delivered the opinion of the Court at the ensuing May term in Kennebec.
The counsel for the respondent insists, that by a union in him of the right to redeem in the original mortgagor, and the interest of Woodman, the first mortgagee, he has a right to hold the land discharged of all intervening incumbrances. The counsel for the plaintiff contends, first, that me transactions between Samuel Fessenden, Esq. under wbom the respondent claims, Fessenden at the time being the owner of the equity of redemption by relation, from the day of his attachment, operated an extinguishment of Woodman’s mortgage, and that he is entitled to the land, as the next in-cumbrancer. Secondly, that if Woodman’s mortgage was not there
If Fessenden, at the time of his payment to Woodman, and taking from him a release and conveyance of his interest, was not the owner of the equity, it is conceded that Woodman’s mortgage was not extinguished. This was done on the sixteenth of July, 1828, and Fessenden purchased the equity, at a sheriff’s sale, on the twenty-first of August following. His attachment was made on the third of June preceding. The attachment prevented the creation of intervening incumbrances to his prejudice, but did not give him an inchoate title to the equity, for it was altogether contingent, whether he or another person would become the purchaser of it. He might deem it convenient or prudent to do so, because he had bought the interest of the first mortgagee. And upon this view of the case, there is certainly great reason for regarding him as the owner of the mortgage, before he acquired a title to the equity. But we deem a decision of this point entirely unimportant, as we are clearly of opinion that whether Fessenden was or was not, at the time he took a release or conveyance from Woodman, the owner of the equity, the mortgage was not thereby extinguished.
The counsel for the plaintiff, to make out an extinguishment, relies upon the case of Wade v. Howard, 6 Pick. 492. The reporter, in his marginal abstract in that case, states that where the purchaser of an equity of redemption of land, which is subject to two mortgages, pays and takes an assignment of the first mortgage, it seems that he does not thereby acquire the rights of the first mortgagee, but that the first mortgage is discharged. Upon an examination of that case, it will be found that the question reserved for the consideration of the court was, whether the mortgage had been assigned or discharged. If assigned, the tenants were to be defaulted; if discharged, the demandants were to become nonsuit; and the court upon the facts held the mortgage to have been discharged. This was the point decided. There are, it is true, to be found in that case, dicta of the Chief Justice, by whom the opinion of the court was delivered, which may be thought to favor the doctrine,
By the conveyance from Woodman, Mr. Fessenden acquired the rights of the first mortgagee, and by his purchase at the sheriff’s sale, he acquired also the equity of redemption. According to the English law he might exclude intervening incumbrances, unless he had actual notice at the time of their existence, and the registry is not there held sufficient, to prove such notice, 4 Kent, 167. But their doctrine of tacking has not been adopted in this country, but has been in fact expressly repudiated ; and Mr. Fessenden frankly admits that he does not expect to prevail on this ground. But he insists that the right of the mortgagor, and those claiming under him, is gone unless he or they avail themselves, within the year, of the right allowed by the statute to redeem an equity, seized and sold on execution ; and that under the circumstances under which ho held, the right to redeem at any time within three years, which exists in ordinary cases, became restricted to one year. But this position is
It appears from the answer of the respondent, that Woodman entered for condition broken, on the twenty eighth of May 1828. In three years from that time the mortgage would have been foreclosed, and Woodman, and those claiming under him, would have had, an absolute title. But long prior to the lapse of that period, viz. on the fifth of November 1829, the plaintiff in equity, who was sec
The decree of the court is, that the defendant state the amount due on Woodman’’s mortgage, and that upon payment of that sum, when it shall have been liquidated, by the plaintiff, the respondent is to surrender to the plaintiff the possession of the land in controversy, and also make and execute to' him a release and conveyance of the right he acquired, as assignee of Woodman’s mortgage.
