78 Ala. 398 | Ala. | 1884
It may be regarded as settled, that in this State two different theories of a mortgage are recognized, dependent upon the forv/m — one which prevails in a court of law, and another in a court of equity. The relations of the mortgagor and mortgagee, and their rights as between themselves, are considered differently, according to the rules and practice of the court in which they are adjudicated.
At law, a mortgage of lands vests-in the mortgagee a legal estate in presentí, with a condition, b.y which it may be defeated. After the law-day, the condition being unperformed, the estate is relieved of the condition, and the mortgagee becomes the owner, and is entitled to receive the rents and profits. Before the law-day has passed, the mortgagor may re-invest himself with his original estate, by a strict performance of the condition. After the law-day, and after default, his only right is an equity of redemption, of which a court of law takes no notice.
In a court of equity, a mortgage is regarded as a mere incident to, and security for the debt, and not as the conveyance of an estate. The mortgagor is held to be the true owner, and entitled, ultimately, to the benefit of the rents and profits received before foreclosure. A mortgagee in possession is treated as a trustee of the rents and profits for the use of the mortgagor, from the time he actually entered into possession, and will be required to apply them in reduction, or, if sufficient, in extinguishment of the mortgage debt.— Welch v. Phillips, 54 Ala. 309; Scott v. Ware, 65 Ala. 174; Dozier v. Mitchell, 65 Ala. 511; 2 Jones on Mort. § 1114.
The liability of a mortgagee in possession to account, as a general rule, and upon equitable principles, for rents and profits, is not denied by appellant. The contention is, whether a mortgagee who entered into possession, after the .law-day, of one parcel of land, where the mortgage conveys several separate and distinct parcels, and received the rents thereof, and who subsequently foreclosed the mortgage as to all the parcels but one, by a sale under the power contained in the mortgage, and became himself the purchaser of a subdivision of the land from which the rents were received, is liable, on a bill filed by him to foreclose as to the land unsold, to account for, and apply in reduction of the mortgage debt, the rents thus re
At law. the mortgagee is not liable to account for rents and profits. Their receipt, by a mortgagee in possession, to an amount sufficient to extinguish the mortgage, is not a legal satisfaction. An application of them to the debt must be made, before any payment results. The right of the mortgagor to account, and to such application, is incident to the equity of redemption, which is exclusively of equitable cognizance. This right, however, does not necessarily depend upon an active exercise of the right of redemption. The rents are applied as an equitable set-off to .the amount due on the mortgage, and the right to an account arises on a bill filed by the mortgagee to foreclose. — Toomer, Sykes & Billups v. Randolph,, 60 Ala. 356; Daniel v. Coker, 70 Ala. 260 ; 2 Jones on Mort. § 1115. Hence it has been held, that when a mortgagee comes into equity for a foreclosure, his bill is wanting in equity, without an offer to account for the rents and profits, which the mortgagor has a right to have applied to the payment of the mortgage debt. — Denby v. Mellgrew, 58 Ala. 147.
There is no compulsion on the mortgagee to enter into possession of the mortgage premises after the law-day. He may or may not enter, or intercept the rents, at his election. If he does not, the mortgagor is entitled to receive them, as the owner of the estate against all persons except the mortgagee and those, claiming under him. On like principle, where the mortgage conveys several distinct parcels of land, the mortgagee may enter into possession of one, or more or all, as he may consider the security of his interests and the protection of his debt may require. But the exercise of his election to take possession of only one parcel does not operate to change or modify the character and capacity in which he receives and holds the rents, or to alter or defeat the right of the mortgagor to an account and- application of them in reduction of the mortgage debt.
In the case of a mortgage, like the one under consideration, the mortgagee may foreclose as to a part of the lands by selling them under and in accordance with the power of sale. The effect of such sale is the same as a foreclosure in equity. If a
The debt, which the mortgage is given to secure, is one debt. The unity of the debt constitutes the mortgage a unit.. The lien extends equally to each separate parcel of land. There is, also, unity in the equity of redemption. Having been cut off as to part of the mortgage property by a partial foreclosure, it is restricted to the property as to which there has been no foreclosure, but remains the same equity of redemption, differing only in degree. The mortgagor has the right to redeem the undisturbed property by paying the amount due on the mortgage debt, estimated by equitable principles. His right is to have the debt credited with the sum of any equitable set-off he'may have. The rents received before foreclosure by the mortgagee, in possession of a part only of the lands, will be applied in reduction of the debt secured by a pledge of all the lands, and not for the relief of the particular land from which derived, from the incumbrance of the mortgage.
When some of the mortgage lands were sold under the mortgage, it was the right of the mortgagor to have the debt reduced by the sum of the proceeds of the sales, and also, as an incident to his equity of redemption, by the rents received before foreclosure, after deducting necessary and proper expenditures. When, therefore, the appellant seeks by bill in equity to foreclose the mortgage on the remaining land, the rents received by him before foreclosure, with the rightful deductions, will be applied in reduction of the mortgage debt.
Affirmed.