42 Mich. 444 | Mich. | 1880
The plaintiff, in November, 1874, sold and conveyed to Voltz a parcel of land in Huron county, reciting in the conveyance a consideration of three thousand dollars, and covenanting to warrant and defend the title 6‘ against all lawful claims whatsoever subject to a certain mortgage given by the parties of the first part, [himself and wife] for one thousand dollars.” This mortgage was given to secure the payment of two notes made by the plaintiff, of seven hundred dollars and three hundred dollars respectively, with interest. In this suit the plaintiff claims that the actual consideration for the conveyance of the land was four thousand dollars of which only three thousand was paid; that defendant agreed to pay • the remaining one thousand dollars by paying the principal of the notes, which were secured by the mortgage, but that he has neglected to do so, and by reason of his neglect the mortgage has been foreclosed, the land sold on the foreclosure decree for three hundred and fifty dollars and a deficiency reported of $1,132.31, for which the plaintiff is personally responsible, whereby the defendant has become liable to pay to the plaintiff the said sum of one thousand dollars which he promised and agreed to pay on the notes aforesaid.
It is not claimed, as we understand it, that the eonsideration expressed in the deed is -to be held conclusively determined 'by the , deed itself. On the contrary it is admitted that ■ the recital in the deed is made for the purpose merely of giving it effect as a conveyance, and that for any other purpose parol evidence may be given to show that the real consideration was greater or less than the sum named. Doty v. Martin, 32 Mich., 462. It is insisted, however, that as the $1000 mortgage is mentioned in the conveyance, and there is a stipulation or agreement respecting it, the* conclusive presumption must be that the parties embodied in this stipulation all their concluded negotiations respecting the mortgage, and that to add further stipulations by parol proof is to add to and vary the written instrument which must be presumed to have been deliberately made as the final and authoritative evidence of what the parties have agreed upon.
To be a little more specific, the defendant claims that by the deed it*is agreed that he shall take the land subject to the mortgage, but that he shall not be personally liable for the mortgage debt. Crawford v. Edwards, 33 Mich., 354. But we have been unable to concur in this view. The deed contains no stipulation or agreement on the part of the grantee. He merely receives a conveyance of the land subject to the mortgage. The title 'conveyed is thereby made subfect to be defeated by failure to pay off the mortgage debt, but the grantee agrees to nothing and stipulates for nothing respecting it. Evi
Nor can it make any difference that the grantee, instead of making payment directly to the grantor, was to pay to some one else in his interest. The agreement to pay has no connection whatever with the exception, in the deed of the mortgage there mentioned from the covenants. The grantee, as has already been said, makes in the deed no agreement whatever, express or implied,’ respecting that mortgage or the mortgage, debt, and his agreement to pay the further sum of $1000 is in no manner connected with the exception. His agreement to pay cannot in respect to validity depend upon the circumstance that the method of payment was specified, and that the mortgage debt happened to be mentioned as a demand which was to be satisfied by it,'rather than some other, or rather than or in place of a direct payment to the grantor.
The cases of Bolles v. Beach, 22 N. J., 680, and Drury v. Improvement Co., 13 Allen, 168, are like this in their facts and fully sustain this -view. They are not, as is supposed by counsel for defendant, opposed to other cases, or out of harmony with the .general rule which excludes parol evidence to control writings. That rule has been too often and too strongly affirmed in this-State to be now departed from or qualified, but the present case stands wholly apart from it as we have already shown.
It is objected that the decree against the plaintiff for the deficiency on the foreclosure sale does not distinguish how much is for principal and how much for interest. But this is immaterial. _ Defendant must pay what he agreed, and is liable for no more. The showing that the mortgage had been ’foreclosed was only important because the land constituted a fund in defendant’s hands from which, if sufficient, the mortgage debt might have
The judgment must be reversed with costs and a new trial ordered.