25 So. 2d 207 | Fla. | 1946
E.R. Bennett gave to Thomas E. Swanson and J.L. Varn his promissory notes not under seal to evidence a debt he owed them. For the purpose of securing the debt he also gave them at the same time a mortgage on certain of his real property, copies of the notes being incorporated in the mortgage. The mortgage contained the provision: "Provided, always, that if said mortgagors, their heirs, legal representatives or assigns, shall pay to the said mortgagees, their legal representatives or assigns, 6 certain promissory notes, a copy of which is on the reverse side hereof, . . . then this mortgage and the estate hereby created shall be void, otherwise the same shall remain in full force and virtue. And the said mortgagors covenants to pay the interest and principal promptly when due . . . Should any of the above covenants be *115 broken, then said note and all moneys secured hereby shall without demand, if the mortgagees, their legal representatives or assigns so elect at once become due and payable and the mortgage be foreclosed, and all costs and expenses of collection of said moneys by foreclosure or otherwise, including solicitor's fees, shall be paid by the mortgagors, and the same are hereby secured." (Italics supplied).
Subsequently, but before default in the mortgage, Bennett, the mortgagor, conveyed the property covered by the mortgage to G.A. Price by warranty deed. The deed contained the recital: "It is understood and agreed that this deed is given subject to and the Grantee hereby assumes and agrees to pay the following outstanding mortgages all dated June 15, 1925 and payable as follows: . . . $3,639.66 due on or before three years payable to J.L. Varn Thos. E. Swanson, all bearing 8% interest from date."
Thereafter Varn assigned his interest in the indebtedness evidenced by the notes and secured by the mortgage to Swanson. On February 16, 1945 — more than five years, but less than twenty years, after the due date of the notes and mortgage — Swanson brought an action of covenant against Bennett, the mortgagor, and Price, the grantee under the warranty deed. The Declaration in the case relied on the mortgage as the covenant under seal for the obligation of Bennett, the mortgagor, to pay the past due debt for which the mortgage and notes were given; and it relied on the covenant of assumption contained in the warranty deed under seal for the obligation of Price, the grantee, to discharge the indebtedness. The defendants demurred to the declaration on the ground that the cause of action was barred by the five-year statute of limitations applicable to contracts and notes not under seal. The demurrers were sustained by the trial judge on the authority of Alropa Corporation v. McNamee,
We think that it is the generally accepted rule that if a mortgage contains a personal covenant whereby the mortgagor unconditionally promises to pay the debt for which *116
the mortgage has been given as security, an action at law may be maintained on the covenant within the period of limitations applicable to sealed instruments, even though an unsealed promissory note given in the same transaction as evidence of the indebtedness may be barred by a shorter period of limitations. See Brown v. Cascaden, (Ia.) 43 Runnells 103; Earnshaw v. Stewart,
In the covenant contained in the mortgage given by Bennett there is no such restriction or limitation as appears in the mortgage in Alropa Corporation v. McNamee, supra. By its plain terms the mortgagor unconditionally bound himself "to pay the interest and principal promptly when due." The "interest and principal" referred to is the interest and principal of the debt evidenced by the six promissory notes given by Bennett, copies of which appear in the mortgage. Bennett also unconditionally bound himself to pay the costs of collecting the debt, including a solicitor's fee, if because of default in payment of the debt it became necessary to resort to any lawful remedy to enforce the obligation. We think that this covenant, unlike the covenant in Alropa Corporation v. McNamee, supra, is a clear, independent and unequivocal promise to pay the obligation, which may be enforced by the mortgagee in an action at law, notwithstanding the fact that the remedy to enforce the notes evidencing the indebtedness is barred by the five-year statute of limitations.
The remaining question presented in briefs concerns the liability of price, the grantee of the property. The grantee argues that because of the fact that the five-year statute of limitations has run on the note given by Bennett to the mortgagees, Swanson and Varn, he may not be held liable on his covenant of assumption.
It is alleged in the declaration that Price accepted the warranty deed conveying title and caused the same to be recorded with full and express knowledge of the provisions therein whereby he assumed and agreed to pay the indebtedness. The liability of Price, therefore, is ruled by Brownson v. Hannah,
It follows that the judgment appealed from must be reversed and it is so ordered.
TERRELL, BROWN, BUFORD, THOMAS and ADAMS, JJ., concur.
CHAPMAN, C. J., dissents.