Gordon v. Lewis

10 F. Cas. 803, 1 Sumn. 525
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine
DecidedMay 15, 1834
StatusPublished

This text of 10 F. Cas. 803 (Gordon v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gordon v. Lewis, 10 F. Cas. 803, 1 Sumn. 525 (circtdme 1834).

Opinion

STORY, Circuit Justice.

As to the first question, the court are clearly of opinion, that the proof does not establish any sufficient entry into the premises for condition broken, so as to create a statutable bar to the bill to redeem. The statute of Massachusetts of the 4th of November, 1788, c. 22 [Laws Mass. p. 199], declares, that all mortgaged premises shall be redeemable, “unless the mortgagee, or person claiming under him. hath by process of law, or by open and [804]*804peaceable entry made in the presence of two witnesses, taken actual possession thereof, and continued that possession peaceably three years.” The statute of the 1st of March, 179S, c. 77 [Laws Mass. p. 577], de-dares, that where the mortgagee, &c. “have lawfully entered and obtained, or shall lawfully enter and obtain, the actual possession of such lands and tenements (the mortgaged premises) for the condition broken, the mortgagor, &c. shall have right to redeem the same at any time within three years after such possession obtained, and not after-wards.” Taking these statutes together it is manifest, that an entry into the land by the mortgagee is not alone sufficient to make the time of foreclosure begin to run; but it must be after the condition broken, and for the condition broken. And as this is a statute operating as a bar to an equitable right, it is not to be extended by intendment There must be a strict compliance with all the requisites to create the foreclosure. In our judgment, it is not sufficient, that the entry has been made after the condition broken; for that may well be by the mortgagee without any intent to foreclose. But the entry must be with the intent to foreclose, or, as the phrase in the statute is, “for the condition broken.” Unless, then, the two witnesses, in whose presence the statute requires the entry to be made, can speak to the intent of the entry, as well as to the entry itself, that it was “for condition broken,” it does not come within the purview of the statute. And in the present case, there is no proof, that it was with intent to foreclose the mortgage.

In the case of Taylor v. Weld, 5 Mass. 109, 119, it is explicitly admitted by the court, that it must be proved on the part of the mortgagee, that he did enter for condition broken. But it has been supposed, that that case establishes the doctrine, that an entry after condition broken is to be presumed to be for condition broken.2 In our judgment, that case establishes no such doctrine. The court go into an elaborate examination of the facts of that case, and come to the conclusion, (with which we have nothing to do,) that, though in point of fact there was an entry after condition broken, that entry could not at that time be, under all the circumstances, deemed an entry for condition broken; but that the entry for the condition broken was at a later period. In our judgment, the mere proof of the fact of an entry after condition broken, is no proof of the purpose, for which it is made. The law requires the intent to be as notorious as the act Equivocal acts, which admit of different interpretations, ought to be so construed as to preserve and not to defeat rights.

Then, as to the title to the Haskell SawMill. It appears, that on the 5th of November, 1811, Archelaus Lewis and Stephen Thacher, as executors of Peter Thacher, brought an action against Joshua Webb, and attached the mill on the writ. At that time Webb’s only title on record was a deed of one undivided half of the premises from John Quimby, dated the 27th of May, 1806. On the 1st of November. 1808, he bought the other half from Solomon and Mark Haskell, to the latter of whom he mortgaged it for the payment of certain notes. But his deed from the Haskells was not recorded until long after the attachment, namely, in March, 1817. Judgment was duly obtained in the action; and the execution was extended, in December, 1812, on three fifths of the mill in common and undivided.

Under these circumstances, it is contended on the part of the defendants, first, that if Webb is to be deemed a tenant in common of one undivided moiety of the saw-mill only, according to his title on record at the time of the levy, then that levy is good at least for that moiety; secondly, if he is to be deemed in possession of the whole mill, so that the execution creditors (the executors) are to be deemed to have notice of his title to the whole mill, still the levy on the three fifths of the mill is ex necessitate rei good. The plaintiff contends, on the other hand, that the levy is altogether void, because at the time of the levy the debtor was seised of the entirety of the mill, and not of an undivided moiety thereof. This necessarily leads us to the consideration of the nature and mode of levies of execution on real estate according to the laws of Massachusetts, by which the present extent must be governed, it being before the separation of Maine. By the provincial act of 1692, it was' declared, “that all lands and tenements belonging to any person, in his own proper right in fee simple, shall stand charged with the payment of all just debts owing by such person, as well as his personal estate, and shall be liable to be taken in execution for satisfaction of the same.” The same provision was re-enacted in 1696. But the mode of levying the execution thereon was not pointed out. This was supplied, first, by an act in 1716, and afterwards by another act in 1719, which required the extent to be by ap-praisement in the mode prescribed under our present laws. And the same acts further provided, that when it so happened, that the real estate extended upon could not be divided and set out by metes and bounds, then the execution should be extended upon the rents of such real estate, and the tenants thereof be caused to attorn to the creditor and pay their rents to him accordingly.3 In this situation our laws remained until the revision by the statute of the 17th of March, 1784 (St. 1783, c. 57), when it was further provided, that “when real estate of the debtor or debtors shall be held in joint [805]*805tenancy, in coparcenary, or tenancy in common, with the real estate of other persons, then the officer may extend execution on such debtor or debtor’s real estate, held as aforesaid, or part thereof, describing the same with as much precision as the nature and situation thereof will admit, and give the creditor, &c., seisin or possession of such debtor or debtor’s real estate held as aforesaid, or part thereof, to hold in common with the said other persons.” So-that this statute in effect provided for three classes of cases; first, levies on real estate in common cases, where the estate can be set off by metes and bounds; secondly, on rents, where the estate cannot be set off by metes and bounds, or other proper description, and there is a tenant in possession to attorn; and, thirdly, levies where the estate is held in an undivided share with others.

Now, the argument for the defendants is, that the act of 1696 still remains in full force, as to all cases of real estate, which cannot be set off in either of the modes thus prescribed, as is the case of a mill wholly owned by one person, where a part of it cannot beset off on one execution in severalty, as the privilege is incapable of a severance; and that the statute of Massachusetts of the 20th of February, 1819 (St. 1818-1820, c. 115), on this subject, is merely affirmative. But it seems to me, that the argument itself is difficult to be maintained. The act of 1696 merely declares in general terms the liability of real estáte to be taken in execution.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 F. Cas. 803, 1 Sumn. 525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-lewis-circtdme-1834.