Debnam v. . Watkins

100 S.E. 336, 178 N.C. 238, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 430
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 8, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 100 S.E. 336 (Debnam v. . Watkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Debnam v. . Watkins, 100 S.E. 336, 178 N.C. 238, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 430 (N.C. 1919).

Opinion

Walker, J.,

after stating the facts as above: The questions of fraud and improvements may be eliminated from the case as the first is not properly pleaded, nor is the second referred to at all. It was agreed that the issues be settled after hearing the evidence. There was no evidence of fraud. It may be, as suggested by jfiaintiff on the argument, that defendants may proceed under the statute to have an allowance made for improvements, but we give no opinion as to this matter i.t not being before us.

Under the tender alleged to have been made to Mr. Jones, the senior mortgagee, the money has not been deposited in court, although the defendants seek in this action to redeem from the Jones deed of trust. It was said bj Justice Allen in Lee v. Manley, 154 N. C., 244: “In Dixon v. Clark, 57 E. C. L., 376, Wilde, C. J., announces the rule as follows: 'The principle of the plea of tender, in our apprehension, is that the defendant has been always ready (toujours prist) to perform entirely the contract on which the action is founded; and that he did perform it, as far as he was able, by tendering the requisite money, the plaintiff himself precluding a complete performance by refusing to receive it. And as, in ordinary cases, the debt is not discharged by such tender and refusal, the plea must not only go on to allege that the defendant is still ready (uncore prist), but must be accompanied by a proferí in cwiam of the money tendered’; and this is cited with approval in Bank v. Davidson, 70 N. C., 122. In Bilzell v. Haywood, 96 U. S., 580, it is said that 'To have the effect of stopping interest or costs, a tender must be kept good;’ and in Soper v. Jones, 56 Md., 503 : A plea of tender, not accompanied by proferí in cwiam, is bad.’ In Parker v. Beasley, 116 N. C., 1, it is held that an unaccepted tender of the amount due on a debt secured by a mortgage does not discharge the lien of the mortgage unless the tender be kept good and the money be paid into court, and the same doctrine is affirmed in Dickerson v. Simmons, 141 N. C., 330.” The alleged tender of defendants was made after the note was due. It is not necessary that our conclusion be based upon this ground alone, and that case is specially mentioned as appearing to be analogous in its facts, and it seems to be sufficiently so to control our decision.

*240 There is another reason for affirming the judgment.. If the tender of the amount- due on the note secured by the deed of trust to Mr. Jones was properly made, or was a good tender, it appears that thereafter Mr. Jones, as trustee, offered the land for sale, after advertisement; that defendants attended the sale and bid for the land, without giving any notice to the other bidders that the sale was unauthorized because of a previous tender by him of the amount due upon the note secured by the deed of trust. He made no such claim at that time, and the plaintiff purchased at the sale, for full value and without any notice of any such claim on the part of the defendant. This, plaintiff contends, was a waiver of the tender defendants made, so far as he is concerned, and an estoppel upon the defendants to set it up as a defense in this action, even if, under other circumstances, it would be a valid one. This subject was considered to some extent in Dickerson v. Simmons, 141 N. C., 325, at 329, where it is said: “It is well settled and universally held that an unconditional tender on the day when the mortgage debt falls due, called the law day, discharges the lien of the mortgage, although the debt survives as a personal liability. 20 Am. & Eng. Ene. (2d Ed.), 1062, and cases cited; Shields v. Lazear, 34 N. J. Law, 496. As to the effect of a tender made, as in this ease, after maturity, there is much conflict of authority. In those jurisdictions where the mortgage is treated simply as a security to a debt, the rule is that a mortgage is discharged by a proper tender made at any time before foreclosure, and that a sale under the power is void. In those more numerous jurisdictions where the common-law doctrines prevail, the lien of the mortgage is not discharged by the tender, the only effect being to arrest the accruing of interest and to free the debtor from future costs. If the mortgagor desires by his tender to discharge the lien, when it is not accepted, he must bring his suit for redemption and pay the money into court. North Carolina, Massachusetts, New Jersey, and other States are classified as jurisdictions which adhere to the common law. 20 Am. & Eng. Enc. (2d Ed.), 1063. In the first-named jurisdictions it is held that, where tender is made after the law day, a sale under the power is void even as to a tona fide purchaser for value. Cameron v. Irwin, 5 Hill (N. Y.), 272-6; Pingree on Mortgages, sec. 1342. The contrary is held in Massachusetts and some other courts, which adhere to the common law. Jones on. Mortgages, 1798, and cases cited. Those courts regard the power as one coupled with an interest which cannot be revoked, and hold that a sale under the power, after an unaccepted tender, transfers the legal title to the purchaser, and that the tender is merely a foundation for a suit in equity for redemption. It seems, therefore, that in those States a bona fide purchaser for value and without notice of tender gets a good title. It is also held that a mortgagor who has notice of an *241 intended sale and allows it to proceed without objection cannot after-wards show a tender or even a payment in full of the mortgage debt and thereby defeat the title of a bona fide purchaser for value without notice. Cranston v. Crane, 91 Mass., 459; Jones on Mortgages, sec. 1788. It has been determined expressly by this Court that 'the unaccepted tender of the amount due on a debt secured by mortgage does not discharge the lien of the mortgage unless the tender be kept good and the money paid into court. Its only effect is to stop interest and cost accruing after tender,’ ” citing Parker v. Beasley, 116 N. C., 1. But our case is stronger for this plaintiff. The defendants knew of the sale and attended it with a view of becoming a purchaser, and was a competitor of the plaintiff in the bidding. He said nothing about his tender, did not rely upon it, and offered no objection to the sale. If he had any objection to it, based on the tender, common fairness required of him to then and there make it known and not to impress the plaintiff with the belief that no such objection existed, and thereby induce him to buy the land after being lulled into security by the defendants’ silence and inaction, or by his conduct at the sale. In this connection, it is further said in Dickerson v. Simmons, at p. 330: “Notwithstanding the conflict between the courts as to the effect of a tender made after the law day, it seems to be agreed by all that a mortgagor may-preserve his right to redeem against any purchaser by giving him notice of the tender before or at the sale,” citing Cranston v. Crane, supra; Jones on Mortgages, supra. This the defendants did not do, but the opposite, as they not only assented to the sale but actually participated in the bidding.

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100 S.E. 336, 178 N.C. 238, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/debnam-v-watkins-nc-1919.