227 F. 181 | N.D. Cal. | 1915
This is a bill by the government te cancel the patent to a parcel of public land. The defendant William Barklage held a mortgage on the premises, executed by Grover, the patentee, after receipt of final certificate, but before patent, and he filed an answer in which- he set up his rights under his mortgage, claiming as an innocent purchaser. He died pending tlie suit and before trial; but the government by bill of revivor brought in those succeeding to his rights, and made them defendants. After the appointment of Barklage’s executors, the latter, who were his devisees as well, made an arrangement with Grover whereby they formally canceled the Barklage mortgage, which was soon to expire, and took a new one in their own names on the same property. The Barklage mortgage was for $2,000, with interest at 8 per cent. The one to the devisees was for a balance of $1,375 still unpaid on the former mortgage, the sum of $276 due on another note of Grover, previously unsecured, and an item for merchandise, making the principal of the second mortgage $1,650, with interest fixed at 7 per cent. This transaction was had before the trial. Thereafter the cause was, by consent of the parties, sent to the master to take the evidence and report his findings and conclusions thereon.
The master found: (1) Fraud on the part of Grover, justifying cancellation of the patent; (2) that the mortgage to Barklage was for value, and taken in good faith, without knowledge of Grover’s fraud, and that Barklage, at the time of his death, was entitled to be protected in the suit as an innocent purchaser for value; but (3) that the subsequent transaction between the devisees of Barklage and Grover, resulting in the second mortgage, extinguished the security of the first mortgage in its entirety — that is, that the mortgage to the devisees was not a renewal of the prior mortgage, but a new obligation, by which the rights of the government could in no respect be prejudiced; and he concluded that the plaintiff was entitled to a decree canceling the patent as against all the defendants. This holding of tlie master as to the character and effect of the mortgage tai the devisees is made the subject of an exception by those defendants and gives rise to the only question in the case calling for special notice.
“If tliis is a new mortgage, it is, of course, dear that the defendants are not purchasers for value without notice. This suit was then pending and operated os notice. It is contended by the defendants, however, that it was a renewal of the former mortgage to William Barklage, and that, so far as it represented an amount due on that mortgage, they are entitled to stand in Ills shoes. In the first place, I am clear that it is not a renewal of the old mortgage, but a new mortgage. The parties are different, the amount is different, made up as it is of the portion still remaining due on the old mortgage plus an amount represented by a note for §276 previously secured. The rate of interest is different, being 8 per cent, in the old mortgage, and 7 per cent, in the new, and the security differs slightly, in that the second mortgage includes a sawmill and machinery not included in the first mortgage. The language of the decree of distribution speaks of a settlement; in other words, it is a novation. The prior obligation was discharged and a new one created to take its place, and taken with full notice of the claims of the United States.”
Are these considerations such as to support the conclusion of the master? It seems to me that they are lacking in most essential respects. That equity ignores mere form and looks to substance, and will ever seek to ascertain and carry out the intent of the parties, if compatible with its principles, is axiomatic. Applying these principles to the pres-* ent case, it is well settled that, where a mortgage is renewed before maturity, or the evidence of the debt is changed by the substitution of new notes therefor, or such portion thereof as may remain unpaid, die lien of the mortgage is not lost or affected, unless the circumstances of the transaction disclose clearly that it was the intention of the parties to create a new security and treat the old as canceled. Dingman v. Randall, 13 Cal. 512; Bond v. Liverpool Insurance Co., 106 Ill. 654; Security Co. v. Hirsch, 96 Ala. 232, 11 South. 63. And the fact of entering satisfaction of the existing mortgage when taking a new one, if the latter he designed by the parties as a mere continuation of the first, when the two1 acts are a part of the same transaction, does not operate as an extinguishment of the mortgage, hut will he regarded as a renewal thereof, and not as abandoning the lien and letting in intervening equities. Dillon v. Byrne, 5 Cal. 455; Roberts v. Doan, 180 Ill. 187, 54 N. E. 207; Higman v. Humes, 127 Ala. 404, 30 South. 733; Eggeman v. Eggeman, 37 Mich. 436.
So long as the same debt, or some part of it, subsists, the presumption ordinarily is that the new mortgage is intended as a renewal of the old,
As to the supposed difference in the security or property covered by the second mortgage, suggested by the master, it is a misapprehension. The land described in both instruments is the same, and the record indicates quite clearly that the lumber mill described in the second mortgage was not on the land when the first mortgage was given, being built subsequently; but the land being the same, when erected the structure would become a part of the realty, and in the absence of special exemption would go to feed the security afforded by the land, although not described. Improvements which are part of the realty need not be referred to in deeds or mortgages, unless they are to be exempted; they go with the land. So the security afforded by the second mortgage is not different from that of the first.
For these reasons I am of opinion that the finding and conclusion of the master as to the effect of the new mortgage to the devisees of Barklage cannot be sustained, but that the latter are entitled to- protection against the forfeiture of their equity to the extent that their mortgage
In accordance with the views above expressed, the exception to the master’s report above discussed is sustained.
’&wkey;> For other cases see same topic & KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numfcered Digests & Indexes
<&wkey; For other cases see same topic & KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests & Indexes