Pasco v. Gamble

15 Fla. 562
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 15 Fla. 562 (Pasco v. Gamble) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pasco v. Gamble, 15 Fla. 562 (Fla. 1876).

Opinion

WESTCOTT, J.,

delivered the opinion of tbe court..'

1 This bill is ñléd’by trustees, Robert H. Gamble and Wil•liam G.'-Poolfe; mortgagees, -against the mortgagor, James E. Anderson;-'and-'Shmuel Pasco, -an execution purchaser of" [563]*563the equity of redemption in a tract of land in Jefferson county. The sale under the execution was had subsequent to default in payment of the mortgage debt. The bill prayed a simple foreclosure and sale. After appearance and default, there was a decree pro confesso against the mortgagor. The execution purchaser answered that one of the mortgagees, William Gr. Poole, was in possession of the land during the years 1870, 1871, 1872 and 1873 ; that from several interviews with him he derived the impression that the mortgage debt was paid from the rents and profits of the land, and prayed that an account thereof might be taken and applied to the mortgage debt. The court, after notice to the purchaser and his tenants for the year 1875, appointed a receiver of the rents, directing the tenants to attorn to him, such order to become effective in the event the execution purchaser failed to give bond to account therefor. This order is made upon petition by the mortgagees setting, up insolvency, that the land was entirely inadequate as security for the debt, and a failure upon the part of the execution purchaser to pay the taxes for the year 1874. The petition also alleged that the mortgagor, before the purchase under the execution, had removed beyond the State, ■ and that the whole amount of the principal and interest of the debt was due. Erom this order the execution • purchaser takes an appeal,' and the general question presented for our determination is, whether, under the circumstances stated, a receiver of the rents and profits of “the mortgaged property can be had in this State.

The rents and profits, of which a receiver was here appointed at the suit of the mortgagee, are rents due the execution purchaser of the equity of redemption under, contracts with parties made subsequent to his entry under the sheriff’s deed, which was after default in the payment of the mortgage debt or any part of the interest thereof. While such purchaser is permitted by the mortgagee to remain in possession, collecting the rents, he takes them without lia[564]*564bility to account. In the matter of account be occupies the same relation to the mortgagee that the mortgagor in possession would; (6 Rich. 311; 10 Met. 112-15 ;) and the rule is, that a mortgagor in possession is not accountable to the mortgagee for profits resulting-from his own use, or for rents received of tenants before and independent of any action by the mortgagee looking to the assertion of such claim, .while a mortgagee in possession is always, in .the absence of some special contract, accountable for such rents to the mortgagor. (1 Hilliard on Mort. 104, 134, 35, 45.) The mortgagee, by virtue of the simple existence of the mortgage, is not to have the rents under leases, either before or subsequent to the mortgage. Says Bayley, Justice, in case of a lease made after the mortgage: “ The tenant may consider the mortgagor his landlord, so long as the mortgagee allows the mortgagor to continue in possession and receive the rents.” (9 B. & C. 251; 11 Ad. & Ell. 307.) Here the rents became due after the institution of the foreclosure suit, and the receiver was appointed with instructions to collect the rents due and accrued before any payment to the purchaser was made. In such cases, upon an allegation of insolvency of the mortagor and inadequacy of the property as security for the payment of the debt, the general practice in some of the States is to appoint a receiver in order that the rents due, and to become due, might be applied to the mortgage debt. In other States, because of the remedies which the moi;tgagee of. the legal estate has in his own hands, equity will not appoint a receiver on his application . In this State, as in New York, the mortgagee is deprived of any remedy by which he can acquire possession; and unless our statute deprives a eourt of equity of its power to appoint such receiver at the suit of the mortgagee, we think the New York rule should prevail, and that a case is here made for a receiver according to that practice, and to the practice of the English courts in analogous cases.

Our statute, (Chap. 525, p. 104, acts of 1853,) provides [565]*565that a mortgagee is a specific lien upon property, and that the mortgagee is incapable of acquiring possession until after decree of foreclosure, and then only by bidding and outbidding all competitors in market.

It is clear from this statute that any right which the mortgagee had at law to possession of the -mortgaged property, until after decree of foreclosure and a purchase at the sale, is destroyed; and the question is, whether the right of the, mortgagee to the rents here claimed must not fail,- both in law and equity, when his right to possession under the statute ceases to exist. The relation between mortgagor and mortgagee is essentially changed. A mortgagor entitled to possession by statute cannot be tenant at will to .the mortgagee. Ejectment cannot lie against him, because he is entitled to possession. ‘There is no action of trespass for mesne profits, - because he is no trespasser. There is no action of assumpsit, for there is no promise, express or implied, to pay.

On the contrary, the implied agreement, as remarked*by Chief Justice Parker, when speaking of a mortgagor right, fully in possession, is, “ that the mortgage# shall take the rents and profits to his own use until he shall be lawfully dispossessed.” In the State of New York, the action, of ejectment-by the mortgagee has been abolished. He has. at law been denied all remedy to get possession, and Chancellor Kent remarks that the consequence is, that a “court of law would seem to have no jurisdiction over the mortgagee’s interest. He is not entitled to the possession, nor to the rents and profits, and he is turned over entirely to the courts of equity.” (4 Kent, 159; 15 Mass. 270; 1 Pick. 90 ; 9 Serg. & Rawle, 311.) Lord Hardwicke,, in Mead vs. Lord Orrery, 3 Atk. 211, says, “as to the mortgagor, I do not know any instance, where he keeps in possession,, that he is liable to account for the rents, and', profits to the mortgagee, for the mortgagee ought to take the legal, remedies to get into, the possession.” ■. In this State thore is, no. legal [566]*566remedy for the mortgagee to get into possession ; the mortgagor is entitled to possession, and, as a consequence, to tlie rents and profits, without account at law. We are entirely satisfied with this conclusion, so far as the legal rights of the parties are concerned; but is it true that, because the legal title is in the mortgagor, and he has all the rights of ownership, subject to the equitable lien, that in no case can equity appoint a receiver of the rents and profits ? The existence of the legal right of entry and possession upon the part of the mortgagee at common law, we have seen, gave him extensive legal rights as to rents and profits, which, by virtue of his legal title, he acquired by entry or notice. These, as was said by Chancellor Kent, are gone, but at the same time the mortgage is a lien by contract. It is an encumbrance, and we are still met with the question, will not a court of equity, for the security and protection of the mortgagee— the holder of this encumbrance — appoint a receiver of the rents and profits of the property upon which it exists, in such a case as is here made %

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Bluebook (online)
15 Fla. 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pasco-v-gamble-fla-1876.