Harrison v. Roberts

6 Fla. 711
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedFebruary 15, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 6 Fla. 711 (Harrison v. Roberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrison v. Roberts, 6 Fla. 711 (Fla. 1856).

Opinion

REARSON, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court of Duval county, sitting in chancery.

On the 22nd of September, 1851, Samuel Spencer, being the owner of lot No. 4, in square No. 2, in the town of Jacksonville, mortgaged the same to Joseph S. Baker, to secure the sum of 1,100 dollars, payable on the 1st day of July, 1852.

Thereafter, on the 22nd of November, 1851, he mortgaged the same property to Hiram -Roberts, to secure the payment of the sum of 1,410 dollars and forty-three cents, payable on the first day of January, 1853.

[712]*712At the time of and previous to the execution of these mortgages Spencer was otherwise indebted, and particularly there was a judgment in force against him, recorded in Duval Circuit Court on the 3rd of June, 1851, in favor of Thomas W. Jones, for the sum of 92 dollars and twenty-one cents, together with interest and costs. On the 27th of November, a few days after the execution of the second of the mortgages aforesaid, Jones sued out an execution upon his judgment, which he caused to be levied upon the house and lot of Spencer, which was the subject, of the aforesaid mortgages, under and by virtue of which levy the property was sold by the sheriff of Duval county on the 5th of January, 1852, Josejah S. Baker, the first mortgagee, becoining the purchaser for the sum of 1,750 dollars. Joseph S. Baker, on the 17th January, 1852, sold his interest in the property to Mrs. Julia A. Harrison, who, together with her husband, the said Ephraim L. Harrison, were admitted into possession and have ever since occupied the premises as their own, adding, in the mean time, materially to their value by substantial and permanent improvements thereupon.

On the 17th of January, 1853, Hiram Roberts filed his bill for a foreclosure of his mortgage, and, on the 7th of July thereafter, Harrison and wife filed their cross-bill to adjust the equities between all the parties.

Such is the state of facts, in the opinion of the court, presented by the re-cord, and for the better understanding of the matter, we choose to regard them in this aspect for the present, leaving for further consideration the details of the subject which are relied upon as varying in some degree this view of the case.

It is urged that the judgment of Jones was not a lien upon any other real estate of Spencer than that of which he was seized and possessed at the date of the rendition of [713]*713the judgment, and as this property was subsequently ac" quired by him, there was no judgment lien upon it, and consequently the sheriff’s sale was void and the mortgages took preference agreeable to their priorities. This can scarcely be regarded as an open question in this State, having received, if not a direct adjudication upon the point, at the least, such a manifest indication of the opinion and views of this court as to remove all prior doubts on the subject. When a statute, as we think this does, (Thompson’s Digest, sect. 4.,) expressly and clearly declares the design of the Legislature, it is not allowable by an extremely refined and technical construction to do away with its force and impair its efficacy. When it is enacted that judgments “shall create a lien and be binding upon the real estate of the defendant,” it is not for this court to say that any portion of that estate shall be exempt from such lien. This would be to create a distinction and make a restriction not contemplated by the legislative authority. Such a distinction is in itself unnatural and unreasonable. Why should property, acquired perhaps by the very means of a loan, be relieved from liability to a judgment rendered for the identical fund with which it was purchased ? Such a rule would confound all our ideas of right and justice. This qjfflfetion was very fully considered in the court below, anoche authorities cited in the opinion of the Circuit Court, in our opinion, conclude the question of the lien of a judgment upon real estate acquired by defendant subsequent to its rendition. The lien of the judgment then prevailing on this property, a sale of the same by execution founded upon the judgment, would carry the title free from the incumbrance of the mortgages. If indeed the mortgages had been executed and recorded in due legal form anterior to the date of the judgment, a sale under it, as provided by our statute, could [714]*714only have affected the equity of redemption and left the properly itself subject to the mortgages and their equities-

But, it is further argued, that Baker, being the first mortgagee, was thereby estopped from purchasing, as another might have done, at the sheriff’s sale. Is this so? Was he prevented by any law or any rule or principle of equity from making such purchase? Does his purchase connect itself with his mortgage interest, so that the sum paid by him on the sale under execution creates but an addition to his mortgage debt, and so to be held by the same security ? Or, does he obtain by such purchase the legal estate in the property absolutely ? A mortgagee may not contract with the mortgagor “at the time of the loan for an absolute purchase of the lands for a specified sum; in case of default made in payment of the mortgage money at the appointed time, justly considering it would throw open a wide door to oppression and enable the creditor to drive an inequitable and hard bargain with his debtor, who is rarely prepared to discharge his debt at the specified time.” Coot on Mortgages, p. 14.

Otherwise, there is no objection to his purchase of the equity of redemption; and, where the transaction was fair, though the full value was not given, the agreement has been enforced. 3 Simons, 42 ; 11 Clark and Finnelly, 648.

If, then, the mortgageeumay purchase the equity of redemption from the mortgagor, we see no reason why he may not purchase it and the entire property, when sold at sheriff’s sale, at the instance of a third party. In such case, there is no room for oppression or opportunity for taking advantage of the necessities of the mortgagor. To deny this right to purchase on the part of Baker would be to place it out of his power to secure his mortgage debt in the event another had become the purchaser at sheriff’s sale, and thereby secured the title in fee. Indeed, con[715]*715sidering the insolvency of Spencer, the mortgagor, the purchase of Baker and the suspension of the surplus purchase money above the amount of the execution,- so far from working or operating as an injury to Boberts, has been the means of securing a considerable portion of his mortgage debt, which otherwise might have been lost; and he may now obtain all the relief which equity would have afforded him had he filed his bill in the first instance for a foreclosure of his mortgage, offering, as he was bound to do, to redeem all prior incumbrances. The mortgagee, Baker, then, having the legal right to purchase, hy so doing, ceased to hold the property in pledge under and by virtue of his mortgage and became absolute owner of the same in fee.

It is further argued that Baker did not complete the purchase of the property under the execution, and is'not therefore, entitled' to be regarded as such owner. So, therefore, it becomes necessary to examine the facts connected with this sale. The sum paid by Baker to the sheriff in satisfaction of tSe execution at the- time of the sale, was about 140 dollars^ while his hid for the property was 1,750 dollars.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Fla. 711, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-roberts-fla-1856.