Fenderson v. Fenderson

102 A. 69, 116 Me. 362, 1917 Me. LEXIS 68
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedOctober 23, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 102 A. 69 (Fenderson v. Fenderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fenderson v. Fenderson, 102 A. 69, 116 Me. 362, 1917 Me. LEXIS 68 (Me. 1917).

Opinion

Hanson, J.

Bill in equity in which the plaintiff prays that an account may be taken of the sum equitably due the defendant upon a mortgage for $500. on the real estate hereinafter referred to, and of the rents and profits, and the sums expended by her in repairs and improvements; that the plaintiff may be allowed to redeem said mortgaged premises by paying to the defendant such sum as may be found due the defendant by said account; and that the defendant may be ordered upon payment of said sum to surrender possession of said premises and execute a discharge of said mortgage to the plaintiff.

The case is reported for the “determination of this-court upon so much of the evidence as is legally admissible, the court to render such judgment as the law and equity require.”

In February,. 1911, the plaintiff was the owner of certain real estate in Scarboro, in the County of Cumberland, which was a portion of farm formerly owned in common and undivided, by the plaintiff and his father, Nathaniel B. Fenderson. In 1909 that part of the farm involved in this suit was set off to the plaintiff as his half. The barn [364]*364and outbuildings on the plaintiff’s half were to be owned and occupied in common with Nathaniel B. Fenderson, the father, and the house and connected shed on the father’s portion of the farm were to be owned and occupied in common with Joseph B. Fenderson, the plaintiff, and expense of repairs to be equally divided. The father’s interest later became the property of Albion L. Fenderson, now deceased, brother of the plaintiff, and husband of the defendant.

On February 20, 1911, the plaintiff executed a mortgage on his portion of the farm in the sum of $500., payable in one year, to one Addison L. Winship. On February 27, 1911, said Winship assigned the mortgage to Frank W. Woodman. Interest on the mortgage was paid to February 20,1914. On July 8, 1914, said Woodman commenced foreclosure of said mortgage by publication. On October 12, 1914, said Woodman assigned the mortgage to the defendant. The plaintiff, on April 15, 1912, mortgaged the same premises to his brother, the defendant’s husband, Albion L. Fenderson, for $1,000 / on one year, and subject to the $500. mortgage first mentioned. On the death of Albion L. Fenderson, the defendant qualified as executor of his estate, and the last named mortgage came into her possession as executrix of said estate.

On November 6, 1914, the defendant, as executrix, commenced two suits against the plaintiff, one a real action in the Supreme Judicial Court for Cumberland County to foreclose the $1,000 mortgage, the other on the note secured by that mortgage, returnable in the County of Franklin.

The history of the case thus far is undisputed. The solution of the question raised by the bill and answer depends upon the equities, if any, arising and resulting from what was said and done at a meeting between the parties hereto, on the farm in question, in June before the foreclosure of the $500. mortgage would expire on July 8, 1915.

For a better understanding of the plaintiff’s position, it may be well to state that the attorney who foreclosed the $500. mortgage, and who later acted as attorney for the plaintiff in the suits at law before mentioned, had informed the plaintiff that on account of an error in the later proceedings in connection with the suits referred to, the time for redemption would be extended so that he would have a year from the following September in which to redeem. It is not urged, however, that the advice of counsel operates in favor of the plaintiff’s position.

[365]*365It is admitted that the parties met on the premises in June, 1915, and the record shows the plaintiff’s account of the meeting: “Q — ■ State just what was said about the foreclosure? A — In general conversation the mortgage was brought up, and I told her I was going to pay her all the money that was due before the September Term of court, and I says, T am advised by counsel that I have until the September Term of Court and another year for redemption,’ ‘but’, I says, ‘I shan’t take a year. I will have it paid by the September Term of Court.’ Q — What did she say? A — She says, ‘Yes’, and looked at me and didn’t say anything else. Only general conversation.”

The defendant admits the meeting, but denies that such conversation took place, or that the $500. mortgage was referred to, but we are persuaded that the conversation was substantially as claimed by the plaintiff, and the testimony of Mr. Doe in relation to a second meeting of the parties in October at Farmington leaves no doubt as to the subject of the conversation in June. Mr. Doe-testified, — “in the course of the conversation Joe called her attention to the fact that he had a talk with her on the farm in June preceding and said ‘you know Hattie at that time I told you that I had until the September Term to pay up these mortgages and a year of redemption even after that,’ and she says, T know that, but I came home to Farming-ton and asked Mr. Richards if you had a year in which to redeem the $500. mortgage and he told me you did not.’ ” This testimony of Mr. Doe is denied also by the defendant, who says that she knew the foreclosure would expire in July, knew it when she talked with the plaintiff in June, and had no occasion to ask Mr. Richards when the foreclosure would expire.

The case shows that the plaintiff acted upon the belief set out in the bill, and began negotiations through a bank in New Hampshire to procure money to pay all his indebtedness to the defendant; that he succeeded in doing so, and the preliminary work was done and notes and mortgage prepared and in readiness for execution in September, when further action on his part was rendered unnecessary by the defendant’s refusal to consent to the redemption. The testimony discloses further that on July 28 the defendant sent the plaintiff an account of repairs and demanded payment. The plaintiff claims he was misled, to his injury, by the silence of the defendant when she should have spoken. The defendant asserts that while a conversa[366]*366tion was had in June, it related to the $1,000. mortgage and not to the $500. mortgage, and the only question presented is this: Is the defendant now equitably estopped from insisting upon a strict foreclosure of the $500. mortgage? The defendant contends that the conversation in June, 1915, (1) does not show an agreement to extend the time for redemption, (2) nor does it show any conduct on the defendant’s part which would estop her to claim that foreclosure was completed on July 8, 1915, and further, (3) that the action was not brought within the statutory period, and (4) that even if the plaintiff’s contention is correct that the conduct of the defendant did amount to misrepresentation, the misrepresentation was one of law, on which the plaintiff had no right to rely.

Counsel for the defendant has cited Carll v. Kerr, 111 Maine, 365, as being directly in point, and urges the observance of the rule emphasized therein that “the time in which a mortgage may be redeemed is clearly fixed by statute and the court cannot enlarge it.” That is now the well nigh universal rule and this court has not varied in following it. But while the court may not enlarge the time, the parties may do so, and the inquiry here is whether or not the parties have enlarged the time, and whether this court in the exercise of its equity powers has authority to consider all the facts and circumstances which help to show what is right and just between the parties and having found what is equitably right, to enforce it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 A. 69, 116 Me. 362, 1917 Me. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fenderson-v-fenderson-me-1917.