62 Md. 347 | Md. | 1884
delivered the opinion of the Court.
° On the 8th of December, 1841, Henry C. McClellan executed a mortgage to Joseph C. Wilson of' five parcels of ground in Baltimore; and agreed, upon default in the payment of the mortgage debt at maturity, that the mortgagee might sell the mortgaged premises in the manner authorized by the Act of 1836, chapter 249, entitled “ An Act relating to mortgages in the City of Baltimore.”
The mortgage debt not being paid at maturity, Wilson in pursuance of this power, on the 24th May, 1848, sold the mortgaged property at public sale. At this sale, Wilson bought lots No. 1, 2, 3 and 5, and Richard S. Hardesty bought lot No. 4.. One of the lots thus purchased, Wilson afterwards sold and conveyed to Miles White.
On the 9th September, 1854, more than six years after the sale, a bill was filed by McClellan claiming the right to redeem the mortgaged premises upon payment of the mortgage debt and interest; and asking that an account be taken of the rents and profits received by Wilson, and those claiming under him.
To this bill, Wilson on the 8th March, 1855, filed an answer under oath, setting up among other things, his title to the property under the sale to foreclose the mortgage.
No further proceedings were taken in the case, until March, 1859, when a hill of revivor was filed by the appellees, claiming to be heirs-at-law of Henry C. McClellan, the mortgagor. A commission was subsequently issued, and testimony taken, and the case was set down for hearing on the 26th November, 1864.
From this date for a period of nearly twenty years, no further steps were taken to bring the controversy to an
In support of this decree it is urged that the Act of 1826, being in derogation of the well established principles of equity, to support a sale under it, there must he the strictest compliance with every requirement of the statute. We have nothing to do of course with the policy or expedience of the Act; and however anomalous and extraordinary some of its provisions may he, yet if they have been fairly and substantially complied with, the rights of bona fide purchasers under it must he protected. The mortgagor McClellan agreed that upon default in the payment of the mortgage debt, the mortgagee might sell in the manner authorized by the Act of 1836; and this Act provides that every sale made in pursuance of such a power, to a bona fide purchaser, “shall be equivalent to a foreclosure and sale under a decree of a Court of equity, so far as to he an entire bar of all claim or equity of redemption of the mortgagor.”
What then are the requirements of this Act ? Sections 2 and 3, provide “ that in order to entitle any person to foreclose a mortgage according to the provisions of this Act, notice that the same will be foreclosed by a sale of the mortgaged premisés, or some part of them, shall be given by publishing the same three times a week for three weeks ; ” * * * “ that every such notice shall specify the name of the mortgagor and of the mortgagee, and the last assignee of the mortgage, if any; the date of the mortgage ; the amount claimed to be due thereon,” &c.
First, it is said the statute expressly provides that the notice of sale shall specify the name of the mortgagee and of the last assignee, if any- — -that the mortgage in this case had heen assigned hy Wilson to Michael Herr, and the notice was defective because it did not state the fact of assignment, and the name of the assignee. How if Herr was the assignee at the time of the notice of sale, there might be some force in this objection. Being the party beneficially interested, it would have been his duty to have given the notice of sale, and to have performed all other duties required by the Act in making sale of the property. The record however shows, that although the mortgage had been assigned to him, yet at the time of the notice of sale, he had no interest whatever in it. Wilson in his answer to the bill of McClellan, says, it was assigned to Herr as collateral security for money borrowed with the knowledge, and for the accommodation, of McClellan, and that the money was paid to Herr before the notice of foreclosure was published. Ho proof was offered, it is true, by the appellant in support of the facts set forth in the answer, but the complainant McClellan as part of his proof, has filed certified copies of the assignment to Herr, and his re-assignment to Wilson; and this latter paper recites that it was executed in consideration of the sum of four thousand dollars, paid to him by Wilson, on or about the sixth of April, 1848. So according to the complainant's own admission, Herr had no interest whatever in the mortgage, at the time of the publication of the notice of sale. On the contrary, Wilson, the mortgagee, was in fact the owner of the mortgage debt, and the proper person to execute the power of sale upon the failure of McClellan, to pay the debt at the time prescribed by the mortgage. And being the original mortgagee, it was un
Then again the notice of sale is said to he defective, because it specifies Joseph Wilson as the mortgagee instead of Joseph G. Wilson. This objection is certainly a very technical one. All the essential facts, the date of the mortgage, the name of the mortgagor are set forth correctly; and the mortgaged premises are properly described and the name of Joseph G. Wilson is signed at the bottom of the notice of sale. It is not pretended that the Joseph Wilson named in the "body of the notice as the mortgagee, and Joseph C. Wilson whose name is signed at the bottom, are in fact different persons, and the mere omission of the middle letter of the name, is no ground to justify a Court in setting aside the sale. In the eye of the law, Joseph Wilson is under such circumstances, Joseph C. Wilson, the mortgagee.
Another objection is the failure to state in the notice the amount claimed to be due on the mortgage. The notice states “ the amount claimed to he due on this mortgage on this first day of May, 1848, is $4,345.22.” According to the calculation made by the appellees, the amount due is about $200 less. All the law required was that the mortgagee should state in his notice the amount claimed to be due him. And if this is done' in good faith, the mere fact, that there was an error in the amount thus claimed, is not such a mistake as would render the sale void.
The next and last objection which in our opinion it is necessary to notice, is the failure to state in the advertisement of sale, that the mortgage will he foreclosed by a sale of the mortgaged premises. We are unable, we must
The notice of sale in this case was as follows:
“Mortgage Sale.”
“ By virtue and in pursuance of a mortgage made and delivered by Henry G. McClellan to Joseph Wilson bearing date the eighth day of December, eighteen hundred and forty-seven, the undersigned will sell, &c.”
Then follows a description of the mortgaged premises.
The notice thus plainly states, that the sale was made in pursuance of a certain mortgage executed by McClellan to Wilson, and this mortgage provided that upon default in the payment of the mortgage debt, Wilson might sell the mortgaged premises in the manner authorized by the Act of 1836. If it was a sale under the Act ■of 1836, it was a sale to foreclose the mortgage, because no other sale is authorized by the statute.
The objections thus relied on and which were pressed with so much earnestness in argument, are not sufficient to justify us in setting aside these sales. Where a mortgagee is authorized by a statute to sell the mortgaged premises, and is not even required to report the sale to a Court of equity for ratification, Courts ought to be careful to see that every essential requirement of the statute has been complied with. But if this has been done, the rights of bona fide purchasers must be protected, however questionable may be the policy of the law under which the sales are made.
For these reasons the decree below must he reversed, and the bill dismissed.
Decree reversed, and bill dismissed.