Bailey v. Blodgett

119 A.2d 756, 49 Del. 485, 10 Terry 485, 1955 Del. Super. LEXIS 106
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedSeptember 28, 1955
Docket950, Civil Action, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 119 A.2d 756 (Bailey v. Blodgett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey v. Blodgett, 119 A.2d 756, 49 Del. 485, 10 Terry 485, 1955 Del. Super. LEXIS 106 (Del. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

*487 Carey, J.:

The petitioners, on February 11, 1931, executed a mortgage in favor of Louisa Blodgett as security for the payment of $2772.77 covering certain lands in Blackbird Hundred. It was payable on or before February 11, 1932. It was duly recorded and remains unsatisfied on the record. The mortgagee died testate in 1940, leaving her residuary estate to the individual defendant and naming him as executor.

After reciting the foregoing facts, the petition states that no payments of principal or interest have been made on the debt secured by said mortgage for a period of at least twenty-two years, and that no demand for payment of either principal or interest has been made, nor any action brought to foreclose the mortgage during that same period. It avers that the mortgagee, executor and heir have refused or neglected to enter satisfaction upon the mortgage record. The petitioners do not allege that the debt was actually paid, but rely upon the presumption of payment arising from lapse of time. They seek an order of satisfaction under Title 25, Revised Code 1953, section 2115.

The individual defendant has moved to dismiss upon three grounds: (1) the Court has no jurisdiction under the cited statute because, by its specific terms, satisfaction can be ordered only when the mortgage debt has been paid, and not when it is merely presumed to have been paid; (2) presumption of payment arising from lapse of time may not be used to secure affirmative relief; (3) the language of this petition shows that the debt has not in fact been paid, thus destroying any presumption of payment which might otherwise exist.

In support of his third contention, defendant relies upon Cunningham, v. Davidoff, 188 Md. 437, 53 A. 2d 777. It was there pointed out that the presumption did not arise because the *488 amended bill expressly stated that no payments of principal or interest had ever been made on the mortgage debt. Obviously, such an admission negatives any such presumption, but this is not the effect of the present petition. It was filed on October 25, 1954 and denies any payments or demand for at least twenty-two years, that is, since October 25, 1932. However the mortgage was dated February 11, 1931 and was payable on or before February 11, 1932. Nothing in the petition, therefore, is inconsistent with a presumption of payment, for the debt may have been paid on or even before its final due date. The allegations are accordingly materially different from those in the Cunningham, case.

Defendant’s first contention, based upon the express language of the statute, attacks the Court’s jurisdiction. In support of it, he relies upon In re Agostini, 3 Terry 347, 33 A. 2d 306, 309. The Act provides in part as follows:

“(a) In all cases where mortgages or judgments are liens on real estate in this State and the same have been paid and the mortgagee or obligee or their executors, administrators or assigns refuses or neglects to enter satisfaction of such mortgage or judgment on the record thereof in the office where the same is recorded or entered, within 60 days after the payment thereof, the mortgagor or obligor or their heirs or assigns may, upon sworn petition to the Superior Court of the county in which such mortgage or judgment is recorded or entered, setting forth the facts, obtain from such court a rule on the mortgagee or obligee or their executors, administrators or assigns, returnable at such time as the Court may direct, requiring such mortgagee or obligee or their executors, administrators or assigns to appear on the day fixed by the Court and show cause, if any they have, why such mortgage or judgment shall not be marked satisfied on the record thereof. * * *
“(b) Upon the return of the rule, if the Court is satisfied from the evidence produced that such mortgage or judgment, together with all interest and costs due thereon, has been *489 satisfied and paid, the rule. shall be made absolute, and the Court shall order and decree that the mortgage or judgment is paid and satisfied, and shall order and direct the Recorder, or the Prothonotary, in whose office such mortgage or judgment is entered, to enter on the record thereof full and complete satisfaction thereof.”

The Agostini case arose under this same statute. There a tender (of the amount which the petitioner alleged to be due) was made and refused, after which the tendered amount was paid to the Prothonotary without any prior order or approval by the Court. The petitioner then sought to have the mortgage record satisfied on the theory that the tender destroyed the lien of the mortgage. The Court pointed out that the statute was not designed to separate the lien from the debt which it secured, that tender of the debt was not payment of it, that only when the debt has been paid but the recorded lien remains does the act apply, and that, unless such a situation existed, no jurisdiction was vested in the Court. It was said that “the statute was intended solely for the purpose of removing the record evidence of a defunct but recorded lien, after the debt secured by the mortgage lien had been actually paid.” The Court was, of course, talking about the facts of the case before it, and its language must be read in the light of those facts. As I construe that language, the words “actually paid” were used in contradistinction to “tender”. I cannot think that the Court intended its words to prescribe any particular method of proving payment, or to deprive a party of the benefit of any presumption of law or fact which might otherwise exist in his favor. The presumption which arises from lapse of time is but one of several presumptions which can come into operation on behalf of one party or the other in the trial of an issue of payment. See 9 Wigmore on Evidence, (3d ed.) 428 etc., 40 Am. Jur. 872 etc. A petitioner must carry his burden of proving payment to the satisfaction of the Court; to do so, he has the privilege of relying solely upon a rebuttable presumption if it makes out a prima facie case, and such reliance does not destroy the Court’s

*490 jurisdiction to hear and determine the case. This view is supported not only by the action taken in a number of unreported Delaware cases but also in at least one reported case, namely, Cloud’s Adm’r v. Temple’s Adm’rs, 5 Houst. 587. In that case, the Court recognized the availability of presumption of payment (including that arising from lapse of time) to supply the basis for ordering satisfaction of a judgment. The action arose before the enactment of the present statute, under the inherent power of the Superior Court to control its own records and judgments. Cf. Budd v. Union, Bank of Delaware, 1 Houst. 455. There is no reason to think that the statute was designed to reduce the Court’s jurisdiction over judgments.

Defendant’s second contention raises a question which has never been expressly decided in Delaware. It was not raised in Cloud’s Adm’r v. Temple’s Adm’rs, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
119 A.2d 756, 49 Del. 485, 10 Terry 485, 1955 Del. Super. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-blodgett-delsuperct-1955.