211 P. 962 | Utah | 1922
The plaintiff, hereinafter called appellant, commenced this action against the defendants to recover upon a certain
Tbe appellant bases his assignments of error solely upon tbe findings of fact and conclusions of law as declared by tbe district court. Tbe assignments are: (1) That tbe court’s conclusions of law are “erroneous, against law, contrary to and not supported by tbe findings of fact”; (2) that tbe judgment is contrary to and not supported by tbe findings of fact; and (3) that tbe court erred in not entering judgment for plaintiff as prayed for in bis complaint. In view that tbe assignments of error are based entirely upon tbe court’s findings of fact' and conclusions of law, it becomes necessary to state tbe findings of fact and conclusions of law somewhat in detail. I shall; however, state them in my own language, condensing them wherever possible. '
It appears from tbe findings of fact. That on tbe 1st day of April, 1916, tbe defendant Heber Jarman, who was then unmarried, in consideration of a loan of $1,250, executed and delivered to tbe Houston Real Estate Investment Company, a corporation (hereinafter called company), “bis certain negotiable promissory note in writing,” payable to said company or order, with interest at 7 per cent, per annum, payable semiannually; that said note by its terms became due five years after its date, “and contained no provision whereby tbe maker might pay tbe same before it became due.” That to secure tbe payment of said note said Jarman executed and delivered to said company a mortgage in which he mortgaged certain real property, which is fully described therein, and which mortgage was duly recorded as provided
The court also found that the interests of the defendants in said mortgaged premises were inferior and subject to appellant’s interest therein.
Upon the foregoing findings of fact the court made its conclusion of law, which reads as follows:
“That the said defendant Heber Jarman, the mortgagor, is entitled to a credit of $300 on the principal sum named in the note and mortgage sought to he foreclosed by this action, and at the time of bringing this suit the mortgagor was not in default in the matter of payment of interest; hence said action was prematurely commenced, and should be dismissed at the plaintiff’s costs.”
In view that neither party excepts to any of the findings of the court the facts found must stand as a correct statement of facts, and therefore all that we are required to determine is, Are the court’s conclusion of law and judgment sound as a matter of law?
The conclusion of law of the district court is based upon our statute (Comp. Laws Utah 1917, § 4903), which reads:
“The recording of an assignment of a mortgage shall not in it*131 self he deemed notice of such assignment to the mortgagor, his heirs, or personal representatives so as to invalidate any payment made by them or either of them to the mortgagee.”
Tbe theory upon which the district court proceeded is that the payments made by the defendant, the mortgagor, were made pursuant to the provisions of the foregoing statute, and that they were made as a matter' of right, and hence the appellant, and not the defendant, must suffer the loss. In view- of the findings, if the conclusion of the district court can be sustained at all, it must, in my judgment, be sustained upon the ground stated, since there is nothing in the findings which would justify- the conclusion that 0. W: Johnson, to whom the defendant made all the payments of accrued interest, had any authority whatever, either express or implied, to collect any part of the principal, much less to receive payment thereof before it became due and payable. I shall refer to this point again, at which time I shall refer to the authorities. The question of agency, therefore, is not in this case.
Eliminating the question of agency, as must be done, are the district court’s conclusion and judgment sustained under the provisions of the statute quoted?
The defense relies primarily upon the case of Johnson v. Carpenter, 7 Minn. 176 (Gil. 120). The case of Van Kueren v. Corkins, 66 N. Y. 77, is also cited by the defense. It doe's not appear from the opinion in the latter case, however, whether the instrument that had been assigned was negotiable or not, and hence that case, for reasons hereinafter appearing, may be left out of consideration. There are a few other sporadic cases which sustain the doctrine laid down in the Minnesota case just cited, but, for the reasons hereinafter appearing, it is not necessary to specifically refer to them here.
