178 Mass. 458 | Mass. | 1901
This is a bill to redeem. The sole question is whether the sum of $450 should have been applied by the bank to the payment of interest due it on the mortgage. It appears that in August, 1892, one Black and his wife made a mortgage for $20,000 to the defendant bank. At the time the mortgage was made there was a building in the process of erection on the premises and the loan was what is termed a building loan. Of the sum lent $15,000 was advanced a‘t once to the Blacks, and the balance of $5,000 was retained by the bank under an agreement with them “ until the said building shall be in such progress to completion that the mortgagee shall deem it safe to advance said balance.” The $450 is a part of the $5,000 thus retained. Ten days after this mortgage was made a second mortgage was made by the Blacks subject to the first mortgage of $20,000. This mortgage has been foreclosed and the plaintiffs have succeeded to the title. The defendant had notice of the foreclosure at or about the time it took place and before paying over the $450 as hereinafter stated. Before the foreclosure the
The plaintiffs contend that the bank had as security for its loan a mortgage on the real estate and also the $5,000 retained by it as above, and that it was bound as against and in favor of the subsequent mortgagee and his assigns to apply the $450 to the payment of the interest that was due it on its mortgage. They also contend that the $450 was by operation of law set off against the interest due the defendant. But the $5,000 was not additional security. It was part of the sum lent and was retained to ensure the completion of the building and the $450 has been applied to the payment for material which was used in the construction of the building. The case is not, therefore, a case for the application of the rule that a prior encumbrancer having two or more securities for his debt will be compelled to resort first to that on which the subsquent encumbrancer has no lien. The case relates rather to the application of the proceeds of the mortgage loan itself. What the effect, if any, would have been if the second mortgagees upon taking their mortgage had notified the bank of that fact, and had notified it not to pay over to the Blacks the $5,000 or any part thereof, or if they had given such notice to the bank immediately upon the foreclosure, we need not consider, as no such notice was given. No doubt the bank could have offset the $450 against the interest due it if the mortgagors had agreed that it might. Whether it could have done so if they did not agree, it is not necessary to decide. We do not see how the bank can be compelled to make such set-off, or, what is the same thing perhaps, on what ground the law itself can make it.
Decree affirmed.