163 A. 107 | Conn. | 1932
The complaint alleged that the plaintiff conveyed to the defendant certain real estate in Waterbury subject to two mortgages which the defendant expressly assumed and agreed to pay, that the defendant has transferred the property to a third person who did not assume the mortgages, and has refused to pay the second of the two mortgages, and that the plaintiff is held responsible by the holder thereof and will be obliged to pay the same. In an answer by way of counterclaim the defendant alleged that the holder of the first mortgage on the property had foreclosed that mortgage in an action to which the plaintiff herein was a party but to which the defendant herein was not a party and of which he had no notice, that none of the defendants in the foreclosure action redeemed, and the title to the property became absolute in the first mortgagee; that the value of the property was more than sufficient to pay all encumbrances on it including the second mortgage; and further alleged that the plaintiff herein had negligently and wilfully failed to notify the defendant herein of the pendency of the foreclosure action as a result of which he was deprived of his security and his equity in the mortgaged premises. The plaintiff demurred to the counterclaim upon the ground that the defendant was not entitled to notice from the plaintiff of the pendency of the foreclosure proceedings, and the court sustained the demurrer.
A demurrer is to be tested by the allegations of the pleading demurred to, which cannot be aided by the assumption of any fact not therein alleged. Ryan v.Knights of Columbus,
The undertaking of the defendant under his assumption agreement was that if he should fail to pay these mortgage notes in accordance with his contract, and the plaintiff in consequence thereof became liable to satisfy them, then the defendant would make good the resulting damage. Trotta v. Prete,
The plaintiff is not a mortgagee who is seeking to enforce the personal liability of a mortgagor. He is the mortgagor who has himself been foreclosed out by the first mortgagee, but who is still personally liable upon the second mortgage from which liability he is entitled to be held harmless by the defendant. It is true that if he had redeemed the first mortgage he could not have recovered from the defendant, assuming the latter to occupy the position of a surety, so long as the property was of sufficient value to cover both mortgages, for under those circumstances he would have suffered no loss by reason of the defendant's failure to pay the second mortgage. Also, if there had been a foreclosure by sale of the first mortgage and the property had realized sufficient to cover both mortgages, the defendant, upon the same assumption, would have been relieved of liability to the plaintiff because both mortgages would have been paid. But the plaintiff was not required to redeem or to apply for a foreclosure by sale. Nor can we see upon what theory he could be said to owe a duty to the *636 defendant to notify him of the foreclosure proceedings. He was under no obligation to protect the defendant from the extinguishment of the security of the second mortgage note. Per contra, the defendant's obligation under the assumption agreement was to protect the plaintiff against the liability upon this note.
The defendant contends that the plaintiff, by permitting the equity of redemption to become valueless, has placed himself in the position of a mortgagee who, by releasing the mortgage, has deprived the mortgagor of his security and therefore released him, to that extent, from his personal obligation to pay the debt. The equity of redemption became valueless as a result of the plaintiff's failure to redeem the first mortgage, but we do not understand the defendant to claim that he was under any obligation to redeem it. The sole complaint is that he failed to notify the defendant of the foreclosure action. In Barnes v. Upham,
After judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff, and the defendant had appealed, assigning as error the ruling of the court upon the demurrer, the plaintiff filed a motion to reopen the judgment upon the ground that, through inadvertence, the amount of the judgment rendered was that of the interest due upon the mortgage note in suit instead of the amount of the principal of the note with interest. This motion was denied by the court (Jennings, J.) and the plaintiff thereafter filed a second motion seeking a reopening *638
of the judgment upon the same ground, which was granted by the court (John Richards Booth, J.). The judgment was reopened and a new judgment entered for the amount due upon the note, and the defendant appealed claiming (1) that the decision upon the first motion was res adjudicata, and (2) that the court had no power to open the judgment. No question of the law of res adjudicata was involved. A judge is not bound to follow the decisions of another judge made at an earlier stage of the proceedings, and if the same point is again raised he has the same right to reconsider the question as if he had himself made the original decision. Wiggin v. Federal Stock Grain Co.,
There is no error upon either appeal.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.