59 Neb. 87 | Neb. | 1899
This action was brought to foreclose a real estate mortgage given by Sallie H. H. Lowe and her husband, William W. Lowe, to the Lombard Investment Company. The debt secured was evidenced by a coupon bond for the principal sum of $60,000. The appellants are the receivers of the mortgagee, and have succeeded to its rights. The Presbyterian Hospital of Philadelphia became, by purchase and assignment, the owner of the bond and mortgage. The investment company, having guarantied payment of the debt, both principal and interest, as the same should mature, was obliged, under its contract, to take up two coupons representing interest installments, upon which the mortgagors had defaulted. Afterwards John L. Welsh bought the mortgaged premises, paid the amount due the Presbyterian Hospital, and obtained from it a release of the mortgage. The balance of the consideration was applied to the payment of other liens against the property. To defeat this suit, which was brought to collect the coupons redeemed by the mortgagee, Welsh relies on the release and the fact that he did not actually know that the coupons were outstanding. The material part of the answer is as follows: “These defendants further say that at the time Sally H. H. Lowe and William W. Lowe sold and conveyed said land to John L. Welsh, as alleged in paragraph 11 of said petition, the mortgage described in said petition was fully released of record by the Presbyterian Hospital of Philadelphia, and that these defendants had no knowledge or information whatever as to the non-payment of the coupon's held by the plaintiffs herein, and that in the purchase of said property said defendant John L. Welsh relied wholly upon the title as it appeared of record in the office of the register of deeds of Dóuglas county, Nebraska, at that date, and that he did not know that the plaintiffs herein claimed any interest therein, or any lien thereon, until long after said property was conveyed to him, and .the
We find in the bill of exceptions an express admission that the Lowes sold and conveyed the mortgaged premises to Mr. Welsh on March'21, 1894, and that the release was not executed until the following day. It is also admitted that the deed from the Lowes to Welsh was recorded on April 6, 1894, and that the release from the Presbyterian Hospital was not filed in the office of the register of deeds until April 18, 1894. Thus it appears conclusively that Welsh did not buy the property oh the faith of a recorded release and on the assumption that the mortgage to the Lombard Investment Company was not a subsisting incumbrance. The averments of the answer are not sustained by the proof. The record of the mortgage was notice to the world of the existence of the debt. This debt has not been entirely paid, and the mortgage release is, therefore, partially ineffective. The assignment of the coupons was pro tanto an assignment of the mortgage given to secure their payment. See Studebaker Bros. Mfg. Co. v. McCargur, 20 Nebr., 500; Todd v. Cremer, 36 Nebr., 430; New England Loan & Trust Co. v. Robinson, 56 Nebr., 50. To the extent of its interest in the security the investment company was authorized to acknowledge satisfaction. See Daniels v. Densmore, 32 Nebr., 40. The Presbyterian Hospital could neither acknowledge satisfaction for it, nor discharge its lien from the land. If a mortgagee enter satisfaction of the mortgage after the debt has been assigned, a subsequent purchaser of. the property who acquires title on the faith of the record, and without notice of the assignment, will be protected; but as to all other persons the lien of the mortgage will, not be impaired. See Whipple v. Fowler, 41 Nebr., 675. The facts in the case of Griffith v. Salleny, 54 Nebr., 362, were substantially identical'with those in the case at bar, and it was there held that the assignee
Reversed and remanded.