100 Mass. 108 | Mass. | 1868
Under the statutes providing for the foreclosure of a mortgage by open and peaceable entry on the mortgaged premises and possession thereof continued peaceably for three years, an entry is peaceable if not opposed by the mortgagor or person claiming the premises, and sufficiently open if made in the presence of two competent witnesses whose certificate thereof is sworn to and duly recorded within thirty days in the ' registry of deeds for the county where the land lies. Gen. Sts. c. 140, §§ 1, 2. The certificate is not in terms required to state that the entry was open ; and it is enough that it states in the present case that it was in the presence of the two witnesses. The signature of a marksman was sufficient in this case, as in all others, even the attestation of a will.
The mortgagor, the plaintiff, just before the three years’ possession expired, filed a bill to redeem against Fawcett, the assignee of the mortgagee, and the one by whom the entry had
The certificate of the entry is made by statute evidence of the fact. Oakham v. Rutland, 4 Cush. 172. Bill dismissed.