Peaslee v. Evans

133 A. 448, 82 N.H. 313, 1926 N.H. LEXIS 28
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedMay 4, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 133 A. 448 (Peaslee v. Evans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peaslee v. Evans, 133 A. 448, 82 N.H. 313, 1926 N.H. LEXIS 28 (N.H. 1926).

Opinion

Peaslee, C. J.

The statute relating to mortgages to secure future advances (P. S., c. 139, s. 3) does not require that money promised to be paid shall be advanced when the mortgage is given. If the event upon which the money is to be paid at a later date is fully agreed upon, a present mortgage to secure a note for the agreed sum is valid if the event afterwards occurs and payment is made as agreed. The statute does not apply to such a mortgage. Future payments are not always future advances. No one would think that a mortgage to protect a surety was invalid under this statute because the payments by the surety were made after the mortgage was executed. Belknap v. Wendell, 31 N. H. 92. Payments made under other contracts are not in any worse plight.

This construction was put upon the statute in 1869: “The statute was ‘intended to cut off all mortgages for the payment of security of any money or other things, which were not contracted for, or the liability for which did not attach at the time of the execution of the mortgage.’ No mortgage ‘can be valid for any future advances or accounts between the parties, which were not a matter of right and positive obligation between them at the time of the mortgage.’ ‘A mere provision for prospective advances or accounts, resting in the discretion of the parties or either of them’ is within the misehief aimed at by the statute. See Story, J., in Leeds v. Cameron, 3 Sumner 488, p. 494.

“We do not think the statute should receive a construction which would invalidate any other class of mortgages than that just described, (see Weed v. Barker, 35 N. H. 386; Richards v. Railroad, 44 N. H. 127;) and it is apparent that the mortgage in the present case is not one of that class.- The plaintiff’s liability to make the *315 payments, and perform the labor, requisite to make up the sum of $1500, attached to him at the time of the execution of the mortgage, and was then a matter of positive obligation between the mortgagor and mortgagee. There was no provision for prospective advances resting in the discretion of ,the parties or either of them. The plaintiff’s promise to make certain payments and perform certain labor constituted a sufficient consideration for the mortgagor’s absolute note.” Stearns v. Bennett, 48 N. H. 400, 401, 402.

“The amount of the advance, eighteen hundred dollars, the contingency upon which it was to be made, and the obligation of the mortgagees to make it, were definitely agreed upon at the execution and delivery of the note and mortgage, and the agreement was after-wards performed, and the mortgage is not within the New Hampshire statute prohibiting mortgages to secure future advances.” Fessenden v. Taft, 65 N. H. 39, 40. See also Abbott v. Thompson, 58 N. H. 255; Staniels v. Whitcher, 72 N. H. 451.

The cases in this state treating mortgages to secure future advances as good only from the time the advances were made (Richards v. Railroad, 44 N. H. 127; International Trust Co. v. Company, 70 N. H. 118; Staniels v. Whitcher, 72 N. H. 451) all involved situations where there was no existing obligation to advance the money. In the first two cases mortgages were made to secure issues of bonds, and the subsequent purchasers of those securities had no relation whatever to the transactions of giving the mortgages. In Staniels v. Whitcher, supra, the mortgagor had the option to take the advances or not, and this feature was deemed to be of importance. The payments were future advances in the legal sense and all these cases are within the statute.

The suggestion in the latter case that the holding in International Trust Co. v. Company, supra, disregards the doctrine laid down in Stearns v. Bennett, 48 N. H. 400, is based upon the assumption that the earlier case is authority for the proposition that mortgages to secure future advances are always invalid. But that case, and the argument in the opinion, are concerned with the question what is or is not a mortgage which is within the meaning of the statute. 1 Jones Mtgs. (7th ed.), s. 366. It being concluded that the instrument then under consideration was not such a mortgage, because a present obligation was created, there was no occasion to go further and determine whether, if the mortgage had been within the provisions of the statute, it could still have been upheld upon the ground that the advances were made before the adverse claim at *316 tacbed to the mortgaged property. The Stearns case does not hold that such a theory would be untenable, and there is nothing in the opinion to suggest that conclusion. This view is strengthened by the fact that Richards v. Railroad, supra, is there cited with approval.

The authorities here are decisive that the mortgages in question were not made to secure future advances, within the meaning of the statute. The unequivocal interpretation of the statute in 1869, and the subsequent reenactments without change (G. L., c. 136, s. 3;, P. S., c. 139, s. 3), establish the legislative intent. Waterman v. Lebanon, 78 N. H. 23, and cases cited. The question is, how far these mortgages are valid at common law. “No statute regulates the making of such mortgages [of real estate] except our statute which prohibits mortgages of real estate for the security of future advances or liabilities.” Belknap v. Wendell, 31 N. H. 92, 99, 100; Prescott v. Hayes, 43 N. H. 593, 599.

While the rule is generally recognized that advancements made without contractual obligation to that end are not preferred over intervening liens of which the mortgagee had notice (Hopkinson v. Rolt, 9 H. L. C. 514), yet where there is such an obligation existing when the mortgage is given, a different rule has been adopted. “ ... it may be said with accuracy that when the senior mortgagee has bound himself to make advances for a clearly defined object, he immediately becomes a bona fide purchaser to the full amount of his contractual liability, exactly as if the entire consideration has passed on the execution and delivery of the mortgage. 1 Jones Mtgs. (7th .ed.), s. 370.” Kuhn v. Company, 101 O. St. 34.

“The bank, if it bound itself absolutely to advance the stipulated sum by installments would have been secured to the amount fixed by the mortgages which would have outranked the liens, even if its officers knew at the time of making advancements that the buildings were in process of construction and that the mechanics, among whom were the petitioners, were actually at work upon the premises. Gerrity v. Wareham Savings Bank, 202 Mass. 214.” Gray v. McClellan, 214 Mass. 92.

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Bluebook (online)
133 A. 448, 82 N.H. 313, 1926 N.H. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peaslee-v-evans-nh-1926.