18 Mass. 87 | Mass. | 1822
The cause was argued at October term 1821, by Bigelow, for the plaintiff, and Lincoln, for the defendant; and the opinion of the Court was delivered at this term, by
The object of this suit is, to recover of the assignee of a mortgager the value of the rents and profits of the land mortgaged, from the commencement of the action to foreclose, brought by the present plaintiff, the mortgagee, to the time of possession taken by virtue of the writ of possession.
The defendant stands in the place of the mortgager, so that the question submitted is the same as if the present action were between the mortgagee and mortgager ; and in this view it must be considered an experiment, no such action having been h.therto brought, either in this country or in England, as far as we can discover from the books which we have been referred to, or others which we have examined. The ground taken by the plaintiff’s counsel is, that the mortgager, left in possession without any covenant or agreement to that effect, is to be considered strictly a tenant at will ; that his estate was determined by the commencement of the suit against him upon the mortgage deed, and that his subsequent possession was wrongful: so that he ought to account for the rents and profits, in the same manner as if he had been a disseisor in fact without any title. But this proceeds upon a mistake of the relation between mortgager and mortgagee. It seems to be admitted, that the mortgager was not a trespasser, or accountable for the
It is true, that when the estate mortgaged is not full security for the debt, the profits would be useful to the mortgagee, as a means of payment; but to obtain them, he should enter early, or bring his 'writ of entry, which he may do immediately upon
Plaintiff nonsuit.
Boston Bank v. Reed, 8 Pick. 459. See Atkinson v. Burt, 1 Aikens’s R. 329; Pope v. Biggs, 9 Barn. & Cressw. 245; 4 Kent’s Com. 149,151; Powell on Mortg. (Rand’s ed.) 177, 946; Big. Dig. Mortgage, C. p. 526, note.