Boyer v. Anderson Et Ux

194 F.2d 305
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 19, 1952
Docket10466
StatusPublished

This text of 194 F.2d 305 (Boyer v. Anderson Et Ux) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyer v. Anderson Et Ux, 194 F.2d 305 (7th Cir. 1952).

Opinion

SWAIM, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff, Joseph C. Boyer, brought an action on a promissory note and to foreclose the mortgage securing it, against the defendants Walter M. Anderson and Margaret Anderson, his wife. The promissory note, executed only by Walter M. Anderson, was given to Boyer as evidence of the unpaid balance on the purchase price of a concrete block manufacturing plant which Anderson bought from Boyer. The mortgage covered both the real and personal property described therein. Both defendants executed the mortgage which, after setting out a copy of the note, contained a promise that the mortgagors would pay “the sum of money above secured.” The note, in the principal amount of $21,650.00, was payable in three equal instalments, the first being due July 1, 1949. The first instalment was not paid when due and the plaintiff exercised his option to declare the entire debt due and to foreclose the mortgage.

The answer and counterclaim filed by the defendants alleged failure by the plaintiff to perform his part of the contract of sale in that he failed to deliver part of the property sold, and that the plaintiff was guilty of fraud in inducing the defendant Anderson to purchase the property. The answer and counterclaim of defendants prayed that “the defendants be given a set-off and counter-claim on the said note and mortgage in the sum of $6,580.95, together with such additional amounts for rent as may accrue until this cause is finally determined, together with a reduction of interest on the amount of the counter-claim from the original amount due on the note and mortgage, and attorneys’ fees such as the Court may determine, and judgment in favor of the defendants that the said note and mortgage is not in default,” and a judgment “for damages against the plaintiff in such amount as the Court may find for the loss of the use of the said equipment occasioned by the fraudulent representations of the plaintiff * *

The Court found against the defendants both on the complaint and the counterclaim and entered a judgment ordering the mort *307 gage foreclosed, the mortgaged property-sold, and giving the plaintiff a personal money judgment against both defendants for any deficiency.

Defendants’ first contention is that no deficiency judgment should have been entered against the defendant Margaret Anderson since she did not sign the promissory note and signed the mortgage only for the purpose of making it possible to free the mortgaged property from her inchoate dower interest in the event of the foreclosure of the mortgage. They also say that her promise, in the mortgage, to pay the debt secured by the mortgage could not be enforced against her because there was no consideration for this promise.

Defendants apparently concede, as indeed they must under Indiana authorities, that the promise of Mrs. Anderson to pay the debt secured by the mortgage, although only in the mortgage, would constitute a valid and enforceable obligation to pay if there were consideration for such promise.

In Noble County Bank v. Waterhouse, 89 Ind.App. 94, 163 N.E. 119, a husband borrowed money and gave his note promising to pay. He and his wife both executed a mortgage securing the payment of the note, which mortgage contained an express agreement to pay the amount of debt secured by the mortgage. The wife there also contended that she had merely executed the mortgage for the purpose of releasing her inchoate interest in the real estate. The court there said, at page 98 of 89 Ind.App., at page 120 of 163 N.E.: “That a joint promise to pay the mortgage debt is just as valid and binding, though found only in the mortgage itself, as it would have been, had it been expressed in the note to secure which the mortgage was given, is well settled by Indiana authorities. (Citing Indiana decisions.) And appellee could not be heard to say, in view of such express written joint promise to pay the debt secured, that she did not become liable therefor, except that, as the wife of Water-house, she executed the mortgages for the purpose only of releasing her inchoate interest in the real estate mortgaged for the debt of her husband. The written promise is unambiguous and absolute, and cannot be contradicted or modified by parol evidence of intention.”

In Stamper v. Link, 117 Ind.App. 212, at page 219, 66 N.E.2d 326, 69 N.E.2d 600, 602, 71 N.E.2d 128, the court said: “It is the general rule, except where statutes provide otherwise, that if the mortgage contains a covenant to pay the debt secured, the mortgagor is personally liable and an action in debt will lie on the covenant.”

An Indiana statute on the construction of mortgages recognizes promises to pay contained in mortgages as being equally as binding as such promises contained in the note or bond secured by the mortgage. This statute, § 56-702, Burns’ Indiana Statutes, Annotated, (1951 Replacement) says that mortgages shall not be construed as implying a covenant for the payment of the sum secured and that “where there is no express covenant contained in the mortgage for such payment, and no bond or other separate instrument to secure such payment shall have been given, the remedies of the mortgagee shall be confined to the lands mentioned in the mortgage.”

Section 3-1814, Burns’ Indiana Statutes, Annotated, (1946 Replacement) provides that in rendering judgment of foreclosure the court shall give personal judgment against any party to the suit “ * * * liable upon any agreement or agreements for the payment of any sum or sums of money secured by the mortgage * *

In discusshig the Noble County Bank case, supra, the defendants, in their reply brief, indicate agreement with the decision, saying: “There would be consideration from the bank to the wife where the wife wanted the husband to obtain the credit, and in order to have the credit extended she signed a mortgage which induced the extending of the credit.”

' The defendants admit that the extension of credit to a husband may constitute sufficient consideration to support a wife’s promise in the mortgage to pay the mortgage debt. The defendants attempt to distinguish the Noble County Bank case by saying that there it is not shown that the *308 credit was extended to the husband prior to the execution of the mortgage promise of the wife to pay.

The question as to consideration to Mrs. Anderson for her execution of the mortgage was not raised by the defendants in any pleading filed in the trial court. Evidence as to the exact time of the delivery of the various documents involved was not clear. Anderson, himself, testified that: “I paid the first payment of $1,000.00 as a binder on June 12 and the remaining $3,000.00 the day I got the deed, which was about August 2nd. The note is dated July 30th. The mortgage August 2nd, both in 1948. Just my signature is on the note. Mrs. Anderson wasn’t with me. She signed the mortgage in the office of Mr. Ging. We signed the note in Greenfield on July 30th, and then took the mortgage back to Cincinnati. Then I was given the deed and bill of sale.”

This testimony would seem to indicate that Anderson did not receive the deed and bill of sale until after he had delivered the mortgage. At that time it is clear that Anderson attached no significance to the fact that his wife did not sign the note.

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Related

Noble County Bank v. Waterhouse
163 N.E. 119 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1928)
Stamper v. Link
66 N.E.2d 326 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1947)

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Bluebook (online)
194 F.2d 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyer-v-anderson-et-ux-ca7-1952.