The decisions in both the Minnesota case and the New York case just referred to are based upon a statute precisely like our Section 4903, supra. There are also many other states which have statutes precisely like the one quoted. By reference to the case of Johnson v. Carpenter, supra, it will
The courts generally hold that a negotiable instrument is not affected by any payment made to the original payee, and that a mortgage given to secure the same is likewise unaffected. The decisions are to the effect that the debt is the principal thing, and that “the rule generally recognized is that the mortgage follows the debt as a mere incident, and shares the immunity of the note from defenses and equities, so that in proceedings to enforce the mortgage nothing can be alleged against it which could not have been set up in defense to an action at law upon the note.” 27 Cyc. 1324. The foregoing text is supported by a great many cases, among which I cite the following: Thompson v. Maddux, 117 Ala. 468, 23 South. 157; Cowing v. Cloud, 16 Colo. App. 326, 65 Pac. 417; Reeves v. Hayes, 95 Ind. 544-545; Lewis v. Kirk, 28 Kan. 497, 42 Am. Rep. 173; Duncan v. Louisville, 13 Bush. (Ky.) 378, 26 Am. Rep. 201; Clasey v. Sigg, 51 Iowa, 371, 1 N. W. 590; Brooke v. Struthers, 110 Mich. 562, 68 N. W. 272, 35 L. R. A. 536; Borgess Inv. Co. v. Vette, 142 Mo. 560, 44 S. W. 754, 64 Am. St. Rep. 567; Paige v. Chapman, 58 N. H. 333; Magie v. Reynolds, 51 N. J. Eq. 113, 26 Atl. 150; First Nat. Bank v. Flath, 10 N. D. 281, 86 N. W. 867; Kelley v. Whitney, 45 Wis. 110, 30 Am. Rep. 697; Van Burkleo v. Southwestern Mfg. Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 39 S. W. 1085. Should the reader desire to examine additional cases, he will find them collated in 14 Am. Dig., Dec. Ed., under the subject “Mortgages,” § 235.
There are, however, in addition to the cases just cited, others in which a statute in terms like ours has been construed and applied, and in which the doctrine announced in the Minnesota and New York cases to which reference has before been made is reviewed and disapproved. The cases to which I desire specially to refer in this connection are the following: Burhans v. Hutcheson, 25 Kan. 628, 37 Am.
“In that transaction the mortgagor who gives his negotiable note, rather than a bond or some non-negotiable obligation, brings himself voluntarily within the rules which govern the payment of negotiable paper, and in effect agrees that he will be bound by them, and that the mortgage shall stand as security for the obligation that he will not only pay the note, but make effectual payment to the party entitled to claim under these rules.”
It is accordingly held that payment to the original mortgagee after transfer of the negotiable instrument, cannot avail the payer of the note either as against it or against the mortgage, and that such is the case, notwithstanding the provisions of the statute, that actual notice of assignment of the mortgage is .necessary. See, also, Jones on Mortgages (6th Ed.) §§ 834, 835; 1 Daniels on Negotiable Instruments (6th Ed.) §§ 834, 834a; 19 R. C. L. p. 359, § 129. In the authority last cited, after discussing the general rule which obtains where negotiable instruments secured by mortgage are transferred in due course before due, it is said:
“So, a purchaser of the equity of redemption in land, who, knowing that there is an outstanding mortgage and making no inquiry as to the ownership or possession of the bonds secured by it, and requiring no excuse for their nonproduction, pays the amount of*135 the bonds to the mortgagee, is not entitled as against the assignee, to credit for his payment. The rule obtains whether the assignment is for collateral security or is absolute, and although no record has been made thereof. And it is not altered by the existence of a statute providing that the recording of the assignment of a mortgage shall not be deemed notice to the mortgagor, so as to invalidate payments to the mortgagee. A statute of that character does not authorize the mortgagor to pay the mortgage to one not' the holder of the negotiable obligation secured thereby, but it only means that the mortgagor shall not be required to search the record before making payment to the one prima facie entitled to receive it, who, in case the mortgage is accompanied by a negotiable note, is the holder thereof.”
In Carpenter v. Longan, supra, Mr. Justice Swayne goes into the question involved in the ease at bar somewhat at length. In the course of the opinion, after pointing out that the transfer of the note, the evidence of the debt, parries with it the security, the justice says:
‘‘AH the authorities agree that the debt is the principal thing and the mortgage an accessory. Equity puts the principal and accessory upon a footing of equality, and gives to the assignee of the evidence of the debt the same rights in regard to both. There is no departure from any principle of law or equity in reaching this conclusion. There is no analogy between this case and one where a chose in action standing alone is sought to be enforced. The fallacy which lies in overlooking this distinction has misled many able minds, and is the source of all the confusion that exists. The mortgage can have no separate existence. When the note is paid the mortgage expires. It cannot survive for a moment the debt which the note represents. This dependent and incidental relation is the controlling consideration, and takes the case out of the rule applied to choses in action, where no such relation of dependence exists.”
