Babcock v. Young

75 N.W. 302, 117 Mich. 155, 1898 Mich. LEXIS 810
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 18, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 75 N.W. 302 (Babcock v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Babcock v. Young, 75 N.W. 302, 117 Mich. 155, 1898 Mich. LEXIS 810 (Mich. 1898).

Opinion

Long, J.

This bill was filed to foreclose a certain mortgage of $300 given November 25, 1882, to John Townsend, and signed by Joseph Young and his wife, Ellen Young. The mortgage was accompanied by a note of even date for like amount, signed by Joseph Young, and due one year from date, with interest at 8 per cent. The mortgage covered lot No. 3, in Hall’s addition to the city of Ionia. The other parties are made defendants as subsequent purchasers or incumbrancers.

It appears that on January 3, 1884, John Townsend assigned this mortgage to the complainant, Burton Babcock,' for the consideration of $326.59. The assignment was in writing, but was not recorded until March 28, 1895. The note, mortgage, and assignment were delivered to complainant, who has ever since that time had them in his possession. It appears, further, that on July 31, 1889, Joseph Young made a contract in writing to sell these premises to John Burke, who paid him $12 per month thereon, the full purchase price being $775. On June 21, 1894, there remaining unpaid on the contract $300, and Burke having arranged with Rudolph Seig to [157]*157secure the money from him by giving him back a mortgage for that amount, Seig, Burke, and Young went to the register’s office, where the Townsend mortgage was discovered of record and not discharged. Notwithstanding this fact, Seig furnished the money to Burke, who, upon the assurance of Young that the Townsend mortgage had been paid, paid the money over to Young, taking a receipt therefor. Burke had not examined the record before this. June 27th following, Young and wife conveyed the premises by deed of warranty to Burke, and on the 30th (of that month a discharge of the Townsend mortgage was duly executed by Townsend, who was out of the State, and sent to the register of deeds of Ionia county. That discharge was recorded October 5, 1894. Nothing was paid to Townsend for this discharge. The deed of Young to Burke was placed on record July 23d preceding. The Seig mortgage was afterwards paid by Burke. March 28, 1895, the complainant recorded his assignment of the Townsend mortgage.

It is not contended that the Townsend mortgage was ever paid, and there is no dispute as to the fraud of Young, who knew that the mortgage was unpaid. It appears that no inquiry was made by Burke of any one as to the possession of the Townsend note and mortgage, and that no arrangement was made that the money should be refunded by Young if it were found that the Townsend mortgage was a valid lien; but Burke took the word of Young and a brother of Townsend, the mortgagee, that the mortgage had been so paid. The case cannot be likened to one where the party making the purchase relies upon a discharge of the mortgage by the mortgagee before the money is paid. Under the circumstances stated, the record of the mortgage was notice to Burke and to Seig that the mortgage was a lien upon the premises, and they were put upon inquiry as to its ownership, and the discharge then procured from the mortgagee, without further inquiry, would be no protection to them as against the actual owner and holder of the note and mortgage. The taking of a [158]*158conveyance with knowledge of a prior right makes a person a mala fide purchaser. In Roberts v. Halstead, 9 Pa. St. 32 (49 Am. Dec. 541), it appeared that the terre tenants purchased the land after the registry of the mortgage, and before satisfaction entered. In considering that case, Bell, J., said:

“Had there been a bona fide purchaser of the mortgaged premises after the entry of the satisfaction and without notice of the outstanding notes, or, as was the case in Brown v. Simpson, 2 Watts, 233, were the attending circumstances such as to lead nobody to lean to the conclusion that the mortgage moneys had not been paid, a countervailing equity would have sprung up for the protection of the innocent purchaser.”

In Indiana State Bank v. Anderson, 14 Iowa, 554 (83 Am. Dec. 390), the above case is cited, and that court clearly implies that where lands are purchased after the registry of the mortgage, and before satisfaction is entered, the purchaser cannot be protected as against the owner of the mortgage, though his assignment of it is not recorded.

Mr. Burke had no right to assume that Townsend still held the note and mortgage unless he produced them. He found the mortgage of record, and not discharged, and he was chargeable with notice that the mortgage was a lien in the hands of any person to whom it might have been legally transferred, and the record of the transfer was not necessary to its validity. This question was discussed in Williams v. Keyes, 90 Mich. 290 (30 Am. St. Rep. 438), and there it was held that where a mortgagee assigned the mortgage and accompanying negotiable note by delivery, and the mortgagor, in ignorance of such assignment, paid the mortgage debt to the administrators of the mortgagee, who did not produce or have in their possession the note or mortgage, the payment was no defense to the foreclosure of the mortgage by the holder of the securities.1

Counsel for defendants rely upon Bacon v. Van Schoon[159]*159hoven, 87 N. Y. 450. That case is referred to in Curtis v. Moore, 152 N. Y. 159 (57 Am. St. Rep. 506), where it was held that the assignee of a recorded mortgage upon real estate, which was conveyed by the mortgagor to the mortgagee after the assignment of the mortgage, has a valid lien as against a purchaser of the land from the mortgagee, who took without notice of the assignment, notwithstanding the conveyance to the mortgagee, as well as the conveyance from the mortgagee to the purchaser, was recorded before the assignment was placed on record.1 The court in that case also referred to the case of Purdy v. Huntington, 42 N. Y. 334 (1 Am. Rep. 532). It was said in that case:

“The question is then presented whether Huntington can be protected in his title as against the mortgage by reason of the omission to have the assignment thereof recorded. It is conceded that he is to be charged with constructive notice of the existence of the mortgage, and of the continuance of its lien, by its record in the proper office. By that he was informed, not only of the date of the mortgage, the amount secured thereby, and of all its particulars, but that it was open and uncanceled of record, and therefore apparently an outstanding lien and incumbrance on the premises of which he was taking title. Having that information, he knew, or, at least, was chargeable in law with the further notice, that it was such lien and incumbrance in the hancls of any person to whom it had been legally transferred, and that the record of such transfer was not necessary to its validity, nor as a protection against a purchaser of the property mortgaged, or any other person than a subsequent purchaser in good faith of the mortgage itself or the bond or debt secured thereby, but, on the contrary, that a vendee of the premises took it subject to the lien of the mortgage, irrespective of the ownership'thereof. That knowledge and notice made.it his duty, in the exercise of proper diligence, f, to inquire whether Mitchell, his vendor, was still the owner and holder of the mortgage, and his omission to make that inquiry deprives him of the protection of a bona fide purchaser,”' — citing cases in support of this proposition.

[160]*160The court in that case said that Bacon

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 N.W. 302, 117 Mich. 155, 1898 Mich. LEXIS 810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/babcock-v-young-mich-1898.