 29. It was difficult for the courts at first to free themselves from their old ideas of the nature of a mortgage, or to realize the full extent of the change wrought by this statute. They still clung to the idea that a mortgage conveyed the legal title, .and gave this statute an absolutely literal construction. They seemed to-think that the mortgagee, after condition broken, still had the right of possession, but that the statute merely forbade its legal enforcement. Hence, if he could only somehow get possession, he could maintain it on common-law principles. Any such doctrine is utterly inconsistent with all legal principles. If a mortgagee in possession can insist on maintaining it, his right must depend upon his contract, and must be capable of enforcement. Newton v. McKay, 30 Mich. 380. The legislature, by the statute referred to, doubtless intended to sweep away every remaining vestige of the ancient common-law rule, which regarded a mortgage as a conveyance of the title, and to-make it a mere chattel, — a lien; the fee and right of possession remaining in the mortgagor both before and after condition broken. Kortright v. Cady, 21 N. Y. 343. This court, although at first not entirely emancipated from the old ideas as to the nature of a mortgage,—see Pace v. Chadderdon, 4 Minn. 390, (499,)—has subsequently, by numerous decisions, planted itself squarely upon this doctrine.
It follows necessarily from this that a mortgagee, even after condition broken, has no right or remedy except to foreclose his mortgage; that he cannot, merely under his mortgage, either recover or maintain possession of the mortgaged premises. The only logical rule is that, to constitute “a mortgagee in possession,” the'mortgagee must be in possession by reason of the agreement or assent of the mortgagor or his assigns that he have the possession under the mortgage and because of it. The right to take possession under his mortgage being taken away, nothing remains but to foreclose, or else make some arrangement for his better security with the owner of the fee. Having no right to take possession under his mortgage, the mortgagee can get none, except by the agreement or assent of the one who owns that right. This, of course, need not necessarily be express. It may be implied from circumstances. Where the mortgagor expressly abandons possession, his assent that the mortgagee might go into possession under his mortgage might well be implied, especially when he allows him to remain in possession for a considerable length of time without objection. But, after all, the assent, express or implied, of the mortgagor, that the mortgagee may take possession under or because of his mortgage, is of the essence of “a mortgagee in possession.”
This assent is conclusively proved in the present case. Benton, by his permanent removal from the state, abandoned all personal occupancy or possession. Conant demanded the possession from Mrs.Benton under his mortgage, or by virtue of rights supposed to have been acquired under its foreclosure. She surrendered possession in pursuance of that demand, knowing, as she herself testifies, that Conant was coming in under the mortgage, and that her husband knew'it too; and after this entry the Conants, and those claiming under them, were allowed to remain in possession over 10 years, without objection or assertion of any right in themselves by the mortgagors, or any one claiming under them. The fact that Conant claimed the right to the possession under his foreclosure, and threatened legal pro
While, perhaps, we have never distinctly so held,—see Meighen v. King, 31 Minn. 115, (16 N. W. Rep. 702,)—yet the necessary and logical result of our decisions is that, where the holder of the mortgage has gone into possession as “mortgagee in possession,” and so remains (the mortgage being unpaid) until the right of action to redeem is barred, he becomes vested wdth an absolute legal title to the mortgaged premises. Such was the position of the plaintiffs in this action at and prior to the time that defendant Elizabeth Benton intruded herself into the premises in dispute, on the 27th of August, 1887. Of this there can be no question, as to the 160 acres claimed by the plaintiff Rogers. The fact that plaintiffs Dodge and Hall have not actually occupied or lived upon their 80 acres since the spring of 1885 cannot, under the facts of this case, make any difference. They have done nothing indicating an intention to abandon their possession, much less of restoring it to the mortgagor or his heirs. Their ceasing to retain the pedis possessionem was merely incident to the unimproved-and untenantable condition of the premises. They continued to pay taxes on them as their property. The possession hav
Order affirmed.