Grant v. Jackson & Sharp Co.

5 Del. Ch. 404
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 5 Del. Ch. 404 (Grant v. Jackson & Sharp Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grant v. Jackson & Sharp Co., 5 Del. Ch. 404 (Del. Ct. App. 1882).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

Assuming that the deed from Zebley and wife conveyed the fee in the premises, which is taken to be admitted in this case, the mortgage by Grant and wife to Sabilla A. Stone had no other effect than to create in her favor a chattel interest; the estate in the premises, both in law and in equity, remaining in Grant, according to the doctrine announced by the superior court of this State in the •case of Cooch v. Gerry, 3 Harrington, 280,—it having been ■decided in that case that a mortgagor in possession is the real owner of the land; the mortgage, though in form a conveyance of the land, is a mere security for the payment of money, and the mortgagee before foreclosure has but a chattel interest. The rigor of the common law in respect to mort.gages does not prevail in this State. At common law a mortgage was a conveyance of land with a stipulation called a ■defeasance, by which it was provided that, if the mortgage •debt should be paid by the mortgagor to the mortgagee on a ■day named, the conveyance should be void and the estate ¡should either, by virtue of the defeasance, revest in the mortgagor, or he should be entitled to call upon the mortgagee for a reconveyance of the same. The fee in the land vested in the mortgagee from the date of the conveyance, subject to the condition of being defeated by the performance of the stipulation on the part of the mortgagor. Littleton classes mortgages with estates upon condition. They are not so •classed in this State, nor are they generally so classed in this ■ country, nor did this view ever prevail in a court of equity. “Hot only,” says Chancellor Kent (4 Kent, Com. 158), “ the ■original severity of the common law treating the mortgagor’s interest as resting upon the exact performance of the condition, and holding the forfeiture or the breach of the condition to be absolute by nonpayment or tender at the day is entirely relaxed, but the narrow and precarious character of the mortgagor at law is changed under the more enlarged and liberal jurisdiction of the courts of equity. Their influence has reached the courts of law, and the case of mortgages is •one of the most splendid instances in the history of our [412]*412jurisprudence of the triumph of equitable principles over technical rules, and of the homage which those principles have received by their adoption in the courts of law.”

Charles F. Grant, notwithstanding he and his wife had executed and delivered a mortgage of the premises to Sabilla A. Stone to secure the payment of the sum of $2,500, continued to be seised and possessed of both the legal and equitable estate in said premises until the second day of March, 1858, when he and his wife conveyed the same by deed to Susan Stafford. Upon the execution and delivery of that deed he ceased to have any.estate or interest in the land, and she ceased to have any inchoate right of dower therein. From thenceforth, against them and against every other person, Susan Stafford was the sole and exclusive owner in law and equity of the premises. These premises, however, were subject to a lien of $2,500, and its interest, which Grant and his wife had created by their mortgage to Sabilla A. Stone while he owned the land. It would have been perfectly competent for Mrs. Stafford, at any time after acquiring title under her deed from Grant and wife, and before sale under the judgment on the scire facias on ■ the mortgage, to pay off the mortgage debt and to preserve the land free and discharged from any claim, either of title or incumbrance, by any person whomsoever. Susan Stafford did not pay off' the debt or discharge the mortgage lien, and the mortgagee-caused a writ of scire facias to be sued out on her mortgage,, upon which judgment was obtained, a levari facias awarded,, and a sale of the premises made by the sheriff to the mortgagee for $2,300, being $200 less than the principal of the-mortgage debt.

This brings me to the consideration of the proceedings, had at law under the mortgage, and their effect in passing title to the premises to the purchaser. Some of these proceedings were illegal and vicious, and it passes legal comprehension how they could have been had in a court of justice.. The forms of the law are of the substance of the law.

Many of these forms were not observed. It is true both: [413]*413Grant and his wife were named in the body of the scire facias; but there was no service of it upon or notice of it given to her, and no return thereto was made as to her. Susan Stafford, to whom they had conveyed the land before the scire facias was issued, was not made a party thereto although she was the owner of the fee and the only legal ■ tenant thereof at the time. If the record of title submitted to me by counsel on both sides in the case is true, Samuel McCaulley, William D. Sparks, and A. Poinsett, notified by the sheriff as terretenants, must have been, if anything, mere occupiers of the land, .or at most tenants. thereof from year to year, having no estate in the lands and no title upon which the mortgage was a lien or which would be affected by the sale. A lessee from year to year is not seised, nor is he terretenant; and the land of which he is merely possessed cannot be called his in the technical more than it can in the popular sense. 4 Watts & S. 256. Our statutes authorizing the sale of mortgaged premises, for the payment of a mortgage debt, must be held as intending that those having a real and substantial ownership in the mortgaged premises should have service of the writ, in order that they may show cause why execution of the mortgage debt should not be made of their lands. A mere occupier or tenant from year to year would have nothing subject to or liable for the debt, and nothing which could be in any manner taken in execution for the payment of the debt. Terretenants are liable to contribution towards payment of the debt, but in no case could tenants from year to year be held so liable.

In the case Chahoon v. Hollenback, 16 Serg. & P. 432, the court says in respect to certain defendants in that cause: “ But they were in fact not terretenants, because they were only occupiers and not owners of the fee.” Bone of the persons summoned as terretenants on the scire facias against Grant derived title from him by any conveyance whatever, vesting any estate in the premises in them, nor had any estate which was bound by the judgment against him ; and no one has any right to interfere between the mortgage creditor and [414]*414his debtor, and dispute his right to satisfaction by execution,, but one who may be prejudiced by the judgment upon which such execution may issue.

On a scire facias to have execution in a real action, the* defendant may plead non tenure generally, because the freehold is in question, and that is favored in law; and the terretenant may plead there are other terretenants not named, and pray, judgment if he ought to answer until the others are summoned, etc., though it would be otherwise if the scire facias had been against particular tenants by name. 2 Salk. 601; 2 Jac. L. Diet. Scire Facias.

On a scire facias against the heir and terretenants to reverse a common recovery of lands, the scire facias is to issue against all the terretenants, for they are to gain or lose by the judgment in the recovery. 2 Jac. L. Dict.

A scire facias to have execution of afine shall not be sued against a lessee for years, but against him who hath the free-' hold, who may have some matter to bar the execution. Cro. Eliz. 471; 2 Jac. L.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Wax v. Riverview Cemetery Co.
24 A.2d 431 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1942)
Malsberger v. Parsons
75 A. 698 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Del. Ch. 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grant-v-jackson-sharp-co-delch-1882.