Stewart v. Crosby

50 Me. 130
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 1, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 50 Me. 130 (Stewart v. Crosby) 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
Stewart v. Crosby, 50 Me. 130 (Me. 1863).

Opinion

The opinion concurred in by a majority of the Court was-drawn up by

Davis, J.

The defendant, having claims against one Charles Hanson, commenced suits thereon, and caused his right of redeeming certain real estate, previously mortgaged by him, to be attached, September 15, 1848. Judgments were recovered February 17, 1854; executions were issued March 17, and Hanson’s right of redemption seized thereon the same day; and, on April 22, of the same year, the officer duly sold to the defendant all of Hanson’s right to redeem, which he had at the time of the attachment.

October 23, 1854, the defendant sold to the plaintiff, by a quitclaim deed, "all the right, title, and interest acquired by him by virtue of his deed” given to him by the sheriff' upon the sale referred to. The plaintiff, upon inquiry, afterwards ascertained that Hanson, after the attachment, and before the seizure of his right of redemption upon the executions, had fully paid the mortgage debt. But the mortgage had not been discharged, either by an entry upon the record, or in any other maimer.

The plaintiff claims that such payment was itself a discharge of the mortgage, so that Hanson’s title was no longer a right of redemption, which could be sold by the sheriff, but a fee, upon which the execution should have been extended. And he has brought this suit, to recover back the purchase money, on account of the failure of title.

The defendant docs not concede that the plaintiff would [132]*132be entitled to recover, if there was a failure of title, as he has alleged, as he gave a mere release, with no covenants of title. But he contends that the mortgage was not discharged hy payment, merely; and that, if the mortgage debt had been paid, it was a benefit, ancl not an injury, to the plaintiff.

In the case of Martin v. Mowlin, 2 Burrow, 978, Lord Mansfield is reported to have said, "a mortgage is a charge upon the land, and whatever would give the money will carry the land along with it, to every.purpose. The estate in the land is the same thing as the money due upon it. It will be liable to debts. ” It will go to executors. ,* * The assignment of the debt, or the 'forgiving it, will draw the land after it, as a consequence, though the debt were forgiven only by parol,” &c.

The- case under consideration was a suit at law; and the confounding of principles of law with those which prevail in equity, only, is probably due to the reporter, whose; language it is. For he admits, in publishing his notes of cases, that he did not always take down the restrictions with which a proposition was qualified, "to guard against its being understood universally, or in too large a sense.” 1 Burr., 9.

It is worthy of notice that in that case, as generally in English mortgages, the condition was, that, upon performance, the mortgagee should reconvey the premises:. — and not, as in this country, that the deed should be void. It would seem- therefore to be certain that payment on the law day would not have revested the title in the mortgager, without such reconveyance. Harrison v. Owen, 1 Atk., 520; 2 Cruise, (London ed.,) 110. Upon mortgages to be void upon performance, such as are usually given in the United States, it is everywhere conceded that payment before condition broken will divest the-mortgagee of his title, without reconveyance, or other discharge. 1 Washburne on Real Prop., 543; Whitcomb v. Simpson, 39 Maine, 21; Holman v. Bailey, 3 Met., 55.

In this country there has been a constant tendency to ap[133]*133ply the views attributed to Lord Mansfield indiscriminately, at equity, and in law. Sustained by such jurists as Chancellor Kent, Judge Story, and Mr. Greenleaf, it is not strange that the weight of authority should turn in that direction. But in Maine, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and in several other States, the old doctrines of the common law still prevail. Though in equity the mortgage is an incident, and the debt the principal thing, at law the mortgage is a conveyance of the title, to bo defeated upon a condition subsequent-. Unless thus defeated, the legal title is ir^ the mortgagee. He may assign the debt without the mortgage, in which case he holds the mortgage in trust for such assignee. Or, he may assign the mortgage without the debt, or, the mortgage to one, and the debt to another, the owner of the mortgage always holding in trust for the owner of the debt. So that the assignment of the debt operates as ■the equitable, but not as the legal assignment of the mortgage. And payment of the debt, after condition broken, does not divest the mortgagee of his legal title; but the mortgager must resort to equity for a release, or a reconveyance. These principles, though extensively denied in this country, are sustained by so many decisions in the States before referred to, that it is unnecessary to cite them. 1 Washburne, 553 ; 1 Hilliard on Mort., 476.

Mr. Greenleaf collects the authorities, in the first volume of his edition of Cruise, and in support of the opposite doctrine suggests that the acceptance of payment, after condition broken, is a waiver of the condition, and has the same effect as a. performance of it. 1 Greenl. Cruise, 595. But this is more specious than sound.

A waiver of the condition may operate to confer the same rights as a performance of it. This is the case in regard to bonds for the conveyance of real estate. But it does not follow that such a ivaiver can operate, by our laws, to convey or release a legal title to real estate. It cannot do so, in the case-of a mortgage, any more than of a bond. So that this theory, like all others in support of the doctrine, rests upon [134]*134a denial that the mortgagee has the legal title, until after foreclosure.

But another answer to it is, that such an acceptance of payment is not a waiver. A waiver is a voluntary relinquishment of some right. But the mortgagee relinquishes nothing in such a case. The mortgager pays it as a matter of right; and it is not at the option of the mortgagee whether it shall be paid or not, until the right of redemption expires. A receipt of payment after that would be a waiver of the forfeiture; but before forfeiture, the mortgager, by payment, acquires a right to a release, or a reconveyance, not on the ground of waiver, but of contract, and of law.

But though it is well settled in this State, that upon payment after condition broken, the legal estate remains in the mortgagee, until it is released, so that the mortgager cannot maintain a writ of entry against him; it is equally well settled that,' in such case, the mortgagee, not being in possession, cannot maintain such an action against the mortgager. Hadlock v. Bulfinch, 31 Maine, 247; Williams v. Thurlow, 31 Maine, 392. ‘ The reason assigned for this, is, that by our statutes, in all actions upon .mortgages, there must be a conditional judgment; and, if the debt has been paid, so that there cannot be such judgment, the demandant cannot recover at all. Wade v. Howard, 11 Pick., 289 ; Webb v. Flanders, 32 Maine, 175; Gray v. Jenks, 3 Mason, 520.

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Bluebook (online)
50 Me. 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-crosby-me-1863.