Hanley v. Brayton

17 A.2d 857, 66 R.I. 87, 1941 R.I. LEXIS 9
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 20, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 17 A.2d 857 (Hanley v. Brayton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hanley v. Brayton, 17 A.2d 857, 66 R.I. 87, 1941 R.I. LEXIS 9 (R.I. 1941).

Opinion

Condon, J.

This is an appeal from a decree of the superior court setting aside a mortgage foreclosure sale and enjoining further prosecution of a pending action at law brought by the mortgagee’s executrix against the mortgagors, the present complainants, for a deficiency. The cause was heard in the superior court on bill, answer and proof. The complainants did not offer any evidence but rested on their sworn bill. On the allegations therein and the respondents’ evidence the trial justice held that the sale was not fair and just and should be set aside on the authority of Hanley v. Brayton, 60 R. I. 101, wherein this court had declared null and void a prior foreclosure sale conducted under the power of sale in this same mortgage.

In their reasons of appeal, respondents allege that the decree of the superior court is erroneous and should be re *88 versed because the decision upon which it is based is contrary to both law and equity, the law and the evidence and the weight thereof. They contend in their brief and argument that the power of sale was exercised strictly according to law, and that the manner in which the sale was actually conducted was fair and unaffected by any fraud or unjust practice that would justify equity in setting it aside.

The complainants on their part contended here, as they did successfully below, that the undisputed facts in this case made it so like the case above referred to in 60 R. I. 101 that the superior court was bound to follow that case and hold the instant sale void for the same reason that this court had held the prior sale void. The facts upon which they based this contention were that the respondent executrix commenced proceeding's to again foreclose this mortgage while the suit to avoid the prior sale was still pending in this court for approval of the decree to be entered in the superior court; that the decree avoiding said prior sale was never entered on the land records of the city of Warwick; that as a result anyone intending to bid at the second foreclosure sale would, upon examining such records, be deterred from bidding at such sale because it would appear from those records that the title of the mortgagors had been sold at the prior foreclosure sale.

Inasmuch as the decision of the superior court upon which the decree in favor of the present complainants is based rests solely upon the decision of this court in Hanley v. Brayton, supra, it is important to determine at the outset whether the factual situation in the instant cause is essentially the same as in that case. That case disclosed a set of facts which in their entirety called for the interposition of the extraordinary jurisdiction of equity to prevent possible injustice to the complainant mortgagors. That is, it appeared to us that the mortgagee’s executrix had failed to accord to the mortgagors that full measure of good conduct and fair deal *89 ing, in exercising the power of sale under the mortgage, that she was in good conscience, as their quasi trustee, bound to do; and that a serious detriment to them had probably-resulted.

It appeared from the transcript in that case that there was open on the land records at the time of the foreclosure sale another mortgage of the mortgagor’s real estate which was made by a predecessor in title of the complainant mortgagors and which was prior to the mortgage that was being foreclosed; that no bidders appeared at the sale except the mortgagee’s son who made a merely nominal bid of $100 and received a mortgagee’s deed of the property, which was duly recorded in the land records; that the prior mortgage, held by the same mortgagee, had been satisfied and therefore was known to the mortgagee’s executrix to be no longer a valid incumbrance, although it appeared to be so from the land records; that such mortgage was in the possession of the executrix; and that no other facts appeared which would lead us to believe that the mortgagors knew of this prior mortgage or that they had it within their power at any time before the sale to correct the land records so that the true state of their title would be disclosed to prospective bidders examining such records.

On these facts we declared the mortgagee’s sale null and void on the ground that a cautious person who contemplated bidding at the sale would very probably have been deterred from doing so by examining the land records and noting therefrom that there was'a prior undischarged mortgage of record. In other words, while we did not expressly so state, it was implied that the lack of bidders at the sale and the merely nominal price received at the sale were probably due to the inequitable conduct of the mortgagee’s executrix in permitting the prior mortgage, which she knew had been satisfied, to remain on the land records undischarged. We accordingly granted the relief prayed for by the mortgagors.

*90 That the situation of the mortgagors relative to the first foreclosure sale was very different from what it was at the time of the second foreclosure sale, now under consideration, and also that the circumstances surrounding the second sale itself were different from those surrounding the first one, will appear from the following: The second sale was held on April 2, 1938, and attracted “quite a few people” according to the testimony of the auctioneer who conducted the sale. Three separate bona fide bids were received. Only one bid was received at the first sale. Respondent Israel B. Brayton made the first bid, not merely a nominal one as at the first sale, but a substantial one of $400. Another bidder raised this bid to $500, whereupon respondent Brayton made a third bid of $700 at which figure the premises were sold to him. The notice of the second sale had been duly advertised on March 11, 1938. On the day before, March 10, 1938, the mortgagee’s executrix had discharged of record the prior mortgage of $5000 which had caused the voidance of the first sale.

Our opinion, in which we held the first foreclosure sale void, was filed on February 17, 1938. However, it was not until March 17, 1938 that a decree embodying the relief prayed for by the complainant mortgagors was presented to this court for approval for entry in the superior court, and it was not until March 21, 1938 that such decree was actually entered in the superior court. In the meantime a second notice of the second foreclosure sale was advertised on March 18, 1938. Two other notices of such sale were duly advertised after March 21, 1938, the day on which the decree voiding the first foreclosure sale was entered in the superior court. For some reason unaccounted for by these complainant mortgagors in the instant cause, who were the complainants also in the former case and who had obtained the decree voiding the former sale, such decree was never recorded in the land records of the city of Warwick. Thus those records appeared to show at the time of the second fore *91 closure sale that the title to the mortgagors’ real estate was in Israel B. Brayton by virtue of the mortgagee’s deed to him under the first foreclosure sale.

Solely on these facts the complainants contended here, as they successfully contended below, that the instant cause was ruled by the former case of Hanley v. Brayton,

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Bluebook (online)
17 A.2d 857, 66 R.I. 87, 1941 R.I. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanley-v-brayton-ri-1941.