163 Mass. 322 | Mass. | 1895
The debt due from the plaintiff to the defendant Chaffee, who seems to have done business under the name of
The evidence would have justified a finding that an agent of the plaintiff went to the defendant’s place of business for the purpose of paying to him the sum necessary to discharge the debt under the statute, having with him sufficient money for that purpose, and being ready and willing to pay the same, and made known his purpose and his readiness and willingness so to pay to the defendant, and was prevented from making an actual and formal tender of the proper sum only by the defendant’s refusal to accept it and his assertion that a larger amount was due, and his withdrawal from further talk and from the immediate presence of the agent for the purpose of preventing the making of the tender. This had the effect to discharge the lien of the mortgage, for the' acts of the plaintiff’s agent were in law equivalent to a tender, Gilmore v. Holt, 4 Pick. 258. Breed v. Hurd, 6 Pick. 356. Southworth v. Smith, 7 Cush. 391.
After the attempt which has been considered to pay the plaintiff’s debt, the defendant gave notice that he should take possession of the property covered by the mortgage for the purpose of foreclosing the equity of redemption, and also that he elected to become the absolute owner of the property, accepting it in satisfaction of the debt. Thereafter he took it by force, committing acts which, if not justified by his rights in the property and under the mortgage, constituted an assault and battery, and which were the wrongs alleged in the action of tort. It is not necessary to inquire whether all the rulings of the court upon this branch of the case were correct. The finding of the jury,
Exceptions in lath cases overruled.