65 Ala. 174 | Ala. | 1880
— These causes were argued and submitted, and will be decided in connection. The cases in which Scott is appellant, each involving the same question, will be first considered. To the clear apprehension of the question, it is better to state the facts — the origin, nature, and history of the controversy.
Robert J. Ware died in 1867, the owner of considerable personal property, and seized and possessed of a large and valuable real estate. Before his death, he made and published his last will and testament, which, after his death, was duly admitted to probate. Thereby, his two sons, James H. and Robert Y. Ware, were nominated and appointed executors, and relieved from giving bond for the faithful performance of their duties. Robert Y. alone qualified as executor, and assumed to perform the duties and trusts of administration. The testator, at his death, was indebted to Charles T. Pollard, as executor of Thomas M. Cowles, in a large sum, which was secured by mortgage on real estate, devised to the testator’s daughter, Mary W. Molton, for life, remainder over, on her death, to her husband and children. The only remaining note due to Pollard, secured by the mortgage, was transferred to the appellant, Scott. Thereon, on the 25th September, 1872, in the Circuit Court of Elmore, appellant obtained judgment by confession, against the executor, Robert Y. Ware, for the sum of twenty thousand and eighteen dollars, besides costs; upon which execution was issued, and returned No property found.
On the first September, 1873, the appellant, suing as well
From his appointment, the receiver had rented all the lands of the testator, including the mortgaged premises; and they were rented for the year when the decree of dismissal was rendered, the rent not falling due until the end of the year. On the 24th October, 1879, the accounts of the receiver not having been settled, and no order of discharge granted to him, the appellant presented to the chancellor a petition, averring the insufficiency of the mortgaged premises to pay the mortgage debt, and that the rents in the hands of the receiver, with the value of the premises, was not adequate to payment in full; and praying that the receiver be ordered to pay him the rents, or that he be permitted to sue for them at law. This petition was overruled and denied, at the April term, 1880, of the court.
On the dismissal of appellant’s original and amended bills aforesaid, he gave the receiver notice of the mortgage, and
While, in a court of equity, a mortgage is regarded as a mere security for a debt — the debt being the principal, and the mortgage an incident; it is in a court of law regarded as a conveyance of an immediate estate in lands, passing to the mortgagee a present right of entry and possession, if there is not expressly, or by fair implication, a reservation to the mortgagor of possession until default in the performance of the condition. Before default in the performance of the condition, all that remains in the mortgagor is the right, on performance, to be restored to his original estate. On the expiration of the law-day, if he makes default, the estate vests absolutely in the mortgagee : it is freed from the condition annexed to it in its creation. If the mortgagor is suffered to remain in possession, he is the mere tenant at will, or, perhaps, more properly speaking, the tenant by sufferance, of the mortgagee. While in possession, he is entitled to the rents and profits — not as the agent or bailiff of the mortgagee, for there is no liability resting upon him to account for them ; but as the tenant in possession, and as to all the world, but the mortgagee and those claiming under him, the owner of the estate. For, though his estate is divested by breach of the condition, of that breach only the mortgagee and his privy in estate can take advantage.— Welsh v. Phillips, 54 Ala. 309; Paulling v. Barron, 32 Ala. 11; Barker v. Bell, 37 Ala. 358. On his death, in possession, his widow is entitled to dower as a legal right, as against all the world
When tbe condition of the mortgage is broken — when there is default in the payment of a debt it is intended to secure— the mortgagee may, if the power is conferred, proceed to a sale of the premises. When the power is conferred, a sale in conformity to it has all the effect of a decree of strict foreclosure: the legal and equitable estate unite in the purchaser, freed from all right of redemption, other than that secured by tbe statute to the mortgagor, and to judgment and mortgage creditors. — Childress v. Monette, 54 Ala. 317. Or the mortgagee may not exercise the power ; or it may not be conferred: he has other remedies, to any or all of which he may resort, and may pursue them concurrently, without being compelled to an election. 1. He may resort to any legal or equitable remedy, to which any other creditor, having a debt past-due, is entitled. 2. He may terminate the permissive tenancy of tbe mortgagor by entry, or by ejectment for the recovery of possession. 3. He may resort to equity for a foreclosure and sale to satisfy the debt- — Duval v. McLoskey, 1 Ala. 708 ; Micou v. Ashurst, 55 Ala. 607 ; Kerr on Inj. 191. But, if he does not enter, or bring ejectment— if he does not displace or disturb the possession of the mortgagor — the latter is regarded as the owner, entitled to take the rents and profits. This right may be displaced, by notice to the tenants that the rents and profits are claimed by, and must be paid to the mortgagee. After such notice, no payment to the mortgagor, of rent past-due, or of rent accruing, unless it be of rent which had accrued before the mortgagee was entitled to enter, can be sustained against him. But all payments of rents to the mortgagor, which had accrued before notice, or before entry, will be sustained. When there is no specific pledge of rents and profits, it is not, as is so strongly insisted by the counsel of appellant, as a mere legal incident to the mortgage, that the mortgagee can claim to take them. When he takes them, it is in consequence of his possession of the premises, or when, resorting to equity for a foreclosure, he obtains the appointment of a receiver. — Argall v. Pitts, 78 N. Y. 239; Douglas v. Cline, 12 Bush (Ky.), 608; Bell v. Mayor, 10 Paige, 49.
