Kerr v. Gilmore

6 Watts 405
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 15, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 6 Watts 405 (Kerr v. Gilmore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kerr v. Gilmore, 6 Watts 405 (Pa. 1837).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Huston, J.

Originally, it would seem that what are now called mortgages, whether contained in one instrument, or divided into an absolute deed and a defeasance on a separate paper, were considered at common law as sales on condition, and if the condition was not performed at the day, the estate became absolute, and could never be recovered; payment or tender afterwards were equally unavailing; and perhaps we may suppose this was the intention of one party, and the terms submitted to by the other under the infatuation which seems at all times to have cheered the heart of the debtor with a hope that he would soon be able to pay. It is unnecessary to inquire at what time, and by what gradations, [407]*407courts of chancery took cognizance of, and relieved the debtor from the contracts which were often ruinously hard. The courts of law at length took notice that mortgages were only securities for money. “ The case of mortgages,” says Chancellor Kent, “ is one of the most splendid instances, in the history of our jurisprudence, of the triumph of equitable principles over technical rules, and the homage which those principles have received by their adoption in courts of law.” 4 Kent’s Com. 158, 2d ed.; see also Story’s Eq. tit. Mortgages, vol. 2, 270; et seq. The books just cited, will refer the reader to most of the cases. The result seems to be, in the opinion of those distinguished writers, the same which this court had early arrived at, and uniformly adhered to, as the true criterion of whether a paper, or two or more papers, amounted to an absolute sale, or to a loan of money and a pledge of land, to secure the repayment. 1 Yeates 379; 5 Binn. 499; 9 Serg. & Rawle 432; 3 Watts.

The result of these cases seems to be, that, if the agreement is in substance a loan of money, no management or contrivance of the lender; no form of expression in the instruments; not even dating the defeasance several days after the deed; not even the lender uniformly stating that he will not have a mortgage, will avail. A sale in form, but which, in fact and substance, may be avoided, by the payment of money within a given time, is, and will be held to be a 'mortgage; if a mortgage until that period elapses, it must continue a mortgage, until lapse of time or some other matter changes it.

In different cases, we find different particulars stated, as being criteria by which _to distinguish, whether the instrument be a mortgage, or an absolute sale. Each of these may have weight, but it is not safe to designate the insertion or omission of any one clause or circumstance as conclusive, for that would be adopted by the rapacious, and submitted to by the needy, and the wholesome rules now established would become useless. The cases, however, seem to admit the possibility of a deed absolute on its face, and a defeasant’s agreeing to reconvey if the money be paid on a certain time, and that the latter may be unavailing, unless the money be paid at the time specified. This, however, can, as I apprehend, only occur, where the contract and conveyance were clearly for an absolute sale, and the agreement to reconvey a subsequent and distinct matter, not in the contemplation of the parties when the sale was made, and deed delivered. In such case, the agreement to reconvey will amount only to an executory agreement to sell, on which the covenantee may have an action.

The authorities, however, say, that even when the matter assumes this appearance, the courts are bound to scrutinize the transaction with great care, and to be watchful that it was not originally a loan of money; and when we consider, that many of those who lend are astute to devise some mode by which to become [408]*408absolute owners, if the money be not repaid at the day, this caution would seem to be necessary.

The offer in the present case, assumes the appearance of making the agreement to reconvey, a new and distinct matter, not contemplated, until after a sale had been agreed on and completed. It is now contended, that the testimony ought to have been heard, and the matter on the evidence left to the jury to decide, whether, under all the evidence, and the fair inferences from it, this transaction was in substance an agreement to advance money on an absolute deed, with an agreement that Gilmores were to have the land back on repaying the money within a year; and if so, the writings and agreement were in law and equity only a mortgage, and this, although both parties had agreed that the deed should be absolute, unless the money was repaid within a year; but that on the other hand, if the transaction was a bona fide sale, at first, and so completed by payment of the money, and execution, and delivery of the deed; and that after this was done, and without any previous understanding or agreement, a new contract was made, by which Kerr agreed to reconvey on the terms specified, then the deeds do not amount to a mortgage, but the one is an absolute deed of bargain and sale, and the other only an executory agreement to convey on certain terms therein specified.

All the cases show, that all the circumstances of the whole transaction are inquired into, in chancery, and in our own courts; and all the cases show, that an absolute sale and defeasance contained in the same instrument, must be a mortgage, and nothing but a mortgage. It is well settled, that the making two instruments, a deed and a defeasance, at the same time, of the same date, leaves it still a mortgage, precisely, as if both were in the same instrument.

If, however, we should once admit, that, to make a sale absolute, and the land irredeemable, unless the money be repaid at the day, nothing more was necessary than to tell the scrivener to write a deed of conveyance, and insert a certain sum as the consideration; . and this deed being executed, to then tell him to draw a defeasance by which the deed was to be void, or a reconveyance be made, if the money, and interest, and. expenses were repaid at a given day, we should break down the system so well established, and open the door to every money lender, who was disposed to take advantage of the needy borrower. I repeat, that almost every person who borrows, feels a hope, however unfounded, that he will, with the aid of a little money, be able to retrieve his affairs, and repay at a precise time. The advantage taken of those in distress, and who are under this infatuation, induced courts and legislatures to interfere; and long and uniform experience has sanctioned the interference, and established the law as above stated; so that it has become impossible to draw any conveyance, nay, to make any contract, by which property shall [409]*409be redeemable for a certain period, and cease to be so after that period has elapsed. The proof was full, that such Avas the agreement of both parties, in Woods v. Colwell, 3 Watts. Yet on full consideration, the two instruments, though the defeasance purported to be executed two days after the conveyance, Avas held to amount only to a mortgage; here the deed and defeasance were executed on the same day and hour, before the same witnesses, without the parties having separated.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Watts 405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kerr-v-gilmore-pa-1837.