24 Mich. 206 | Mich. | 1872
Charles N. Terry, a minor and sole heir of Reuben S. Terry, by his next friend, filed his bill setting forth, in substance, that his father, Reuben S. Terry, died in the spring of 1865, seized of lots nine and twelve, in block sixteen of the village of Fenton, subject to a mortgage of three hundred dollars to one George W. Nickley,' executed by said Reuben S., and his wife, Laura A. Terry; that his father was a soldier in the army of the United States in the late civil Avar, and died in the army; and that he is informed that there was due to his father, at the time of his death, a certain amount of money or bonds from the township of Fenton, and from the United States; that such moneys or bonds, to the amount of three or four hundred dollars, Avere received by his mother, Laura A. Terry, or one William Dunham; and that other moneys belonging to the estate of his father, had come into the hands of the mother, or of the said Dunham, at the time of the foreclosure sale mentioned below, Avhich moneys Avere sufficient to pay the said mortgage; that said Dunham, who is now utterly insolvent, pretended to act as administrator on the estate of said Reuben S. Terry, but avers that he never Avas such administrator, and had no authority to act as such; that said Dunham and said Laura,A., the mother of complainant, combining, etc., with said Nickley,. the mortgagee, to defraud complainant, did induce said mortgagee to foreclose said mortgage by advertisement, on the 16th day of January, 1866, for the purpose of placing the title of said lots in said Laura A., and thereby defrauding complainant of his right thereto; that on such pretended foreclosure, said lots nine and twelve were bid off, as one parcel, by said Dunham, for, and in the name of, said Laura A., for three hundred and ten dollars, which
Complainant further alleges that his mother, said Laura A., on the 12th of June, 1868, without any consideration received by her, executed a mortgage on said lots nine and twelve, to one John C. Brown (which the evidence shows to have .-been for one thousand dollars), which is recorded in the register’s office, etc.; that said Brown afterwards pretended to assign the same to defendant Charles Tuttle, who, on the 3d of October, 1868, pretended to sell and transfer a portion of said mortgage to defendant James M. Tuttle, which pretended .assignments have been recorded, etc.; charges them with notice of all the facts and complainant’s title, and, on information and belief, that they paid no valuable consideration; that said Tuttles are now proceeding to foreclose said Brown mortgage by advertisement, the sale to be October 23, 1869; that Nelson Proper, the next friend of complainant, was, on the 23d of February, 1869, duly appointed administrator on said estate, and took peaceable possession of said lots; that complainant is apprehensive that a sale will take place on said pending foreclosure, aud thereby cast • a cloud upon his title unless enjoined, etc.; prays that the pretended foreclosure of the Nickley mortgage and the deed from the sheriff to his mother may be declared void and that she be decreed to release to complainant; that said Nickley mortgage be declared paid and satisfied; that said Tuttles be decreed to discharge the pretended mortgage executed to Brown, and that the same be declared void as against complainant, and
The Tuttles-alone make any defense, the other defendants allowing the bill to be taken as confessed.
Their answer admits that Reuben S. Terry owned the lots in October, 1863, when he and his wife executed the three-hundred-dollar mortgage to Nickley; they deny all knowledge or notice of any fraud or intended fraud in the foreclosure of said mortgage; say they are ignorant whether the money paid on the foreclosure belonged to the estate, but are informed the foreclosure was in good faith ; insist that even if the facts alleged in the bill as to that foreclosure and sale are true, they do not affect their rights; admit the execution of the mortgage by Laura A. Terry to Brown, and that the same was duly recorded, but deny it was executed without consideration, as alleged in the bill; and aver that Brown paid a full" and valid consideration, and received the mortgage in good faith, without notice of any irregularities in the foreclosure; admit that Brown assigned the mortgage to Charles Tuttle, and that he assigned a part of it to James M. Tuttle as alleged; and aver that both were given in good faith and for a full and valuable consideration, without notice of any fact which could in any manner affect the validity of the mortgage, and that neither they nor said Brown had any notice of complainant’s title or of any fraud or irregularity; admit that they are proceeding to foreclose,, and claim the right to do so.