The Supreme Court of Kansas, in Burhans v. Hutcheson, supra, in speaking through Mr. Chief Justice Horton, after discussing the principle announced by the Supreme Court of the United States in Carpenter v. Longan, says:
“Counsel for defendants say, that conceding the correctness of the general doctrine laid down in Carpenter v. Longan, supra, yet the adoption of § 3, c. 68, Comp. Laws of 1879, has placed a legislative restriction upon the negotiability of all mortgages executed since its adoption, and that this statute throws upon the assignee of negotiable paper secured by real-estate mortgages, the burden of*136 personal notification to the mater of the mortgage of the change of ownership, if he would cut off future payments to the mortgagee. Our attention is called to Johnson v. Carpenter, 7 Minn. 176 [Gil. 120] and to Van Kueren v. Corkins, 66 N. Y. 77, interpreting a statute like ours. In Johnson v. Carpenter, the mortgage is treated as a chose in action standing alone. In Van Kueren v. Corkins the suit was upon a bond and mortgage, and it does not appear that the bond was negotiable. However, Johnson v. Carpenter, and the other authorities referred to in the same direction, are not satisfactory to us; or, rather, they are not in harmony with the law of mortgages in this state. Section 3 speaks of the recording of the assignment of the mortgage, and does not by its terms refer to negotiable paper, and it seems to us a strained interpretation to hold its provisions applicable, where a debt is evidenced by a negotiable note, secured by mortgage upon real estate, when such mortgage is merely ancillary thereto, and follows the note wherever it goes, deriving its character from such instrument. A better interpretation, and one clearly more in accord with the law of mortgages in this state, is that such section has reference only to a mortgage standing alone, or one securing debts and notes óf a nonnegotiable character. Under this interpretation, section 3 of the statute is not nugatory, but has ample room for operation. As Brandon had parted with all his interest in the notes and mortgage before accepting the conveyance from Hutcheson and wife, and had no interest therein at the time, such conveyance did not extinguish the mortgage held by plaintiff; nor was it necessary for the plaintiff to record an assignment of the mortgage to protect himself from the payment to the mortgagee. The notes and mortgage went together, and the mortgagor, having made the conveyance and payment without a surrender of the notes or the mortgage, did so at his peril.”
The statutes of Kansas, Nebraska, and Michigan are precisely like our section 4903, and therefore are like that of Minnesota, but notwithstanding that, all of these courts have refused to follow the Minnesota doctrine as announced in Johnson v. Carpenter, supra.
The reasoning and the conclusion in the Kansas case which I have quoted from are followed by the Supreme Courts of Nebraska and Michigan, as appears from the cases I have cited from those courts. The same conclusion has also been asserted in other cases to which I do not deem special reference necessary at this time. It is worthy of remark, however, that the doctrine announced in the Minnesota case is based entirely upon the old doctrine that a mortgage, being a mere chose in action, was not assignable in law, and for
That decision, in my judgment, is however, inapplicable to the law of this state for other reasons. Our statute (Comp. Laws Utah 1917, § 6496) provides:
“In the case of an assignment of a thing in action, the action by the assignee is without prejudice to any set-off or other defense existing at the time.'of or before notice of the assignment; but this section does not apply to a negotiable instrument transferred in good faith and upon good consideration, before maturity.”
It will thus be seen that under our statute a mortgage is assignable in law the same as any other chose in action. This court in territorial days held that the transfer of the note carries with it the mortgage as an incident. In speaking to that point in Donaldson v. Grant, 15 Utah, 239, 49 Pac. 781, the court said:
“ * * * And we have no doubt that the indorsement and delivery of the note to the plaintiff were equivalent to an assignment and delivery of the mortgage to him also.”
The modern doctrine that the mortgage follows the note as an incident was thus long ago recognized by this court, and, so far as the writer is aware, has never been departed from, although I know of no case in which Donaldson v. Grant was expressly followed.
