Loggie v. Chandler

49 A. 1059, 95 Me. 220, 1901 Me. LEXIS 65
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedApril 6, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 49 A. 1059 (Loggie v. Chandler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Loggie v. Chandler, 49 A. 1059, 95 Me. 220, 1901 Me. LEXIS 65 (Me. 1901).

Opinion

Emery, J.

The story is this. Mr. and Mrs. Leighton on Dec. 16, 1897, mortgaged certain personal property to the respondents, Chandler and Wass, as security for their surety-ship upon certain notes of the Leightons given to a Machias Bank. The property consisted of a building used as a blueberry canning factory, and its various contents of tin, tools, cans, machinery, etc. The mortgage was in the usual form of a chattel mortgage bill of sale, conditioned to become void if the Leightons paid the described notes on or before Dec. 15, 1898, and it was recorded in the town where the Leightons resided.

In April 29,1899, the mortgagees, Chandler and Wass, began the usual statutory proceedings to foreclose the above mortgage. The notice of such proceedings and the affidavits of service were recorded May 5, 1899.

In the January previous, however, the Leightons conveyed for value all said property to the plaintiff, Pattangall, who had no actual notice of the prior mortgage. Pattangall soon afterward conveyed for value the same property to the Messrs. Loggie, the other complainants, who also had no actual notice of the mortgage.

The right to redeem from the mortgage would have expired in [223]*223sixty days from May 5, 1899, when the notice of foreclosure was recorded; but a few days before such expiration, viz. on June 27, Pattangall and the Loggies filed a bill in equity against the mortgagees, Chandler and Wass, in which they substantially stated the matters above recited and then further alleged as follows:

“Fourth. — The complainants further say, that they believe and have reason to believe, that there is nothing due these respondents under said,mortgage.
“Fifth. — The complainants further say, that they have no means of ascertaining the amount due on said mortgage to these respondents, if any amount be due, and that they are willing to pay whatever is due.”

Their specific prayers were as follows:

“ First. — That an injunction issue to prevent the completion of said foreclosure proceedings, and to protect the said Loggies in their possession of the said property, pending a hearing on this bill.
“Second. That the amount due on said mortgage, if anything, be determined and that they be allowed to redeem said property on payment of the same.
“Third. That they be awarded costs.”

There was no other prayer, general or special.

I. The ground first taken in the bill is that the mortgage has been paid. At present, however, no relief is asked for upon that ground, nor is there any prayer for general relief under which the court could grant appropriate relief. The only relief we are asked to grant is (1) to stay foreclosure, etc., pendente lite — (2) to determine the amount due, and (3) to award costs.

The prayer for relief is as essential a part of a bill in equity as is the statement of facts. The court cannot go beyond the one any more than the other. The respondent need not anticipate a decree that is not asked for. By the fourth Chancery Rule a statement of the specific relief sought is required, while a prayer for general relief is merely permitted. If the first ground taken in the bill [224]*224were the only ground, the bill would be demurrable for want of sufficient statement of the relief desired. Whitehouse’s Eq. Pr. 222; Perry v. Perry, 65 Maine, 399.

The prayer for relief is not a statement of- any matter of fact, but rather of the claim made under stated facts. If no demurrer be interposed the court can proceed to ascertain the facts and the resultant law and permit the plaintiff to formulate his claim before decree upon terms and conditions equitable to the respondent, No demurrer was interposed in this case, and hence the court may proceed to consider what equitable relief, if any, the plaintiffs are entitled to upon the first ground stated. If relief is found to be due them, the court can grant permission to formulate the claim therefor upon such terms as shall fully compensate the respondents for any inconveniences suffered from its omission in the first instance.

The only relief that can be given is a decree for the surrender or cancellation of the mortgage bill of sale.

There is, however, no statement of facts in the bill showing that to be necessary. If the condition of the mortgage has been performed, as alleged, then the mortgage is ipso facto void and the paper upon which it is written is waste paper. The property mortgaged has already vested in the plaintiffs “without re-delivery or re-sale, and without any cancellation of the mortgage.” Sumner v. Bachelder, 30 Maine, 35. A chattel mortgage is not a “written contract” which may be ordered cancelled under R. S., c. 77, § 6, ch. III. No statute or rule of law is cited which requires the mortgagee in a chattel mortgage to cancel and deliver up the written instrument upon performance of the condition; and certainly the court will not ordinarily require a party to do more than the law requires him to do.

Though not stated in the bill, it is urged in argument that the respondents may undertake to take possession of the property, or bring some action to recover it, upon the strength of the written instrument. Should they do so, the respondents have a plain, adequate and complete remedy at law, both to defend against the respondents’ action and to maintain actions against them. The [225]*225alleged performance of the condition is a complete bar to any claim the respondents can make. It is further urged that the evidence of such performance may in time be lost, — to the great inconvenience of the plaintiffs. That fact, however, is no ground for a decree in equity for cancellation. Farmington Vill. Corp. v. Sandy River Bank, 85 Maine, 46-53. It may be a casus omissus, but the mortgagor in a chattel mortgage seems to be left to preserve the evidence of the performance of the condition, ready to adduce if any action be taken under the defunct bill of sale. If he desires to perpetuate the evidence, he must resort to the usual means for that purpose.

It is again urged in argument that the mortgage is invalid because not sufficient in itself to give notice by record, the plaintiffs having no actual notice, — and also because it does not describe the notes on which the respondents became surety, but other notes which did not exist. The answer is, that these questions can be effectually and readily determined in an action at law. York v. Murphy, 91 Maine, 320.

So far as appears the- plaintiffs can fully protect themselves by available remedies at law, and hence are not entitled tó any relief in equity upon the first ground stated. See Bushnell v. Avery, 121 Mass. 148, an almost parallel case.

II. The second and last ground taken by the plaintiffs in the bill is, that if anything is due they are willing to pay it; and here the prayer is that the court will determine the amount due and allow them to redeem the property on payment of that amount.

Assuming, for the moment, that the court should ordinarily entertain a bill in equity to redeem from a chattel mortgage, it is common learning that such a bill should contain a tender or an offer to pay tbe amount due. It is certainly not clear that this bill contains such.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 A. 1059, 95 Me. 220, 1901 Me. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loggie-v-chandler-me-1901.