Marion Mortgate Co. v. Grennan

143 So. 761, 106 Fla. 913
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedOctober 4, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 143 So. 761 (Marion Mortgate Co. v. Grennan) 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
Marion Mortgate Co. v. Grennan, 143 So. 761, 106 Fla. 913 (Fla. 1932).

Opinions

This cause is here upon appeal from an order of the Circuit Court dismissing a bill of foreclosure, filed by the appellant as assignee of the mortgage which had been placed upon improved real estate by the owner (mortgagor) after said owner executed and delivered a contract for deed on the same property to a purchaser who had, at the time of said mortgage, been in adverse possession and occupancy for nearly two years without default.

The main facts, in substance, are that the Merchants Realty Company, hereinafter called the "original owner," on May 17, 1920, executed and delivered a contract for *Page 915 deed (or sales contract) covering lot 14, block 6, Wyndwood Park, a subdivision of Miami, to Patterson W. Reed and Flora E. Reed, his wife, for $4750.00 of which $500.00 was paid in cash with the balance payable $40.00 per month with interest over a period of five years. Reed and his wife immediately took possession of and occupied the property and they and their assignees have been in continuous adverse possession since date of said purchase on May 17, 1920, to the filing of this suit. The contract for deed was filed for record May 9, 1922.

The said original owner on Feb. 15, 1922, executed and delivered to G. L. Miller Bond and Mortgage Company a mortgage covering the same property to secure a note of $2500.00 payable in three years, which was filed for record March 13, 1922, or approximately eighteen months after the Reeds had purchased the property and gone into possession. It further appears that soon thereafter Reed died intestate and on Feb. 12, 1924, Flora E. Reed having married John R. Croft, the said Croft joined her in assigning said contract for deed to Harmon A. Bailey who on March 12, 1924, assigned said contract to John G. Grennan who at the time this suit was filed on November 14, 1930, was in actual adverse possession under the said contract for deed, also a quit-claim deed which was executed to him (after making all required payments under the said contract) by the Keystone Loan Discount Company to whom the original owners had deeded the property.

It appears that the title to the said mortgage being foreclosed, is by regular assignments vested in the complainant Marion Mortgage Company as Trustee. It also appears that Appellee Grennan and his predecessors under the contract had made all required payments to the Merchants Realty Company so long as it was the *Page 916 owner and thereafter to the Keystone Loan and Discount Company as title holder to whom the contract for deed was also assigned on December 22, 1922, containing a provision requiring that all payments be made to said Keystone Company or their assigns.

It is obvious that by reasons of the various transfers, deeds, conveyances and assignments, that the issues are very complicated, and were it not for the very able briefs filed by each of the parties it would be most difficult of solution.

It appears undisputed that the Reeds had been in actual possession for about eighteen months at the time the mortgage here being foreclosed was executed and filed for record and were regularly making their payments to the Merchants Realty Company as holders of the legal title until the property was deeded to the said Keystone Company on December 22, 1922, and thereafter to the latter company until said contract was assigned to Bailey on Feb. 12, 1924, who in turn on March 12, 1924, assigned same to the appellee — all of whom have been in continuous adverse possession up to the time of this suit.

The General Master in his findings stated that as to all payments to the original owner of about $1142.63 the complainant herein could not claim its mortgage as prior to or superior to the rights of the Reeds in such property, which rights passed with the regular assignment to defendant Grennan who would be entitled only to credit on the said mortgage of the amount of said $1142.63, paid by the Reeds on said contract for deed up to the date it was assigned to Bailey on March 12, 1924, as Grennan from said date would be held to constructive notice of the record of said mortgage. The Chancellor apparently declined to take this view as he entered an order dismissing the bill. It is observed that the Chancellor states *Page 917 as reasons for dismissing the instant bill that the former assignee (Crozier) of said mortgage had brought suit to foreclose the same mortgage and that defendant Grennan intervened and set up the same facts as here pleaded and said suit was dismissed without prejudice. It seems that the view was taken that no new facts had been presented and those pleaded had been adjudicated.

It is observed that on December 12, 1922, the original owner, The Merchants Realty Company, by one instrument (1) deeded said property to the Keystone Loan and Discount Company, and (2) transferred his contract for deed (with the Reeds) to the said company. The same instrument also contained the following provisions: (a) that all payments when due on the contract for deed must be made to the said Keystone Company, and (b) when completed a deed conveying good title to the Reeds or their assigns must be executed and delivered by the said company; also contained a provision (c) that said instrument was being made subject to the said mortgage which the grantee (Keystone Company) agreed "to pay or cause to be paid."

The record shows that at the time of the completion of the payments by Grennan on June 17, 1930, the said Keystone Company executed and delivered a quit-claim deed to the said defendant Grennan. The said Keystone Company did not pay off the said mortgage when it fell due on Feb. 15, 1925, nor cause it to be paid nor apply any of the payments received from either the Reeds, Bailey or Grennan to the payment of said mortgage.

Appellant's first contention is that under Sections 5698 and 5699 C. G. L. of 1927, the contract for deed executed by the Merchants Realty Company to the Reeds was not entitled to record as no acknowledgment is shown thereon, and that therefore the record thereof constitutes no *Page 918 constructive notice to the mortgagee or its assignee or to anyone, of any rights claimed thereunder, and therefore the said mortgage executed or assigned at any time when there was no constructive notice of the contract for deed would thereby establish the superiority of the lien of said mortgage over the contract for deed and the assignment thereof to Bailey and Grennan.

It is not necessary to determine here whether the contract for deed to the Reeds was acknowledged or recorded as the contract would be good not only as between the original owner and his vendees and between the original owner and the grantee of the title in which latter instrument the said contract for deed was also transferred. The said contract for deed was in fact effective though not recorded as against the subsequent mortgage which was executed after the property had been sold to said vendees, as it is clearly shown that said vendees had from date of purchase been in actual adverse possession of the premises and at the time of the execution and delivery of the mortgage and each subsequent assignment.

Actual possession is constructive notice to all the world or anyone having knowledge of said possession, of whatever rights the occupants have in the land. Such possession when open, visible and exclusive, will put upon inquiry those acquiring any title to or a lien upon the land so occupied to ascertain the nature of the rights the occupants really have in the premises. Carolina Portland Cement Company vs. Roper, 68 Fla. 299, 67 So.2d 115; Tate v. Pensacola G. L. Dev. Company,37 Fla.

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Bluebook (online)
143 So. 761, 106 Fla. 913, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marion-mortgate-co-v-grennan-fla-1932.