A mortgagee, therefore, claiming rents and profits, after his right of entry has accrued, must be active in making claim. The right of the mortgagor to them cannot be interrupted, unless the mortgagee enters, or give notice to the tenants in possession; or unless, pending a bill for foreclosure, he obtains, in aid of it, the appointment of a receiver. As a mere incident to his legal estate, they do not accrue to him. The mere filing of a bill of foreclosure will not interrupt the right of the mortgagor in possession, or of those claiming under him, to take the rents and profits. The right can be interrupted, when the mortgagee resorts. to equity for a foreclosure, not having entered or given notice to the tenants, only by obtaining the appointment of a receiver. Such an appointment is not a mere matter of course in aid of the foreclosure suit. There must be shown clearly, by allegation and by evidence, that the mortgage security is inadequate, and the mortgagor insolvent; or some case of fraud, or of imminent peril to the rights of the mortgagee, before the court will exercise the power of appointing a receiver, displacing the possession of the mortgagor. — High on Eeceivers, §§ 639-644; Hughes v. Hatchett, 55 Ala. 639.
It is apparent that, until after the dismissal of the creditors’ bill, the appellant, as mortgagee, had not been active in making claim to the rents and profits — had taken no step, indicating a purpose to displace the right of the mortgagor, or of those claiming under him, to take and hold them. The bill, on which he obtained the appointment of a receiver to take them, did not distinguish them from the rents and profits of other real estate of the testator, and treated the rents and profits of ail as a common fund, in which all the creditors of the testator had the right to participate, upon terms of equality. In that suit, the appellant was pursuing,
We are not questioning collaterally the regularity and propriety of the order in that cause appointing a receiver. It is a simple inquiry as to the operation and effect of the appointment, which can be satisfactorily resolved in no other way, than by ascertaining what it was proper and right for the court to do, in the case before it, and which it must be presumed the court did and intended. There is no room for the contention, that the receiver wras appointed for the benefit of the appellant as mortgagee.. The appointment was intended solely for the purposes of suit, and for the protection of the rights and interests involved in it — the rights and interests of creditors of the testator, and of legatees
The appointment of a receiver is for the benefit, and on behalf of all the parties in interest, and not for the benefit of strangers to the suit. He holds for the benefit of all parties, until the termination of the suit ; and then for the benefit of the parties ascertained to have the right to the property or fund in controversy. — 2 Story’s Eq. § 829 ; Howell v. Ripley, 10 Paige, 46. When the rights of strangers are affeeted, they can apply to the court to be heard pro interesse suo ; and the court will protect them from any inequitable interference by the receiver,' its own officer. But a stranger can claim or derive no benefit from the appointment of a receiver. While, if he intervenes, he will be protected from any diminution of his rights or equities because of the receivership, it can not operate to enlarge such rights. He 'can not claim and derive from it a benefit to which he wrould not have been entitled if there had not been a receiver appointed, and the parties to the suit had remained in the condition in which they were when the receiver was appointed. Howell v. Ripley, supra. Therefore is the general rule, that a junior mortgagee, proceeding, as he may, to foreclose without making parties senior incumbrancers, and obtaining in aid of the foreclosure a receiver of the rents and profits pending the suit, obtains a specific lien upon them, and is entitled to them, until the. senior mortgagee applies for and obtains a receiver in a suit for foreclosure. Then, the senior mortgagee will acquire a right to, and a lien upon subsequently accruing rents; and not upon rents past-due, which are in, or may come to the hands of the first receiver. — High on Beceivers, § 688; Howell v. Ripley, supra: Post v. Durr, 4 Edw. Ch. 412.
In Thomas v. Brigstocke, 4 Russell, 64 (4 Eng. Ch. 64), a receiver had been appointed in a suit for establishing the will of the mortgagor, and had received the rents during the pendency of the suit. The mortgagee, who was not a party to the suit, gave notice to the tenants of the mortgaged premises to pay the rents to him, which was disregarded, in consequence of the appointment of a receiver. Subsequently, he filed q, petition, claiming the rents, and for the discharge of the receiver. The receiver was discharged, but the claim to rents was disallowed. The master of the rolls, whose decree was affirmed by the Lord Chancellor, said: “ A mortgagee is entitled only to such rents as become due when he is in possession of the mort
In Gresley v. Adderley (1 Swanst. 579), the mortgagee of a term claimed an account of rents and profits in the hands of a receiver, accruing before the expiration of the term. The mortgagee was not a party to the suit in which the receiver was appointed. The account was denied him, Lord Eldon saying : “ I apprehend that, when the court interposed to receive the rents, beyond what was required for keeping down the interest on incumbrances, all the surplus rent, after payment of interest, was received for the benefit of the heir. I think that the mortgagee of a term, if he chooses not to lay his hands on the rents during the term, must be in the situation of a mortgagee in fee, who has suffered the rents to be applied for purposes other than the satisfaction of his security.”
