50 Conn. 262 | Conn. | 1882
This is a petition to remove a cloud upon the title of certain land, occasioned by a caveat signed by the defendant and recorded in the land records of the town, in ■which the defendant claimed to be the equitable owner, by reason of an agreement for the sale of the land to him by one Isaac W. Ives, owner of the equity of redemption. The land was subject to three mortgages—one to Joseph M. Ives, guardian, for nine hundred and thirty-five dollars, one to him individually for eight hundred and sixty-five dollars, and one to the plaintiff as administrator of Lyman Keeler for three thousand and five hundred dollars. The equity of redemption had no value, and the owner, Isaac W. Ives, was
From this condensed statement of the facts it seems clear that the defendant has no equitable title as against the plaintiff. Had he accepted the title offered he could have successfully resisted all the plaintiff’s claims and enforced his own, but as the caveat states and the finding otherwise shows, he refused the offer and demanded just, what the treasurer of the savings bank required, namely, a release from the plaintiff and the other mortgagees of their entire mortgage, covering other land than that which he purchased. So far as the plaintiff was concerned he had no right to insist on such a release.
It would have been most unreasonable and unjust to the mortgagees to require them to part with the entire security which' they held for the avails of a part, amounting only to a part of the mortgage debt; and neither they nor the plaintiff ever made or authorized Isaac W. Ives to make any agreement of sale involving such consequences.
The quitclaim which the plaintiff and the other mortgagee consented to give had been executed and was exhibited to the defendant when the agreement for the purchase and sale was made, and this was the only basis of Ives’s authority and fixed its utmost limits. The unfortunate feature of the contract was not owing to the desire or fault of either party, but wholly to a new and insurmountable obstacle unexpectedly thrust between them by the requirement of the bank treasurer. Brooks could not raise the money without meeting this requirement, and Ives could not procure the release of the entire mortgage with the avails of that part of the mortgage property sold.
We. are not aware that this statute has ever been before any of our courts for construction,, and it is. to be regretted that, the counsel on both sides avoided all discussion of this question.
- The conclusion of the bank treasurer was occasioned by a strict construction of the language; this was the more prudent course for a bank officer in case of doubt. At first blush it seems plausible to hold that payment of a debt means full, payment, and release of the legal title, means a full, rather than a partial, release, yet we are inclined to favo.r. a. more liberal construction. It may be regarded as. payment of the debt so- far as it equitably rests on the parcel sold, and as. to that it is a full release of the legal title. It will, often happen that more money can be obtained to apply on the mortgage by selling and releasing the land in parcels to> different persons than could result from a sale of the entire tract, and. the best interests of the wards will often.
Our conclusion therefore is, that the caveat recorded by the defendant is such a cloud on the plaintiff’s title as equity will remove. It is found to work a present injury to the plaintiff by preventing the sale of the property, and on the other hand it is of no possible benefit to the defendant, for as we have seen he has no title legal or equitable which he can now enforce. It is against conscience for him to retain his caveat, for it can serve no possible purpose other than a sinister one. 1 Story Eq. Jur., (12th ed.,) sec. 700; Holland v. Mayor, 11 Md., 186; Chipman v. City of Hartford, 21 Conn., 488.
We advise the Superior Court to render judgment for the plaintiff and to deny the prayer of the cross-bill.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.