Morris v. Beecher

45 N.W. 696, 1 N.D. 130, 1890 N.D. LEXIS 15
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 12, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 45 N.W. 696 (Morris v. Beecher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morris v. Beecher, 45 N.W. 696, 1 N.D. 130, 1890 N.D. LEXIS 15 (N.D. 1890).

Opinion

Corliss, C. J.

This controversy presents conflicting claims of the plaintiff, and of the defendant Elizabeth McKnight to certain real estate. Each asserts title under foreclosure of a different mortgage upon the same land. The effort of each, therefore, is to sustain the priority of the mortgage under which he or she claims title. The plaintiff in 1881 was the owner of the property in question. On the 27th of June of that year he conveyed the same to Beecher & Dean, taking back a purchase-money mortgage for 14,500 upon the land, which,, however, was never recorded, having been subsequently lost. Beecher & Dean on the 14th of September, 1882, conveyed the premises to Eugene McKnight, who assumed this unrecorded mortgage, and gave back to Beecher & Dean a purchase-money mortgage, which in express terms was made subject to the unrecorded mortgage. Dean thereafter assigned to Beecher his interest in the mortgage given . to Beecher & Dean. Eugene McKnight having bought the land subject to the. .unrecorded [132]*132mortgage, and having assumed the same, and the mortgagee therein, the plaintiff in this action, being without satisfactory evidence of his mortgage lien, it, was agreed that McKnight should give this plaintiff another mortgage on the land as a substitute for the lost mortgage, “and to stand in place thereof, and to evidence the existence thereof.” This new mortgage was not given or received in satisfaction of the lost mortgage. This mortgage was in the ordinary form, to secure $4,815, and contained no reference to the lost mortgage; nor was there anything, on the face of, it to show that it was given merely as a substitute for such lost mortgage. It in fact appeared to be a new and independent lien on the property. It is under the foreclosure of this mortgage that plaintiff claims title. At the same time, and as part of the same transaction, plaintiff executed and delivered to McKnight an instrument which was recorded August 11, 1884, and, as the decision of this cause depends in the main upon the construction of this paper, we deem it best to set it forth fully: “I, Edwin Morris, mortgagee, do hereby certify that a certain indenture of mortgage, bearing date the 20th day of June, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and eighty-one, made and executed by Salmon I. Beecher and Charles R. Dean, upon section seven, (7) township one hundred and thirty-nine (139) north, of range fifty (50) west, in the county of Cass, and territory of Dakota, and due on the 20th day of June, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and eighty-four. It is the intention of this instrument to satisfy a certain mortgage for forty-five hundred ($4,500) dollars, and bearing seven per cent, interest, given by Salmon I. Beecher and Charles R. Dean, on or about June 20th, 1881, to Edwin Morris, which said mortgage has been lost or mislaid; and I, Edwin Morris, mortgagee, guarantee Eugene Y. McKnight, his heirs and assigns, against all loss or damage that may at any time be sustained by him, his heirs or assigns, by reason of said mortgage aforesaid, redeemed, paid off, satisfied and discharged. Dated the 14th day of July, 1884. Edwin Morris. [Seal.]”

The plaintiff at the time of accepting the new mortgage and executing this instrument did not in fact know of the existence [133]*133of the recorded mortgage to Beecher & Dean. Beecher, being the sole owner of this mortgage by assignment from Dean of his interest, transferred the mortgage to George S. Barnes on the 3d of September, 1885. Barnes paid full value for the mortgage, and bought it in good faith, relying, through his counsel, Hon. A. D. Thomas, on the apparent satisfaction and payment of the lost mortgage, as evidenced by the instrument from plaintiff to McKnight. The record disclosed that the first mortgage had in fact been paid and satisfied, and therefore that the mortgage which he was about to purchase, although formerly a second mortgage, had become, by this instrument, a first lien on the premises. It is immaterial whether this instrument was such a paper as was entitled to record, or whether its record operated as constructive notice. Judge Thomas and Mr. Barnes agree that the whole matter was left to the former to determine what was the condition of the record, and Judge Thomas positively swears that he in fact saw and examined the record of this instrument, and was satisfied from such examination that the lost mortgage had been satisfied, and that the mortgage which Barnes contemplated purchasing was a first lien on the property; and he so advised Mr. Barnes. The finding of the court in this regard is amply sustained by the evidence. If the instrument was calculated to and did mislead Judge Thomas, who was attorney for Mr. Barnes in the transaction, the case is the same as though Barnes himself had been personally misled. It is insisted that Barnes took subject to all equities as against the mortgage in the hands of Dean, who, it is unquestioned, held the mortgage subject to the right of the plaintiff to have the lost mortgage reinstated and established against him (Dean) as a prior lien. But a paramount principle makes ineffectual this doctrine under the facts of this case. Equitable estoppel seals the plaintiff’s lips, and declares to him that he shall not invoke the rule that the purchaser must abide by the case of the person from whom he buys, because, by his written declaration that the lost mortgage had been paid and satisfied, he inveigled Barnes into purchasing the Beecher & Dean mortgage as a first lien on the property. He held out to him that it was a first lien, because he asserted that [134]*134the only prior lien was both paid and satisfied. Whether Barnes took subject to the prior equity in favor of the plaintiff we do not decide, for, assuming that he did, the plaintiff has by his own solemn act estopped himself from insisting on the priority of lien. Simpson v. Del Hoyo, 94 N. Y. 189, and cases cited; McNeil v. Bank, 46 N. Y. 325. Certainly the plaintiff is in no better position than he would have been had he personally stated to Barnes that his (plaintiff’s) mortgage had been paid and satisfied, and Barnes, relying on that statement, and of course inferring from it that the mortgage he was about to purchase had become a first lien, had bought the mortgage for value and in good faith. Equity will listen to no plea against the words of a suitor, misleading another to his detriment, if the admission could be retracted. It is under the Beecher & Dean mortgage that defendant Elizabeth McKnight claims title.

It was urged that the fact that there appeared to have been recorded, about the same time this satisfaction was z’ecorded, another mortgage to the same mortgagee as in the lost mortgage, and for about the same amount, was sufficient to put Barnes on inquiry as to whether the new mortgage and satisfaction together did not, in reality, constitute mere record evidence of a lost security, which it was never intended to cancel or release. In the first place, the mortgage is for several hundred dollars more than the lost mortgage, which is izi no manner referred to therein, as would naturally have been done if it had been the design of the parties merely to create an evidence of a lost security.

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Bluebook (online)
45 N.W. 696, 1 N.D. 130, 1890 N.D. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-v-beecher-nd-1890.