Mott v. Rowland

48 N.W. 638, 85 Mich. 561, 1891 Mich. LEXIS 729
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 8, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 48 N.W. 638 (Mott v. Rowland) 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
Mott v. Rowland, 48 N.W. 638, 85 Mich. 561, 1891 Mich. LEXIS 729 (Mich. 1891).

Opinion

McGrath, J.

This is a bill to foreclose two mortgages given by Henry C. Rowland and Delilah Rowland, his wife, to complainant, upon a farm in Kalamazoo county. One of the mortgages is dated October 20, 1870, and is for the sum of $3,000, and the other is dated November 25, 1879, and is for the sum of $1,500. The first named was drawn at 10 per cent., and the other at 8 per cent., but by an agreement dated at Phelps, N. Y., August 5, 1879, time was extended on the first named mortgage for five years from April 1, 1879, the interest to be computed at 8 per cent. No defense was offered to the second mortgage, but as to the first it is claimed that it is a New York contract, and by the laws of that state is usurious, and therefore void, and this is the sole question in the case.

Complainant, at the date of the mortgage, resided in Phelps, N. Y., and defendants lived at Comstock, Kalamazoo county, Mich. The negotiations for the loan began while complainant was at defendant’s house at Comstock, Mich., and were carried on by correspondence after complainant returned to New York, and through defendant’s brother, who resided in New York. The defendant denies that the negotiations began in Michigan, but complainant testifies positively to the fact, and on September [563]*56321, 1870, complainant wrote to defendant, using the following language:

“ I received a line from your brother, saying you and I had some talk ahotvt money, and that you wanted it.”

Again, on October 4, 1870, complainant wrote as follows:

“Phelps, Oct. 4, ’70.
“Mr. Rowland,—
“Dear Sir: Tours of the 27th is at hand, and in reply will say that I think there is no doubt but that you can have $3,000 by the 10th of November, if everything is satisfactory. You can have a mortgage made, and according to the custom of your state of making them, on the 200 acres, with an abstract of title; have it recorded, and send it to Hubbell, if you choose, and I will give him the money. You can have it for five years or longer at 10 per cent, interest, payable as we talked, or arrange it any other way you choose. I believe the laws of Michigan require that the amount of attorney’s fees shall be stated in a mortgage in case of foreclosure; otherwise it comes out of the mortgagee. I want it made out right and legal. Please write me on the receipt of this, if you have any other way of doing the business more satisfactory to you; if so, how.
“Yours respectfully, Philander Mott.”

These letters distinctly refer to conversations had with reference to this loan, and these conversations must have been had in Michigan. Defendant, on the 20th day of October following, had prepared, and 'he and his wife executed and acknowledged, and on October 22 had recorded, in Kalamazoo county, the mortgage in question. Defendant Henry C. Rowland afterwards took the mortgage to New York to complainant, who objected for the reason that no note or bond accompanied the mortgage; whereupon the following note was drawn up then and there by complainant, and executed by defendant, but dated at Comstock:

“$3,000. Comstock, Oct. 20, 1870.
“Five years from date, for value rec’d, I promise to [564]*564pay Philander Mott or bearer three thousand dollars, at ten per cent, per annum. This note is secured by a mortgage bearing even date, and duly recorded in the register’s office at Kalamazoo, the same being duly stamped.
“Henry C. Rowland.”

The money was paid over to defendant in New York, who paid the interest at the rate of 10 per cent, until some time in 1879. It appears that complainant held a third mortgage upon the same property, dated August 28, 1862. It is claimed by defendant that in August, 1879, he was negotiating with another New York party to make a loan at 8 per cent, of a sufficient amount to take up these two mortgages, and he in person notified complainant of that fact at Phelps, N. Y.; whereupon complainant agreed to reduce the rate of interest, and extend the time of payment upon these two mortgages, and then and there executed and delivered to defendant the following :

“Phelps, August 5, ’79.
“ I hereby agree the time of payment of two certain mortgages I now hold against the premises of H. O. Rowland, of Galesburg, Michigan, dated as follows : One of fifteen hundred and fifty-six 25-100 dollars, August 28, 1862, and one of three thousand dollars, dated October 20, 1870, be extended five years from April 1, 1879 ; said mortgages now draw ten per cent, interest; and that the rate of interest to be computed after October 1, 1879, at eight per cent, per annum.
“ Philander Mott.”

In November following defendant executed to complainant the other mortgage of 81,500, which is involved in this foreclosure, which drew interest at 8 per cent., but to which no defense is made. Defendant continued to pay the interest at the new rate (8 per cent.) down to January 1, 1887. Both mortgage and note are silent as to the place of payment, either of interest or principal.

Restated, the facts are that complainant and defendant [565]*565met in this State, and discussed the matter of this loan; that after complainant returned to New York he writes, proposing to loan defendant $3,000 for 5 years, at 10 per cent., upon a mortgage to be executed in accordance with the laws of Michigan, and he suggests that defendant execute and record the mortgage, and send it on. Defendant and wife executed and recorded the mortgage as suggested. This was a clear and definite acceptance of complainant’s proposition. What had been done thus far indicated no design to evade the usury laws of New York. The taking of the mortgage to New York, and the making of the note there, were incidents of the execution of an agreement already made. It has been frequently held that the place where the terms of a contract are agreed upon governs, rather than the place where the evidences of agreement are executed. Bank v. Low, 81 N. Y. 567; Coal Co. v. Kilderhouse, 87 Id. 430. In the last case cited the court say:

“The only time the parties were together or in communication was August, 1875. The bank then yielded to the application of the debtor, and consented to an extension upon certain precise and defined terms. They were accepted by the debtor. At that moment the minds of the parties met. This was in Michigan. That State, therefore, was not only the place of contract, but, on the part of the bank, was the place of performance. Ingram complied with the contract afterwards in Buffalo, but what he did there, while in the performance of an agreement, was in the performance of one already made.”

It is not necessary to rest the decision of this case upon that principle. This is not one of that class of cases where, by reason of the absence o'f the stipulation between the parties, fixing their respective rights and liabilities, it is necessary to invoke some rule.of law to determine their rights. It is a case where two parties, residents of different states, have made an- agreement valid by the [566]*566laws of the state where the borrower resides, and invalid by the laws of the state where the lender resides.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 N.W. 638, 85 Mich. 561, 1891 Mich. LEXIS 729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mott-v-rowland-mich-1891.