The appointment of a receiver being solely for the benefit of the parties to the suit, intended for the preservation of the fund pending the litigation, to be paid ultimately to the party prevailing, there is no principle upon which the appellant, as a mortgagee, can claim from the receiver a retrospective account of rents and profits. It will not be insisted that he could have claimed such an account from the executor, or the devisees of the testator, if they had remained in possession, undisturbed by the appointment of a receiver. The truth is, the bill against them, on which the appointment of á receiver was obtained, having failed and been dismissed, the possession of the receiver was their possession, and, by relation, must be deemed exclusive throughout the whole period of the litigation, from the appointment to the discharge of the receiver.' — Beverley v. Brooke, 4 Grattan, 212; Field v. Jones, 11 Ga. 413. The appellant was a party, — the actor, in the suit in which the receiver was appointed. If his right and claim to the rents in the hands of the receiver was involved in that suit, the decree of dismissal of the bill, reserving his rights as mortgagee, was an adjudication necessarily of a want of right and claim to the rents in the hands of the receiver, the disposition of which could be de
The result is, the decree of the chancellor appealed from, disallowing the claim of the appellant Scott to the rents in the hands of the receiver, must be affirmed.
Lehman, Durr & Co., by purchase from Robert Y. Ware, acquired the lands devised to him by the testator, Robert J. Ware; and they were in possession, taking the rents and profits, when the receiver was appointed on the creditor’s bill filed by Scott. ' Asenath A. Ware was the widow of the testator, and the lands devised to her were sold, at sheriff’s sale, under execution against her, and purchased by William Robinson, who was in possession, taking the rents and profits, when the receiver was appointed. Both of them, Lehman, Durr & Co. and Robinson, were defendants to the creditor’s bill, and yielded to the receiver possession of the lands claimed by them; and he collected the rents and profits, and had them in his hands when their petitions for restoration to possession, and for payment of the rents, were dismissed.
On the death of the testator, the legal estate, then residing in him, in the lands devised, passed to the devisees. There was no gap or- chasm in its continuity — it was not at any time in abeyance. Bo instanti, the death of the testator, it passed to the devisees, who had the right to possession, and to rents subsequently accruing.- — 1 Brick. Dig. 935, § 316. The lands were subject to the payment of debts ; and the executor, for that purpose, could have taken possession, and rented them; or could, under the statute, have obtained an order to sell them from the Court of Probate, if the personal estate was insufficient. Until the executor exercised the power of renting, or the power of sale, the right of the devisee to possession, and to the rents and profits, was not intercepted, and the estate passing to him remained. 1 Brick. Dig. 937, §§ 328-333. The devisee was entitled to alienate, and an alienation passed the legal estate, though it would continue subject to the payment of debts, and would not frustrate or impair the power of the executor, nor lessen the liability of the land to pay debts, or to equalize, as the will directs, the value of the devises. — Bell v. Craig, 52 Ala. 215; Goodman v. Benham, 16 Ala. 625.
There may be cases, in which the court would not, on the termination of a suit, order the receiver to restore possession of property, and to pay over funds to the successful party. Circumstances may exist, in which it would be a duty to keep the custody of the property and funds, and to continue the receivership; and, it may be, to transfer the receivership from the cause terminated, to another cause pending before the court, between the same parties, involving their rights and equities in and to the property and funds. But, in any such case, a state of facts must be shown, which would authorize the original appointment of a receiver. ' In the cause to which the chancellor transferred the receivership, the custody of the property and the funds, neithe’r Robinson, nor Lehman, Durr & Co., are parties ; and there is no fact shown in it, which would have autborized the appointment of a receiver to take their possession of the lands, or the rents and profits accruing from them. There is no averment or evidence of the insolvency of either — of any inability to account for the rents, if hereafter they should be wanted to pay debts, or to satisfy any charges to which the legal estate may be found subject, nor of any waste, or peril to the property. When parties have rightful possession of lands, under a legal title, a court of equity is reluctant to interfere with the possession, by the appointment of a receiver; and it may be doubted whether, under any circumstances, it will interfere, unless they- are parties to the record. — High on Receivers, § 145. The interference is unauthorized, when it does
On tbe appeals by Lehman, Durr & Co. and by Robinson, tbe decree must be reversed, and tbe cause will be remanded, that the chancellor may order the restoration to them, respectively, of possession of the lands now held by tbe receiver, obtained from them, and payment to them of the rents of such lands in his hands.