Hunt v. Davis

96 A. 814, 90 Vt. 153, 1916 Vt. LEXIS 252
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 24, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 96 A. 814 (Hunt v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hunt v. Davis, 96 A. 814, 90 Vt. 153, 1916 Vt. LEXIS 252 (Vt. 1916).

Opinion

Munson, J.

The property in question is the place occupied as a homestead by George W. Davis and his wife Addie B. There were two mortgages on the property; the first signed by George ~W. and Ms wife, and the second by George W., alone. One Sweeney became the owner of both mortgages, and obtained a decree of foreclosure on both, which was invalid as against the rights of Addie B. After the equity expired, Sweeney conveyed the property to Edward E. Davis, with a warranty against all persons claiming by, through or under him; and Edward E. conveyed the same to George "W. by a deed conditioned upon the payment of a certain sum. Mrs. Davis afterwards brought a bill against George W. Davis and Edward E. Davis to secure her homestead right, and prevailed in the litigation. A fuller statement of the title and proceedings will be found in Davis v. Davis, 81 Vt. 259, 69 Atl. 876, 130 Am. St. Rep. 1035.

The orator in this suit was the solicitor of Mrs. Davis in the proceeding to secure her homestead, and provided part of the means with which she redeemed the property from the first mortgage under the terms of her decree. He now seeks to secure a repayment of the sum so advanced, and other charges against Mrs. Davis, through an application of the doctrine of subrogation.

[155]*155Sweeney’s, decree gave Mm the title to the whole property, with the mortgage interests merged; subject, however, to this future assertion of the homestead right. The relief of Mrs. Davis could not be accomplished by setting out the homestead, for Sweeney was entitled to hold his first mortgage security on all the property until redeemed. So the two mortgage interests were ascertained and separated by an accounting, and Mrs. Davis was allowed to redeem the property by paying the amount due on the first mortgage. The Sweeney decree was valid as to the first mortgage, for that mortgage was signed by Mrs. Davis and covered the homestead. The decree was invalid as to the second mortgage, for it held the homestead to satisfy an incumbrance which Mrs. Davis had not assented to. But the second mortgage was good as a second lien on whatever there might be outside the homestead which was not required for the satisfaction of the first mortgage. So the Sweeney decree was set aside as to the second mortgage only; and after the separation of the two mortgage interests by an accounting as a basis for a redemption of the property from the first mortgage to secure the homestead right, the decree was affirmed in other respects. This partial affirmance left unimpaired the foreclosure of the second mortgage as to any property there may have been outside the homestead and not absorbed in satisfying the first mortgage. If there is such a margin, George W. Davis, the husband, is now the owner of it by successive conveyances from Sweeney, subject to the conditional right of Edward E. Davis, his immediate grantor.

The bill as originally filed and demurred to stated that the orator, for and at the request of Addie B. Davis, paid to the clerk one hundred and sixty-two dollars to redeem the premises from the first mortgage, and charged that amount to her on book account; that the disbursements made and services rendered in the prosecution of the suit amounted to ninety-five dollars and four hundred and eighty-five dollars respectively; that the orator has requested Mrs. Davis to secure him for these • charges by assigning to him her right, title and interest in the premises acquired by virtue of this redemption, excepting her homestead right therein; and that she has refused so to do. The bill as thus framed was held insufficient and dismissed. ' This entry-was stricken off on application, and the orator had leave to amend his bill, which he did by setting up a writing executed by Mrs. [156]*156Davis two days before the payment of the redemption money. The agreement is for an expressed consideration of one hundred and sixty-two dollars paid to her full satisfaction by the orator, and the language of the undertaking is as follows: "As soon as I shall become empowered to sell or mortgage the land and premises hereinafter decribed, or any right, title or interest therein, I will, when thereunto by said George L. Hunt requested, execute and deliver to him a good and valid first mortgage deed of said land and premises, or of such right, title or interest therein, as security for the repayment of said above mentioned sum of money, and as security for the payment of whatever I may then be owing said George L. Hunt and the firm of Amey & Hunt for legal services and disbursements. ’ ’ The bill alleges that the orator made the payment in pursuance of this promise and agreement.

The prayer of the bill, both originally and as amended, is that the orator be subrogated to all the original rights of Edward E. Davis in said first mortgage; that the amount due on said mortgage be ascertained, and that the defendants be required to pay the orator such amount, or such other amount as equity requires; and that in default thereof the defendants be foreclosed. There is an alternative prayer that the said Addie B. Davis be subrogated to all the original rights of Edward E. Davis in the first mortgage; that the orator be given a lien on the amount found due on said mortgage in satisfaction of his claims; and that the defendants be required to pay the amount so found due in discharge of said lien, or be foreclosed. There is a further prayer that the conditional deed from Edward E. Davis to George W. Davis be cancelled and decreed to be of no validity as against the orator and the defendant Addie B.

The case is before us on a demurrer to the bill, and the decision must be kept within the scope of the pleadings; but in considering the case it must be remembered that there is an unknown quantity in the problem, and that the final and exact ascertainment of the rights involved, if such an ascertainment is deemed necessary, will depend upon the valuations made and bounds established in setting out the homestead. It is alleged in the bill that from 1886 until the bringing of the bill George W. Davis occupied the premises as a dwelling place. Evidently there has been no abandonment of the homestead by the husband, [157]*157and presumably there has been no separation of the family that has received the sanction of the law. <

The orator’s claim, as presented in his brief, is that Addie B. Davis, by redeeming the- premises from the first mortgage, became the owner of that mortgage, and was subrogated to the rights therein of Edward E. Davis, the mortgagee; and that the orator should be subrogated to all of Edward’s rights in the premises under the first mortgage, not only to the extent of the money advanced to redeem the premises from that mortgage, but to the full extent of the security given him and offered to be given him by Mrs. Davis. The decree below did not include the charges for services and disbursements, and the orator, while asserting his right to them, presents no argument upon this point. The statements of the law contained in his brief relate only to money advanced to pay off a mortgage, and we find nothing in the long list of our cases, cited without extract or comment, that supports this further claim. Nor can we conceive of any ground on which the orator can establish this claim as a lien on the property superior to the rights of Edward E. Davis.

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Bluebook (online)
96 A. 814, 90 Vt. 153, 1916 Vt. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunt-v-davis-vt-1916.