Battle v. Battjes

264 N.W. 367, 274 Mich. 267, 1936 Mich. LEXIS 754
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 1936
DocketDocket No. 42, Calendar No. 38,571.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 264 N.W. 367 (Battle v. Battjes) 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
Battle v. Battjes, 264 N.W. 367, 274 Mich. 267, 1936 Mich. LEXIS 754 (Mich. 1936).

Opinion

Fead, J.

November 9, 1925, H. A. Weatherby and N. H. Battjes purchased real estate in Florida from plaintiffs for $100,000, paying $20,000 down and giving notes for $80,000, secured by a purchase price mortgage on the premises. The mortgage was recorded April 22, 1926.

December 29, 1926, Battjes and wife, by quitclaim deed, conveyed their undivided one-half interest in the premises to Leo B. Dice.

April 20, 1927, plaintiff filed a bill for foreclosure in circuit court in chancery in Florida against Weatherby, Battjes, Dice and their wives. The bill prayed:

“That the defendants, H. A. Weatherby and N. EL Battjes, may be decreed to pay the sum so found upon said accounting to be due to your orators, together with all costs of this proceeding, within a short day to be fixed by the court in the final decree-herein; * # * that if, in the event of such sale, said real property should sell for less than the amount so found to be due to your orators as aforesaid, then your orators may have an appropriate money decree for the deficiency; and that your orators may have such other and further relief as equity may require and to the court may seem meet.”

*272 Personal service of summons was had on Weather-by and wife and substituted service by publication and mail on the other defendants. Battjes and wife were permanent residents of Grand Rapids, Michigan.

June 6th, orders pro confesso were entered and, on June 18th, decree of foreclosure was granted for $90,911.28. The property was sold on July 4th to Bertha S. Battle, plaintiff herein, for $20,000, and, on September 23d, decree confirming sale, barring interest and equity of redemption of all defendants, and disposing of fund, was entered' with the further provision:

“Ordered, adjudged and decreed that this court retain jurisdiction of this cause for the purpose of considering complainants’ application for a deficiency decree and of determining whether any money decree for deficiency shall be entered.”

Obviously, this had reference to the prayer in the bill as no other application for deficiency decree had been filed.

October 20th plaintiffs served notice on Weather by that they would move for deficiency decree against him. Weatherby filed objections, on equitable grounds, to deficiency decree. No further action was taken by anyone in the Florida court.

Battjes died in Grand Rapids May 28, 1933. November 20, 1933, plaintiffs filed in probate court proof of claim against the estate of Battjes for about $107,000, representing the difference between the principal sum of the mortgage, with additions, and the foreclosure sale price of $20,000. The claim was disallowed in probate court and on appeal in circuit court.

The controlling issue is as to the effect of the foreclosure suit in Florida upon plaintiffs ’ right to main *273 tain an action at law for the deficiency, in view of the prayer for deficiency in the foreclosure hill and the present uncompleted status of the case.

We discover no uncertainty in the prayer. Upon any fair construction, it prayed deficiency decree against both Weatherby and Battjes.

Florida is a common-law State. Under the common law no deficiency personal judgment could he entered in equity proceedings for foreclosure of a mortgage. For a time jurisdiction to enter such decree was exercised by the Florida courts of chancery by virtue of a court rule. In 1927 (chap. 11993, § 1, Acts 1927), however, substantial changes were made by statute in the practice and its effect. The act, 3 Florida, 1927, Comp. Gen. Laws, § 5751, reads:

“In all suits for the foreclosure of mortgages heretofore or hereafter executed the entry of a deficiency decree for any portion of a deficiency, should one exist, shall be within the sound judicial discretion of the court, but the complainant shall also have the right to sue at common law to recover such deficiency.”

In 1929 the act was amended by adding the following proviso:

“Provided no suit at law to recover such deficiency shall be maintained against the original mortgagor or mortgagors in cases where the mortgage is for the purchase price of the property involved and where the original mortgagee becomes the purchaser thereof at foreclosure sale and also is granted a deficiency decree against the original mortgagor, or mortgagors.” 1 Florida, 1929, Gen. Laws, chap. 13625.

In Cragin v. Ocean & Lake Realty Co. (1931), 101 Fla. 1324 (133 South. 569), rehearing, 101 Fla. 1337 (135 South. 795), in which both the execution of the mortgage and the filing of the bill of foreclosure *274 antedated similar events at bar, the court thought the whole statute applicable to pending cases. However, it held that while the amendment of 1929 affected the construction of the act of 1927, as related to nonpurchase price mortgages, it was immaterial whether the original or amended act was applied to purchase price mortgages because the effect would be the same in either event.

In construing and applying the statute, the supreme court of Florida recognizes that a real estate mortgage involves two distinct causes of action— one at law on the debt — and the other in equity for foreclosure of the lien. It holds that both the former rule and the statute conferred on courts of equity jurisdiction over the legal as well as the equitable cause of action in order that, in accord with the general rule, equity, taking jurisdiction, may end the controversy.

The statute, however, is broader than the rule. It does not afford the mortgagee merely the choice of a convenient forum, as between two courts of concurrent. jurisdiction, in which to seek personal judgment on the debt. On the contrary, it offers him an election of remedies. In the Cragin Case, supra, page 1347 (on rehearing), the court said:

“It is true that chapter 11993, laws of 1927, after providing for the entry of deficiency decrees also says that ‘the complainant shall also have the right to sue at common law to recover such deficiency.’ But this means that he has an election of remedies; he may obtain a deficiency decree in the mortgage foreclosure, or he may sue at law to recover such deficiency.”

The significance of this language is better appreciated when the character of the equity jurisdiction under the statute is realized. The jurisdiction conferred on the court of equity is not merely to adju *275 dicate and enforce the cause of action on the debt as a legal right of action and to enter deficiency decree upon a mathematical computation of the difference between the debt and the sale price of the premises on foreclosure. The jurisdiction is equitable, the legal right of action for deficiency becomes practically converted into an equitable cause of action, and the court enters decree for the whole or such part of the actual deficiency as the equities determine. Taylor v. Prine (1931), 101 Fla. 967 (132 South. 464); Atlantic Shores Corp. v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
264 N.W. 367, 274 Mich. 267, 1936 Mich. LEXIS 754, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/battle-v-battjes-mich-1936.