Moss v. Keary

204 N.W. 93, 231 Mich. 295, 1925 Mich. LEXIS 630
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 1925
DocketDocket No. 43.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 204 N.W. 93 (Moss v. Keary) 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
Moss v. Keary, 204 N.W. 93, 231 Mich. 295, 1925 Mich. LEXIS 630 (Mich. 1925).

Opinion

Steere, J.

This bill was filed to obtain relief- from a statutory foreclosure of a mortgage on a house and lot located in Bradford Smith’s subdivision of the west part of private claim 729 in the city of Detroit, Michigan. , The property in question had belonged to one Earl L. Thompson, who mortgaged it for $3,200 on October 8,' 1920, to the Wayne County and Home Savings Bank of Detroit, which was duly recorded the next day. On June 18, 1921, he obtained a loan of $600 from defendants Keary, through a real estate and loan broker of Detroit named Ebert, giving them a second mortgage on said land to secure the same, which was recorded five days later. On September 24, 1921, Thompson conveyed the property to plaintiff Jacob Moss and one Arnor Rubach by warranty deed subject to the two mortgages above mentioned which the grantees assumed and agreed to pay. Said deed was duly recorded. On October 31, 1921, Rubach and wife conveyed their' interest in said property to plaintiffs, Jacob and Lena Moss, subject to said mortgages, which the latter assumed, and agreed to pay. Some payments were made and the interest kept up on the first mortgage to the bank but no payments were made upon the second mortgage held by defend *298 ants. This mortgage called for monthly payments of not less than $60 per month, the entire principal with interest to be paid in full by February 18, 1922. It expressly provided:

“That should default' be made in the payment of any instalment of principal maturing hereon, before the whole thereof becomes due, or of any instalment of interest when the same becomes due and payable, or of any taxes or assessments or premium for insurance, or any part thereof, when the same are payable as above provided, and should the same or any part thereof remain unpaid for the period of thirty days, then and from thenceforth, the aforesaid principal sum, with all arrearages of interest, shall at the option of said mortgagees, their legal representatives, or assigns, become due and be payable therefrom and thereafter although the period above limited for the payment of the same shall not then have expired, anything hereinbefore, or in said notes contained to the contrary thereof in any wise notwithstanding.”

In which case the mortgagees are authorized to declare the whole amount due upon said mortgage and proceed to enforce the same. In case of foreclosure $35 attorney fee is provided.

Over a month before plaintiffs acquired title to this property, in whole or in part, this second mortgage for $600 was in default, defendants had declared the whole amount due and begun statutory foreclosure proceedings by advertisement in the Springwells Tribune, a paper printed and published in Wayne county. After acquiring full record title to the property, subject to the two mortgages, plaintiffs sold it under a land contract dated November 10, 1921, to a man named Oliver, the consideration named in the contract being $10,300. The terms of payment and amount paid down are not shown, neither does it appear that this contract was ever recorded.

The mortgage contained the usual power of sale authorizing foreclosure by advertisement. Such fore *299 closure is an ex parte non-judicial proceeding, based on contract and authorized by the mortgagor. While it should not be hampered by unreasonably strict construction of the act (Lee v. Clary, 38 Mich. 223), all essential provisions of the act must be complied with (Pierce v. Grimley, 77 Mich. 273). No personal notice is required under power of sale at common law or by the statute. The statutory requirements for foreclosure appear to have been regularly observed in proper time and manner. Public auction pursuant to foreclosure notice published for the statutory period in Springwells Tribune was held on November 22, 1921, by the sheriff of Wayne county, at the time and place specified, and the property was sold by him to defendants, they being the highest bidders. Following the close-of the sale the sheriff promptly executed a deed of the property to them as the act authorizes (3 Comp. Laws 1915, § 14957), which was duly recorded and left in the custody of the register of deeds of Wayne county, where it remained until the period of redemption expired," on November 23, 1922, when it was delivered to defendants.

Aside from the contention that the Springwells Tribune was not such a paper printed, circulated and published in the county within which the property is located as contemplated by the statute, it is practically conceded for plaintiffs that the strict letter of the law was followed in this statutory foreclosure. The claim and theory urged in their behalf as condensed from their bill is in substance that defendants as mortgagees violated the trust obligations which the law imposes on them as such, conceived and executed a plan to suppress or conceal as far as possible any notice to the mortgagor and others having an interest in the proceeding that they might, as they did, secure the property for themselves, and to that end both refrained from giving any notice to the mortgagor and made their statutory publication in a small and obscure *300 paper printed in the village of Springwells, outside of Detroit.

Plaintiffs’ testimony in support of their contention that the newspaper in which publication was had was not such as required by the statute showed that the Springwells Tribune was a paper scarcely two years old at that time, published in the little village of Springwells, with a circulation of scarcely 400, little known in the city of Detroit and the youngest newspaper in Wayne county carrying legal notices. It was shown by defendants’ testimony to be the official paper of the village, that it was patronized for publication of legal notices by various attorneys of Detroit, several of the circuit judges of Wayne county had issued orders for publication of legal notices in it, that it was distributed' to various law offices in Detroit and its circulation was about equal to that of the Detroit Law Journal and the Belleville Enterprise, both of which have been held to meet statutory requirements. Copies of the two village papers were made exhibits in the case, that of the Belleville Enterprise containing a copy of the notice held legal in Lau v. Scribner, 197 Mich. 414, and that of the Spring-wells Tribune a copy of the notice in this case.

The statute (3 Comp. Laws 1915, § 14951) requires the notice of foreclosure of mortgages by advertisement to be given by publishing the same for twelve consecutive weeks, at least once in each week, in a newspaper printed in the county where the premises included in the mortgage and intended to be sold are situated. A proper notice legal in form was published for that period in the Springwells Tribune. This case is controlled, so far as involves the validity of the notice, by Lau v. Scribner, 197 Mich. 414, the paper there in question being the Belleville Enterprise. Vide, also, Hoock v. Sloman, 155 Mich. 1, where publication of notice of sale in the Detroit Law Journal was held valid.

*301

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
204 N.W. 93, 231 Mich. 295, 1925 Mich. LEXIS 630, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moss-v-keary-mich-1925.