Home Owners' Loan Corp. v. Guaranty Title Trust Co.

76 S.W.2d 109, 168 Tenn. 118, 4 Beeler 118, 1934 Tenn. LEXIS 26
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 76 S.W.2d 109 (Home Owners' Loan Corp. v. Guaranty Title Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Home Owners' Loan Corp. v. Guaranty Title Trust Co., 76 S.W.2d 109, 168 Tenn. 118, 4 Beeler 118, 1934 Tenn. LEXIS 26 (Tenn. 1934).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Chambliss

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Complainant is a federal loan agency, and files this hill seeking a declaration by way of assurance of title to lands mortgaged to it, in trust deed form, to secure loans of money made to burdened debtors who had previously incumbered their property and fallen into default and suffered foreclosure.

The conditions as to which a declaration is sought, as set forth in the bill, may be thus illustrated:

A, owning land unincumbered, makes and records a first mortgage thereon with power of sale, to secure a debt to B. He thereafter makes and records a second *120 mortgage on the same land to secure a debt to C. (It does not appear, in the case presented, whether or not the second mortgage contained warranties against in-cumbrances ; the pertinency of this being hereafter made to appear.) Following default, the land is lawfully sold under the power of sale in the first mortgage and bought in by, or for, B. Subsequently, complainant corporation, upon the consent of B to accept securities issued by it in satisfaction of its original mortgage debt, takes from A a mortgage of the same land to secure said debt — in effect a redemption — the land being conveyed to A by B in order that he may so mortgage it, pursuant to and in execution of this plan, the conveyances by B to A, and by A to secure complainant being practically contemporaneous in execution and registration. May C assert a claim against the title thus conveyed to complainant, based on his unsatisfied second mortgage, superior to that of complainant corporation?

The case thus illustrated is, as we conceive, that presented by the bill. However, the prayer of the bill in its second paragraph thus specifically states the matter:

“Second: That your Honor declare and decree that in a case where real estate is encumbered by two liens, one inferior Or subordinate to the other, either by the express terms of the instruments establishing the same, or as a matter of law, securing indebtedness owing by the same party in whom title to the property is vested, when a foreclosure sale under the prior or superior lien has occurred in a regular manner, either by advertisement and foreclosure sale as provided in the instrument establishing the lien, or by proper court proceedings, and, thereafter, the original lienor by a mesne con *121 veyance or conveyances becomes reinvested with the title to the property, the inferior or subordinate lien, whether represented by trust deed in usual Tennessee form or is a vendor’s or mechanic’s lien or lien of similar character, does not attach to the property as an encumbrance, regardless of the fact that the purchaser at the foreclosure sale paid an amount sufficient only to liquidate all or a part of the indebtedness secured by the prior or superior lien; in other words, that the effect of the foreclosure of a first or superior lien on real estate is to extinguish a second or inferior lien, although the indebtedness secured by said lien may remain as a personal obligation of the original lienor, and such extinction takes place even though the original lienor becomes reinvested with the title to the property after the foreclosure sale.”

■ A demurrer adopts the case thus set forth, in practically the same language, and challenges the legal soundness of the rule as thus stated, and prayed to have declared. The chancellor overruled the demurrer, and the defendant appeals.

It will be observed that the prayer quoted seeks a declaration as to the rights of the original mortgagor to the effect that, as between him and the holder of an unsatisfied second mortgage executed by him, this mortgage is “extinguished” by a foreclosure of the first mortgage, even though he becomes the purchaser, directly or indirectly, at or following the sale. We are not prepared to declare the rule to be as thus broadly and unqualifiedly stated, despite the general statements in authorities relied on for complainant.

It is true that the general rule is that the purchaser at a regular foreclosure sale “takes the mort *122 gagor’s title divested of all incumbrances made since the creation of the power,” 5 Thomp.’ on Beal Property, sec. 4838; Jones on Mortgages (7 Ed.), sec. 1897; the effect of the foreclosure being “to extinguish the second mortgage.” Jackson v. Coffman, 110 Tenn., 271, 75 S. W., 718; Parker et al. v. Thacker, Trustee, 15 Tenn. App., 553; Commercial-Germania, etc., Bank v. Russell, 148 La., 334, 86 So., 831. In section 1654 of J ones on Mortgages this explicit statement of this general rule is made: “ As the title of the purchaser relates back to the time of the execution of the mortgage, it does not matter to him what disposition the mortgagor may afterwards have made of the property if the foreclosure is perfect. All conditions and reservations and easements, as well as all junior liens, mortgages or other encumbrances, afterward imposed upon the property are extinguished, and the purchaser under foreclosure of the senior mortgage takes the property free therefrom,” citing a great number of decisions.

But it does not appear that these authorities in thus stating this general rule had in contemplation the exceptional situation arising where the mortgagor himself becomes the purchaser at a foreclosure of a first •mortgage, leaving an unsatisfied second incumbrance out-' standing. To the contrary, in section 1887 of Jones on Mortgages it is said: “But if the mortgagor has given a subsequent mortgage upon the same property, his purchase will not defeat this, but will operate for the benefit of it in the same way as a discharge or a transfer of the mortgage to himself. He cannot set up against his own encumbrance another one which he has himself created.” This author adds: “Whether the mortgagor would stand *123 in any better position as regards the subsequent incum-brance if, instead of purchasing directly under the power, the estate had been sold under the power to a stranger and subsequently purchased from such stranger by the mortgagor, is a question raised and not decided in the case last cited.” We are unable to see upon what principle this purchase by indirection would place the mortgagor in any better position. The text in 41 C. J., p. 978, reads: ‘ ‘ The mortgagor or grantor may always purchase at a sale of his own property by the mortgagee or trustee, but he cannot, by such purchase, defeat the right of recovery under subsequent encumbrances . . . ”

The right of an unsatisfied subsequent mortgagee to assert the lien of his mortgage upon the land, when it is reacquired by the mortgagor, following a foreclosure of the first mortgage, appears to rest on the doctrine of estoppel, applicable because of the warranties made by the mortgagor against incumbrances. In two Massachusetts cases cited, Huzzey v. Heffernan, 143 Mass., 232, 9 N. E., 570, and Ayer v. Philadelphia & B. Face Brick Co., 157 Mass., 57, 31 N. E., 717 (opinion by Holmes, J.), also in Merchants National Bank of Fargo v.

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Bluebook (online)
76 S.W.2d 109, 168 Tenn. 118, 4 Beeler 118, 1934 Tenn. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-owners-loan-corp-v-guaranty-title-trust-co-tenn-1934.