We have another statute (Comp. Laws Utah 1917, § 7253), which provides that *a mortgage on real property, whatever its terms, “shall not be deemed a conveyance.” If we keep in mind the provisions of section 6496, which I have here-inbefore quoted, wherein it is provided that the notice required by that section respecting the assignment of a chose in action to make the assignment effective, shall not apply to negotiable instruments when transferred in due course before maturity, we have another strong intimation that it was not intended that the provisions of section 4903, upon
Then there is still another statute (Comp. Laws Utah 1917, § 7230) which we have had occasion to.construe and apply in several cases. See Boucofski v. Jacobsen, 36 Utah, 165, 104 Pac. 117, 26 L. R. A. (N. S.) 899, and Coburn v. Bartholomew, 50 Utah, 566, 167 Pac. 1156, which cases have been followed in a later case which it is not necessary to refer to specially. It will be observed that in view of that statute this court has held that in case a note is secured by a mortgage no personal judgment can be obtained against the maker of the note unless and until the property mortgaged or pledged to secure payment of the note has been sold and the proceeds thereof applied in payment of the note. It is therefore held that under that statute the property mortgaged or pledged, or the proceeds derived upon a sale in an action in equity to foreclose the mortgage, constitutes the fund to pay the debt, and it must be exhausted before a personal judgment can be entered against the maker of the note. So long, therefore, as a fund created by contract of the parties to pay the debt remains intact, no personal action will lie. It has also been held that the mortgagee may not waive the provisions of that section without the consent of the mortgagor. The provisions of the statute are therefore directly contrary to the common law by which the creditor had the right to waive the security and bring a personal action.
It would seem reasonably clear, therefore, that in this state the doctrine announced by the Supreme Court of Minnesota, and which I have hereinbefore stated, cannot be followed. That is, the payee of a note, or his assignee, in case the debt is secured by mortgage, cannot recover in a personal action so long as any part of the property mortgaged or pledged to secure the payment of the debt has not been exhausted. From that it seems to me the doctrine is natural and .reasonable that the mortgage given to secure the debt is an incident
While I do not contend that the different sections of the statute herein referred to are conclusive, yet if we keep in' mind the modern doctrine that the negotiable instrument evidencing the debt which the mortgage is given to secure is the principal thing, and that the mortgage is a mere incident, then, in my judgment, the provisions of those sections are all in harmony with such a view.
There is, however, still another reason why, in my judgment, the conclusion of law and judgment of the district court in this case cannot prevail, although it were held that the doctrine announced by the Supreme Court of Minnesota should be adopted in this jurisdiction. I have hereinbefore called attention to the fact, that the Minnesota Supreme Court based its decision upon the presumption ’that at the time the payment in that ease was made by the mortgagor the debt was due and legally payable. Such is not the case here. In the case at bar it is conceded that the payments in question were all made long before the note matured, as well as long after it had been transferred and delivered to the appellant, and that the note and mortgage always remained in his possession in the state of Illinois. It is elementary that an obligation, without the consent of both the obligor and the obligee, can only be legally paid when the same has matured. It is equally elementary that, although an agent may have authority to collect an obligation, without the consent of his principal he cannot receive payment thereof before maturity. It has expressly been held that payment by the mortgagor of a debt which has been transferred or assigned to another cannot legally be made to the mortgagee or its agent before due without authority to receive payment of the debt. Watson v. Wyman, 161 Mass. 96, 36 N. E. 692; City National Bank v. Goodloe-McClelland Commission Co., 93 Mo. App. 123. To the same effect are Kernohan v. Durham, 48 Ohio St. 1, 26 N. E. 982, 12 L. R. A. 41; Head v. Cole, 53 Ark. 523, 14
“Payment can only be made before maturity by consent of both debtor and creditor. "And it can only be made with perfect safety at or after the maturity of the instrument, unless the payor receives it in his hands and cancels it; for a payment before maturity is not in the usual course of business; and should the bill or note afterwards, and before maturity, reach the hands of a bona fide holder for value, without notice, such holder could enforce a second payment. And an agent who has authority to collect a note when it shall become due has no authority to receive payment before maturity.”
It is manifest, therefore, that for the reasons just stated, if for no other, the doctrine applied in the Minnesota case cannot be applied to the case at bar.
There is still another reason, however, why the case at bar cannot be influenced by the Minnesota eases or by any others which follow the doctrine laid down in those cases. It will be observed that section 4903 authorizes only the “mortgagor, his heirs or personal representatives,” to make payments to the “mortgagee.” C. W. Johnson, to whom the payments were made by the defendant Jarman, was neither the mortgagee nor the assignee or agent of the mortgagee, and hence did not come within either the letter or spirit of the statute. He was a mere stranger to the • note and mortgage, and had no more legal right to receive payment thereof than any other stranger to the paper would have had without authority from the appellant either express or implied. There is, there can be not even a semblance of a claim that Johnson had any authority whatever, either express or implied, to collect the principal at any time, much less that he had any authority to do so before the maturity of the debt.
In view of the undisputed facts in this case and the decisions as I read and understand them, therefore, there is no decision, either ancient or modern, of any court anywhere that sustains the conclusion of law and judgment of the district court.