Matthews v. Lindsay

20 Fla. 962
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 20 Fla. 962 (Matthews v. Lindsay) 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
Matthews v. Lindsay, 20 Fla. 962 (Fla. 1884).

Opinion

The Chief-Justice delivered the opinion of the court.

The first ground on which appellants pray a reversal of the decree is that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to Harris’ cross bill. This cross bill alleged that by the tenders by Matthews the lien of the mortgage was extinguished ; that he had become the owner of Matthews’ in-est by his sheriff’s deed under executions against Matthews, and he prayed a partition as between himself and complainants.

As to the tenders, without examining .the question as to [974]*974the amount tendered, the allegations and proofs show that Matthews offered complainants the money, but the tender was not followed by a proferí in curia. Such a tender was held to be ineffectual in Spann vs. Baltzell, 1 Fla., 301; Forcheimer vs. Holly, 14 Fla., 239; Co. Litt., 207, a. But it is argued that the tender discharged the mortgage.

A mortgage is but a security for the payment of the debt mentioned in it. That which discharges the debt will discharge the mortgage lien. To discharge the debt by a tender, such tender must be kept good, and a plea of tender, as has been decided in the above cited cases, is ineffectual unless it appear that the-creditor can have, his money when he wants it. “ It ought to appear that the mortgagor from that time [of the tender] always kept the money ready,” otherwise the interest will run on. Gyles vs. Hall, 2 P. Wms., 378, per Lord Chancellor Hardwicke. Should the mortgagee, after tender and refusal, demand his money and find the mortgagor not ready to pay in accordance with his previous tender, interest will run on as if no tender had been made, until the money is paid or brought into court. Columbian B. Asso. vs. Crump, 42 Md., 192.

“The appropriate office of a tender is to relieve the debtor from subsequently accruing interest and the costs of enforcing, by a suit, the obligation which by the tender of payment he was willing to perform. The debt still remains. * * * The tender does not pay or discharge the debt; and though it will avail to arrest the accruing of interest and to free the debtor from costs, it will be deprived of that efficacy by a subsequent demand and refusal. If legal analogy is to be pursued, it could lead no further than to deprive' the mortgage of operation beyond the amount due when the tender was made, leaving the question of subsequently accruing interest and costs to be varied by the subsequent demand and refusal. The instances [975]*975in which a tender and refusal amount to payment and will operate as an extinguishment, are those in which the obligation is in the nature of a gratuity, without any precedent debt or duty, and the discharge is an accidental and not a necessary consequence of the tender and refusal, there being no debt or duty remaining whereon to ground an action.” 6 Bac. Abr., 456, tit. Tender; Shields vs. Lozear, 34 N. J. L., 505-6.

The rule prevailing in Kew York and in Michigau that a tender after a debt became due operates to discharge the mortgage and to leave the mortgagee only a personal remedy for his debt, has not been adopted in other States. Says the court in Crain vs. McGoon, 86 Ill., 433: “We fail to appreciate why a court of equity, while interposing its authority to mitigate the rigor of the common law rule against the mortgagor, should, at the same time, extend and make more rigorous the rule against the mortgagee. We do not perceive how this can be said tó be in pursuance of the natural principles of justice. If a tender is made but not accepted, and is kept ■ good, it is plainly right that the mortgagee shall have only the tender. The mortgagor has been deprived of the use of his money and the mortgagee has had ample time to reflect upon, his rights and has been at liberty to have them, whenever he would, by the acceptance of the tender. But when the tender is not kept good the mortgagor has the use of the money and fhe mortgagee, however ill advised he may have been at the time of tender, has no opportunity for revising and reconsidering his judgment and thereafter accepting the money tendered. * * When it is reflected that no serious hardship is imposed on a party making a tender by requiring him to keep it good, it would seem clearly unjust, under circumstances like those alluded to, to require a party to whom a tender is made, after the day [976]*976of payment has passed, to elect at once to accept or reject it, at the peril of losing his security if he misjudges as to his rights. * * The policy of the courts of equity is against forfeitures; and in this State, to discharge the mortgage would be, in very many instances, in effect to forfeit the debt. We think the preferable rule is, where the tender is made after the day the debt secured by the mortgage is due, to require that it shall be kept good in order that it may operate to discharge the mortgage.”

A tender, to be effectual, as has been decided in this State, must be kept good ; there must be profert in curia. Otherwise the debt is not discharged, nor is the interest stopped. If a mere tender and refusal of it operates to discharge the debt or the security, a subsequent demand or an offer to accept the money would not create a right of action at law or in equity, because the debt has ceased to exist as the result of the tender. If there be a tender and a refusal of it, and the creditor afterward sues, a plea of tender with profert and bringing the money tendered into court will give effect to the tender and extinguish the debt and the security.

As to Harris’ title under the sheriff’s deed, while it may be good as against Matthews, (though we cannot determine it here) yet it cannot avail as against the mortgage. Matthews never had a title or right which was not from its inception subject to the payment of the money demanded by complainants.

As to the prayer by Harris for a partition, it cannot be entertained in this suit brought to foreclose a mortgage on the very land he claims. Buckmaster vs. Kelly, 15 Fla., 199; Mattair vs. Payne, Id., 685. The .cross bill seeks to put in issue and establish his legal title. This must in all such cases be established or unquestioned before partition can be had.

[977]*977The second error alleged is in sustaining the demurrer to Matthews’ cross bill. This cross bill alleges that by reason of the refusal of complainants to accept the tenders and their assertion of title, their bringing suit against him to recover possession under their mortgage, driving him to bring suit to enjoin their suits at' law, slandering and clouding his title and destroying his credit, and putting -Jiim to great trouble, annoyance and expense in defending and prosecuting his rights, all on account of the illegitimate and wrongful claims and conduct of the complainants under the mortgage, he has sustained great damage and expended large sums of money, to an amount larger than their demand, and prays that the same may be set-off against the mortgage debt. The claims sought to be set-off are for tort. It is not a debt or demand capable of computation as in matters of contract. Damages arising out of tort are not the subject of set-off, either at law or in equity. 7 Wait’s Act. & Def., 483, and citations. Our statute prescribes that debts or demands mutually existing between the parties shall be proper subjects of set-off. A set-off can be allowed in an action on contract of matters only growing out of contract. Robinson vs. L’Engle, 13 Fla., 482.

The third ground of error is the refusal of the court to allow Matthews to file an amendment to his answer.

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Bluebook (online)
20 Fla. 962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matthews-v-lindsay-fla-1884.