The evidence clearly establishes all. the material facts alleged in complainant’s bill, so far as respects his right as the heir of his father, the foreclosure for the mere purpose of vesting the title in his mother, and the payment of the bid from the assets alleged in the bill. It shows that this was done by the advice of Dunham, who was the administrator, but who, though he gave bonds, never returned an
It does not become necessary to determine the amount of the respective interests to which the son might have been entitled as heir and next of kin, in the real and personal estate, and that to which the widow might have been entitled by way of dower or homestead rights in the lots, and by way of allowance from the personal estate under the statute. She claims nothing on these grounds, and the Tuttles, as we shall see, do not stand in a position to enforce any claim against her, or through her, against complainant. And, though it seems probable from the evidence that, upon a proper administration of the personal property, she might have been entitled to a part of the money with which the lots were bid in on the foreclosure, it is not necessary to determine whether, as between her and complainant, she could (if the exact amount of her interest could be ascertained) be allowed to derive any benefit from having allowed it to be applied in extinguishment of so
Upon this branch of the case the evidence shows (and it is without contradiction) that after Mrs. Terry had thus got the apparent paper and record title into her own name under the foreclosure, she was induced by one Israel L. Carr, upon his promise to give her that amount of money, to execute to him a mortgage upon these two lots for one thousand dollars, to secure an accompanying bond in that sum. Carr employed an attorney to draw up the bond and mortgage, who drew them, as instructed, in the name of Carr as the mortgagee. But subsequently (probably before she had seen the papers), Carr instructed his attorney to erase his name as the mortgagee in the mortgage and payee in the bond, and to insert that of John G-. Brown, who was not present. The attorney very innocently made the change, knowing nothing of the arrangements or understanding between the parties, or the reasons for the change. And she, without any notice or intimation of any such change, and without ever having seen or heard of Brown, who was an entire stranger to her, executed the papers, supposing them to be a bond and mortgage to Carr. She swears positively that, though the mortgage was read to her, the name of Brown was not read or mentioned, and the attorney, who was also a notary and took her acknowledgment, does not say that Brown’s name was read or mentioned to her; in fact, he does not say that the mortgage was read to her, or that she read it. The reading to
The mortgage, as soon as executed, was delivered to Carr; but no consideration whatever, either then or after-wards, was paid her, either by Carr or Brown. Though there is no direct testimony to the fact, the nature of the transaction and all the circumstances, as far as they' do appear, excite a very strong suspicion, and afford a probable inference, that Browm was cognizant in fact of the nature of the transaction between Mrs. Terry and Carr, and of the intention of Carr to defraud her; and that he was an accomplice in aiding Carr to perpetrate the fraud. However this may be as matter of fact, when he took the mortgage w’hich Carr had procured to be executed directly to him, he must adopt the acts of Carr as his agent in procuring it, and be held chargeable with notice of all the facts of the transaction known to Carr. Ho could have no greater rights under such a mortgage than if he had himself procured it of the mortgagor by the same means.
It is too clear, therefore, to admit of doubt, that in the hands of Brown, the mortgagee, this bond and mortgage could not have been enforced against Mrs. Terry, the maker, or against her interest in the land, if she had any. And it is equally clear that Brown could not have enforced it against the complainant’s interest, though his mother should
Such would be the position of Brown, the mortgagee. Do the Tuttles stand in any better position as his assignees ? They might have done so, in some respects, had the mortgage been given to secure a negotiable promissory note, and they had made the purchase before maturity and without notice] but being given to secure a bond non-negotiable, a mere chose in action, they are bound to take notice, and therefore conclusively presumed to have had notice, of every defect in the right of the mortgagee, as between him and Mrs. Terry, the mortgagor, at least, and of all the defenses which the latter might have made to the mortgage, had it remained in the hands of Brown. They have succeeded to his rights, and nothing more. They stand in his shoes, and can claim no rights which he could not have
This case differs from that of Bloomer v. Henderson, 8 Mich., 395 (relied upon by the defendants), in two very important particulars. In that case there was no fraud by the mortgagee against the mortgagor, and no want of consideration as between them; there was fraud on the part of both of them against Bloomer, the vendor, but the mortgage being executed by Jones to Hoisington, for the very purpose of being sold, and the latter having sold and assigned it to Henderson for a valuable consideration, Jones, the mortgagor, was estopped to deny that the mortgage was good, as between him and the mortgagee. In that case, also, Bloomer, the grantor of the mortgagor, by his own gross carelessness in delivering the deed to Jones and trusting to his verbal assurances, had placed the record title in Jones, and enabled him and Hoisington to exhibit the title to Hender son, as properly in the mortgagor; and for this reason it was held that the loss should fall upon Bloomer, the vendor, rather than upon Henderson, the purchaser of the mortgage.
Here the complainant has done no act by which the defendants Tuttles have been misled into the belief that he had parted with his title. He was a minor without a guardian, and, instead of doing any thing by which others could be defrauded, others had defrauded him by placing the apparent title in his mother. His equities are therefore much stronger than those of the Tuttles, if they can be said to have any. He has been guilty of no negligence. They were negligent in not making inquiries of the mortgagor. Such inquiries would have resulted in. information which must have prevented the purchase. Whatever they have paid for the mortgage they paid in their own wrong,
The decree of the circuit court, in chancery, must be affirmed, with costs of both courts to complainant.