Spaulding v. Quincy Trust Co.

7 Mass. App. Div. 440
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedOctober 28, 1942
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Mass. App. Div. 440 (Spaulding v. Quincy Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spaulding v. Quincy Trust Co., 7 Mass. App. Div. 440 (Mass. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinions

Keniston, J.

Between 1921 and 1925 Thomas Milton Taylor gave to the Quincy Trust Company four mortgages on a parcel of property in Quincy to secure the payment of three loans of $5000. each and a fourth loan of $2000. Taylor died in 1931 leaving a will naming his wife, Jane W. Taylor, as executrix. By this will the property on which the four loans were outstanding was devised to the widow and to a niece of the mortgagor. On June 10, 1932, the defendant filed a claim against the Estate based upon the four mortgage notes and on the same day commenced legal proceedings to collect said notes but no execution has issued in the suit. Early in 1938 the defendant topfc possession of the property under the fourth mortgage and advertised the foreclosure, setting forth in the notice that the property would be sold subject to the three prior mortgages, of $5000. each. On February 11,1938, the date of the foreclosure sale, there was due on account of the fourth mort[441]*441gage $2027.84, of " Which $1850. was principal, $33.93 was interest and" $143.91 the ■ foreclosure expenses, and there was due on that date $13,443.28 on account of the three prior mortgages. The defendant bought the interest in the property sold at the foreclosure sale for $5000. or $2972.16 more than the amount due on account of the fourth mortgage, including the foreclosure expenses. On February 25, 1938, the defendant sold the property free of mortgages to one Thomas F. Carey and as consideration for the conveyance, received a note in the sum of $19,500., secured by a mortgage on this property. On February 25, 1938, Jane Taylor, executrix of the Estate of the original mortgagor and one of the devisees of the property, made an assignment to the plaintiff of any claim she might have against the defendant for the difference between the amount due on the fourth mortgage and the price bid for the interest foreclosed at the sale and in this action the assignee seeks to recover this difference. The other devisee joined in this assignment. The court found for the plaintiff.

The defendant seasonably filed twenty-three requests for rulings and claims to be aggrieved by the denials and ruling upon certain requests as follows:

1. The proceeds of a foreclosure sale, after the satisfaction of the foreclosed mortgage, may be applied by the foreclosing mortgagee to the satisfaction of any prior mortgages held by it from the mortgagor on the foreclosed premises. Denied
3. The defendant, at the time of the foreclosure sale, was entitled to apply the funds in its hands from the foreclosure sale to the debts owed to it by the mortgagor. Denied I find that there were no debts owed by the mortgagor to the defendant after the sale.
4. The rights of the plaintiff in this action were only the rights of the mortgagor named in the four mort[442]*442gages, and no more, said - rights having been acquired from the mortgagor’s executrix. Denied Bights of the plaintiff’s assignor were acquired through will and not through executrix.
6. Until the notes held by the defendant were paid, the defendant had the right to apply any funds of the mortgagor or his successor coming into its hands to the satisfaction of the notes. Denied see 3.
7. There is still due the defendant, on account of the promissory notes of the plaintiff’s predecessor held by it, overdue and unpaid, an amount in excess of $10,000. Denied.
8. The defendant’s plea of payment in this action is sustained by its application of the proceeds of the foreclosure sale to the partial satisfaction of the unpaid notes of the plaintiff’s predecessor held by it. Denied.
10. There is no evidence in this case that the defendant intended to merge the prior, mortgages into the title acquired by it at the foreclosure sale. Denied.
11. There is ample evidence that the defendant did intend to allow its two estates to stand together. Denied there is some evidence but not “ample.”
13. "Whether or not there was a merger depends upon the best interest of the purchaser of the equity of redemption. Denied purchaser’s best interest does not necessarily coincide with his intent or with his acts.
14. “There is nothing in the case at bar which would justify a ruling that the defendant, because of its bid at the sale and of the sale to it, acquired an excess of money which in equity and good conscience he should pay to the mortgagor or his successor.”’ Denied.
15. Foreclosure is not payment, and does not discharge the mortgage debt, unless the parties so agree. Denied It is payment and a discharge to the extent of the-proceeds realised upon foreclosure.
19.. The extinguishment of a mortgage does not extinguish the mortgage note or debt.. Denied inapplicable see 3.
20.. A merger will not be effected or a debt extinguished when the mortgagee has an interest to. maintain. Denied see 13.

[443]*443The defendant also .claims to be aggrieved by the allowance and qualified rulings upon other requests as follows:

2. At the time of the foreclosure sale, the mortgagor was indebted to the defendant in excess of $13,000, which indebtedness was overdue and unpaid, and was owed by the mortgagor to the defendant. Allowed asswmmg this refers to a time when the sale was not completed.
5. At the time of the foreclosure, the defendant was the holder of four promissory notes from the mortgagor, which were overdue and unpaid in accordance with their terms in an amount of approximately $15,000. Allowed on assumption stated in 2.
12. There is no evidence of the intent of the plaintiff’s assignor. Allowed if material.
16. An assignment in fraud of creditors gives no right to the assignee named therein. Allowed if material.
17. The plaintiff took his instrument of assignment with full knowledge of the existence of the notes and claim of the defendant. Allowed if material.
22. A merger of the mortgage and the equity does not take place when the manifest interest of the mortgagee is to acquire the mortgage interest, especially where the interest of the mortgagee requires that he should continue to hold his two different titles distinct to protect him against some other interest which would intervene between the two estates in case they were held to be merged. Allowed however I find there was a merger as is shotvn by the fact that after purchasing at the foreclosure sale subject to the three prior mortgages the defendant shortly thereafter conveyed the premises free and clear of a/ny mortgage. In view of these facts I deem this request inapplicable.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Mass. App. Div. 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spaulding-v-quincy-trust-co-massdistctapp-1942.