Munro v. Barton

56 A. 844, 98 Me. 250, 1903 Me. LEXIS 94
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 10, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 56 A. 844 (Munro v. Barton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Munro v. Barton, 56 A. 844, 98 Me. 250, 1903 Me. LEXIS 94 (Me. 1903).

Opinion

Whitehouse, J.

This is a bill in equity brought to redeem a mortgage of certain real estate situated in the town of Vinalhaven, given by William Brown to Timothy Fernald December 28, 1835, and recorded in the registry of Hancock County, which then comprised the town of Vinalhaven. The original bill was dated March [252]*25212, 1895, and the subpoena served on the defendant Sophia M. Barton, February 25, 1896. By agreement of the parties the hill -was amended, after it was filed in court, by inserting an allegation respecting the ownership of the one undivided-eighth part of the mortgaged premises not represented by the plaintiff, and also by making the defendant’s husband, Watson V. Barton, who holds title to one acre of the premises described, a party to this bill. The cause was reported for the consideration of the law court on bill, answer and proof. In her bill the plaintiff offered to pay what should be found due upon the mortgage, but there was “neither allegation nor proof of any prior tender of payment or performance, nor of any demand upon the mortgagee, or persons claiming under him for a true account of the sum due upon the mortgage and a neglect or refusal on his or their part to render such account” as required by statute. Nor were there any averments in the bill showing that a tender could not be made, or that the defendant in any way by her default had prevented the plaintiff from performing or tendering performance of the condition of the mortgage. Under these circumstances, it was held by the court that the bill could not be maintained (95 Maine, 262) and the cause was thereupon remanded for any amendment to the bill respecting “tender or demand and refusal to account” which the facts might warrant. An amendment setting forth a demand and refusal to account has been duly filed, and the cause is now before the court a second time on report for final decision upon the merits of the cause.

At the date of the mortgage in question the premises conveyed consisted of thirty acres of unproductive land, only a small patch being under cultivation, and a slab-roofed cabin or “shanty” upon it about fourteen feet square. ’ William Brown acquired title to the place for $65.00 by deed bearing date December 26, 1835, and both parties derive title from him. Wm. H. Brown, one of the four children of Wm. Brown, acquired title to five-eighths of it by purchase from the other heirs and then made a voluntary conveyance of his entire seven-eighths to this plaintiff, his daughter, who then bore the name of Jennie A. Tolman. The defendant derives title through several mesne conveyances from the mortgagee of William Brown. It has been seen that William Brown’s mortgage to Timothy Fernald [253]*253was dated December 28, 1835, only two days after the date of Brown’s deed of purchase, and was given to secure the payment of $65.00 and interest in one year from that time. This appears to have been the entire consideration of the deed to Brown and the mortgage was doubtless given as a part of the same transaction for the purpose of raising the money to purchase the place. Timothy Fernald, the mortgagee, assigned the mortgage to Keuben Leadbetter by an assignment bearing date February 14, 1845, but not acknowledged until December 30, 1845, and recorded January 16, 1846. On the same day (February 14, 1845) Fernald gave to Leadbetter a warranty deed of the place in consideration of $50.00. He also commenced proceedings for a foreclosure of the mortgage by making peaceable entry upon the premises in the presence of two witnesses January 9, 1846, and recording a certificate of the fact in Waldo County, to which Vinalhaven had been set off in 1838. January 10, 1853, Leadbetter conveyed the property to Dennis Conway by warranty deed for the same consideration of $50.00. December 31, 1873, Dennis Conway conveyed one acre of the lot to Hannah S. Brown, who conveyed the same to the defendant Watson V. Barton, November 26, 1892. August 13, 1875, Dennis Conway gave his son, Bufus Y. Conway, a warranty deed of the residue of the place in consideration of $300. September 18, 1885, Bufus Y. Conway conveyed by warranty deed to Lane and Libby, and May 12, 1886, Lane and Libby conveyed to the defendant Sophia M. Barton; each of the two deeds last named being for the consideration of $300.

In their answer the defendants, in the first place, interpose the alleged foreclosure as an insuperable obstacle to the maintenance of the plaintiff’s bill to redeem the property from the mortgage; and secondly, if by reason of the fact that the certificate of entry was recorded in Waldo County instead of Hancock, or for any other cause, the court should hold the proceedings for foreclosure invalid and ineffectual for the purpose, the defendants insist that the plaintiff’s right to redeem is conclusively barred by the adverse possession of the premises on the part of the defendants and their predecessors in title, not only for more than twenty years, but for more than forty years prior to the date of the plaintiff’s bill to redeem.

[254]*254Subsequently the defendants also filed a plea of res judicata because of a former judgment in favor of the defendant Sophia'M. Barton in the real action brought by this plaintiff to recover possession of the same premises.

In McPherson v. Hayward, 81 Maine, 336, the court say: “bio question of -laches arises under a bill to redeem a mortgage. The duration of the mortgagor’s right to redeem is clearly defined by law, and one the court cannot abridge, or enlarge by a single day. The right continues indefinitely, until barred by some process of foreclosure, or by twenty years’ adverse possession of the land by the mortgagee.” But it is undoubtedly a settled rule in this State that if the mortgagee is permitted to take and hold possession of the mortgaged premises for twenty years after the debt becomes payable to the exclusion of the mortgagor and in denial of his rights without accounting and without admitting that he holds only as mortgagee, the mortgagor’s right of redemption is barred and the mortgagee’s title becomes absolute. Roberts v. Littlefield, 48 Maine, 61; McPherson v. Hayward, 81 Maine, 329; Frisbee v. Frisbee, 86 Maine, 444. It is obviously the adverse 'character of the possession, however, and not the mere fact of possession by the mortgagee for twenty years that will operate to convert the mortgage title into an absolute one. Twenty years’ possession by the mortgagee after condition broken may raise a presumption of foreclosure, but it is by no means conclusive. It is the nature of the mortgagee’s occupancy which determines the question of the mortgagor’s right to redeem. To constitute a bar to such right it must appear that the mortgagor’s possession is unequivocally adverse to the mortgagor, or to those claiming under him. 2 Jones on Mort. 1144 — 1156; McPherson v. Hayward, 81 Maine, supra. “The general rule in equity,” says* Judge Story, “is that twenty years’ exclusive possession by a mortgagee is a bar to the equity of redemption. The exceptions are where there have been during that period acts done, or solemn acknowledgments made by the mortgagee, recognizing the title as a mere mortgage.” Dexter v. Arnold, 3 Sumn. 152.

In the case at bar it is not in controversy that the mortgagor William Brown, having made default -with respect to the payment of [255]*255both the principal and interest of the mortgage debt, left the place in March, 1842, and took up his residence in Rockland.

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Bluebook (online)
56 A. 844, 98 Me. 250, 1903 Me. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/munro-v-barton-me-1903.