Spottswood v. Herrick

22 Minn. 548, 1876 Minn. LEXIS 55
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedApril 24, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 22 Minn. 548 (Spottswood v. Herrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spottswood v. Herrick, 22 Minn. 548, 1876 Minn. LEXIS 55 (Mich. 1876).

Opinion

Berry, J.

The material facts set up in the complaint as the second cause of action are these : The plaintiff was owner ■in fee of certain real estate, subject to a mortgage to defendant, on which $167.00 was paid on account of interest. The ■defendant foreclosed the mortgage, by advertisement and ■sale of the mortgaged premises for the full amount of the principal and of the interest thereon from the date of the ■mortgage to the day of sale, besides costs of foreclosure, without applying the payment, or making any deduction for ¡it. The plaintiff, (in the language of his complaint,) “ in tthe exercise of his right to redeem said premises from said foreclosure sale, was compelled to pay, and did pay, * * * ■for the use and benefit of” the defendant, “ in addition to :all other sums, the said sum of $167.00, already paid.” '.The defendant interposed a general demurrer.

The statement of the cause of action demurred to is so flagrantly indefinite and uncertain that it might properly ■have been stricken out upon motion, or an amendment of it required, under Gen. St. ch. 66, § 90. But as against a ■demurrer we think it can- be sustained. The complaint may ibe taken as alleging, in substance, that the defendant foreclosed the mortgage upon the basis that no part of its prin[550]*550cipal or interest had been paid, and that the mortgaged premises were sold for the full amount of the principal and interest, as such amount, and not otherwise. This construction would embrace the implication that the defendant, in her notice of sale, claimed that the full amount of the principal and interest, as they appeared upon the face of the mortgage, was due at the date of the notice. By Gen. St. ch. 81, § 13, the plaintiff was authorized to redeem the property sold ‘ ‘ by paying the sum of money for which the same was sold, together with interest on the same.” This rendered it necessary for the defendant in this case, in order to save his property by a redemption, to pay the full amount of the principal and interest of the mortgage for which the-mortgaged premises were sold, without any deduction on account of the payment of the sum of $167.00. As it is alleged that the redemption money was paid £ £ for the use and benefit of ’ ’ defendant, it is to be presumed that she held the certificate of sale, and was, therefore, entitled to the redemption money, and that such money was paid to her directly, or to the sheriff for her. If it was paid to the latter, he had the right (unless stopped by some legal proceedings) to assume that the amount claimed in the notice of sale to be due upon the mortgage was correct, and to pay over the redemption money accordingly. Whether the defendant received the redemption money from the plaintiff directly, or through the sheriff, she would receive $167.00 for interest, which have already been paid to her, and which she ought to have deducted from the interest appearing to be due upon the face of the mortgage.

The case is, then, manifestly one in which the defendant has received money of the plaintiff, which, in good conscience and equity, she ought to pay over to him. Upon the pleadings, then, the plaintiff is entitled to maintain this action, in which he seeks to recover said sum of $167.00, as an action for money had and received.

Order affirmed.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Minn. 548, 1876 Minn. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spottswood-v-herrick-minn-1876.