Maxwell v. Hammond

208 N.W. 443, 234 Mich. 461, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 598
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 1926
DocketDocket No. 60.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 208 N.W. 443 (Maxwell v. Hammond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maxwell v. Hammond, 208 N.W. 443, 234 Mich. 461, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 598 (Mich. 1926).

Opinion

WIEST, J.

This is a suit in equity to foreclose a real estate mortgage. Defendant Harry H. Ham *463 mond, a subsequent purchaser under foreclosure of a second mortgage, contests on the grounds of merger, novation, and void assignment to a foreign corporation not authorized to transact business in this State, and appealed from a decree granting foreclosure. Facts sufficient to present the several issues will be stated as we proceed.

Merger. The mortgage was given November 6, 1919, by Benjamin J. Zahn and wife to Austin C. Davis, on a 342-acre farm in Lenawee county, to secure three notes aggregating $17,000; one for $1,000, payable August 17, 1921; one for $1,000, payable August 17, 1922, and one for $15,000, payable August 17, 1924. March 11, 1920, Davis indorsed the notes and assigned the mortgage to the Monroe County Bank of Dundee, to secure two notes of his, held by the bank, amounting to $8,500. October 21, 1920, Zahn and wife deeded the farm to Harry R. Shipman, subject to the mortgage. November 22, 1920, Shipman and wife deeded the farm to Austin C. Davis, subject to the mortgage. At the time of the deed to Davis the bank held the mortgage as security for Davis’s indebtedness to it. This deed to the mortgagee did not extinguish the mortgage in the hands of the bank. Merger is not a rigid rule, unyielding to equities, or declared and enforced regardless of intention or the just rights of third parties.

Tiffany on Real Property (2d Ed.), vol. 3, p. 2606, states:

“Merger can evidently not occur when the land is conveyed to the mortgagee after he has assigned the debt with its lien to another.”

It was held in Campbell v. Vedder, 1 Abb. Dec. (N. Y.) 295, quoting from the syllabus:

“A conveyance of the equity of redemption in land, to the mortgagee thereof, after he 'has transferred the mortgage held by him to a third person, as collateral *464 security for payment of a debt, does not merge the mortgage.”

In Case v. Fant, 53 Fed. 41, it was said:

“The rule is well settled that, where the mortgagee has transferred his mortgage as collateral security for the payment of a debt before his purchase of the equity of redemption, no merger takes place, for the reason that the different estates in such case do not vest in the same person. Kellogg v. Ames, 41 N. Y. 259; 1 Jones, Mortg. § 870. It would operate as a fraud upon the pledgee of the mortgage to hold that a subsequent conveyance of the equity of redemption to the mortgagee extinguished the mortgage.”

See, also, Curtis v. Moore, 152 N. Y. 159 (46 N. E. 168, 57 Am. St. Rep. 506); Lime Rock Nat. Ban k v. Mowry, 66 N. H. 598 (22 Atl. 555, 13 L. R. A. 294); International Bank of Chicago v. Wilshire, 108 Ill. 143.

Novation. March 8, 1922, Davis and wife deeded the farm to Richard Powers, subject to the $17,000 mortgage, which Powers assumed and agreed to pay. March 22, 1922, Powers, a widower, deeded to Jerome Probst and wife, subject to an existing indebtedness of $8,000. This was the Davis indebtedness to the bank and for which the bank held the mortgage as security, $500 having been paid. In dealing for the farm Probst obtained from Davis a letter to the Monroe County Bank, dated March 22, 1922, reading:

“You are hereby authorized to satisfy the seventeen thousand ($17,000) mortgage or assign the same to Jerome Probst, as 'he may desire upon payment of the eight thousand ($8,000) loan on which you hold this mortgage for security.”

Probst did not pay the Davis debt to the bank, but, May 26, 1922, executed and delivered to the bank his note for $7,871.56, due on or before six months, with interest at seven per cent, per annum, and received the following writing from the bank:

*465 “In connection with a certain promissory note this day given by Jerome Probst to the Monroe County Bank of Dundee, Michigan, for the sum of seventy-eight hundred and seventy-one and 56/100 dollars payable to the order of said .Monroe County Bank on or before six months after date with interest thereon at the rate of seven per cent, per annum and secured by a certain real estate mortgage and notes for $17,000, made by Benjamin J. Zahn and wife to Austin C. Davis, November 6, 1919, on 342 acres more or less in the township of Raisin, county of Lenawee, and State of Michigan, recorded in the recorder’s office of said Lenawee county in liber 207, page 443, and assigned by said Austin C. Davis and wife to said Monroe County Bank by assignment recorded in said Lenawee county in liber 207, page 556, it is agreed that the unpaid balance on said Zahn mortgage and notes secured thereby is exactly the same as the amount of the said note by said Probst, being the sum of seventy-eight hundred seventy-one and 56/100 dollars and that in case of any default in the payment of said Probst note, that said Zahn mortgage and notes shall be foreclosed for the amount then due and owing on said Probst note and further, that upon payment in full of said Probst note with interest, said Monroe County Bank shall assign and deliver said Zahn mortgage and the three notes secured thereby to the said Jerome Probst or his assignee.”

This agreement made certain the amount due the bank in case of foreclosure, afforded Probst an opportunity to pay that amount and have an assignment of the mortgage, but was not a novation to the release of Davis or the Zahns. Under the authority of the Davis letter Probst was to satisfy the mortgage, as security, in the hands of the bank by paying the Davis notes. Probst has not paid the Davis notes and February 15, 1923, received back from the bank his note of May 26, 1922. It is clear that the bank released no one, but accepted additional security and finally surrendered that. Even had the bank given up to Probst the Davis notes and accepted the Probst *466 note in lieu thereof, the mortgage would not have been released.

“Where the mortgagee gives up the notes secured to a purchaser of the mortgaged premises, and takes from such purchaser his own notes, as evidence of the same continuing debt, this does not release or extinguish the mortgage.” 2 Jones on Mortgages (7th Ed.), § 925.

And,

“So the question whether or not the taking of a new security of equal dignity is to be treated as a novation or substitution for and an extinguishment of a prior indebtedness is a matter of intention to be determined from all- the facts and circumstances of the case. ‘A court of equity will keep an incumbrance alive, or consider it extinguished, as will best serve the purposes of justice, and the actual and just intention of the party.’” 2 Jones on Mortgages (7th Ed.), § 926.

Probst did not undertake to pay the Zahn mortgage; at the most he attempted to arrange for satisfaction of the amount due the bank, by his undertaking to pay the Davis debt to the bank, and obtain an assignment of the mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
208 N.W. 443, 234 Mich. 461, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maxwell-v-hammond-mich-1926.