73 Me. 84 | Me. | 1881
The declaration is in assumpsit upon two promissory notes, signed by the defendant. The question is, whether-the plaintiff’s written agreement of June 21,1876, and the stated, admissions of fact, afford a legal defence to the action.
• On the date of that agreement, the plaintiff gave the defendant a deed of lands in town of Amity. In exchange therefor, he
The plaintiff agreed that, if the mortgage notes, with interest, were paid to him before the expiration of the foreclosure, he would refund or indorse on the defendant’s motes an amount equal to the interest on $467 — the difference between $1,008 and $541 —for that part of the period of foreclosure which had not ■expired when such payment was made. This was his agreement, not in words, but in effect.
On February 26, 1877, without the defendant’s knowledge or consent, the plaintiff sold and assigned the mortgage to a second mortgagee of the same property. To that date, and beyond it, the plaintiff has received the additional interest stipulated for, by the payment of the first of the defendant’s notes. Can he require more ?
The plaintiff’s agreement of June 21, reserved certain rights to the defendant in th.e event of the payment of the mortgage debt. There was a chance that the mortgagor, or a second mortgagee, might pay; and thereby prevent the accruing of the interest, for which, in the event it did accrue, the defendant’s notes were given. This whole chance belonged to the defendant. The plaintiff had substantially agreed that he might have it, and that whatever saving of interest there should be on the $467,
The fact that the plaintiff chose to sell at a discount, does not affect the merits of the case. The same principle which would defeat this action, if he had assumed to sell to the second mort
The plaintiff agreed that these notes should be void in a certain contingency. That contingency did not happen. But the plaintiff did an act which had a tendency to prevent, and which for all the court can Imow, actually prevented its occurrence. The chance of the second mortgagee’s paying this mortgage was the principal advantage that the defendant derived from this agreement. It was worth more than the chance of the mortgagor’s paying. The plaintiff could not deprive the defendant of that, and still be in position to demand payment of the notes.
Plaintiff nonsuit.