Thompson v. Ela

58 N.H. 490
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedAugust 5, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 58 N.H. 490 (Thompson v. Ela) 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
Thompson v. Ela, 58 N.H. 490 (N.H. 1878).

Opinion

*491 Clark, J.

On the sixteenth day o£ March, 1868, the plaintiff was the owner of three undivided sevenths of a farm in Lebanon, in her own right, and her husband, Franklin O. Thompson, was the owner of the remaining four sevenths, and on that day the defendant Ela loaned to the plaintiff’s husband the sum of $1700, and the plaintiff and her husband executed and delivered to the defendant a note for the $1700, and a mortgage upon the Lebanon farm to secure the same. The plaintiff now asks to be relieved from the mortgage, claiming that a mortgage executed by a married woman of her separate estate, to secure a debt of her husband, is void.

Whatever may be the construction of c. 32 of the Laws of 1876, which we are not now called upon to determine, it is certain that prior to the passage of that act there was no statute of this state limiting or abridging the rights and powers of married women relative to their separate estates. The power of the wife to convey her separate estate, by joining in a deed with her husband, has never been questioned. Gordon v. Haywood, 2 N. H. 402, 404; Woodward v. Seaver, 38 N. H. 29; Eaton v. George, 40 N. H. 258. It is also settled in this state that a married woman can bind her separate estate by mortgage. Albin v. Lord, 39 N. H. 196; Batchelder v. Sargent, 47 N. H. 262, 264; Messer v. Smyth, 58 N. H. 298. The authorities are numerous and substantially uniform in support of the validity of a married woman’s mortgage of her separate estate made to secure a debt of her husband’s. In Stephen v. Beall, 22 Wall. 329, 337, Hunt, J., in delivering the opinion of the court, says, — “ The doctrine that a married woman has the power to charge her separate estate with the payment of her husband’s debts, or any other debt contracted by her as principal or as surety, has been uniformly sustained for a long period of time.” In Jones on Mortgages it is said, whatever conflict there may be in the authorities as to the ability of a wife to charge herself personally for anjr debts not contracted for her own benefit, there is a general unanimity in holding that a mortgage of her property may be enforced, whether made for her benefit or not; and that a married woman may make a valid mortgage of her separate property to secure the payment of the debt of her husband. Jones on Mort., ss. 109, 113. To the same effect are 1 Hilliard on Mort. 6, 7; Eaton v. Nason, 47 Me. 132; Bartlett v. Bartlett, 4 Allen 440; Thacher v. Churchill, 118 Mass. 108; Willard v. Eastham, 15 Gray 328; Yale v. Dederer, 18 N. Y. 265; Ins. Co. v. Babcock, 42 N. Y. 626.

If a married woman has the same power over her separate estate as if she were unmarried to convey it by mortgage, we see no reason why she may not mortgage it to secure her husband’s debt, if she chooses voluntarily to do so, in the absence of any statutory prohibition ; and we are of opinion that the mortgage of the plaintiff and her husband to the defendant was valid and binding upon the estate of the plaintiff in the Lebanon farm. Babbitt v. Morrison, 58 N. H. 419.

The plaintiff claims that the mortgage is void for uncertainty in *492 the description of the premises. The error consists in using the name of Jonathan Howe instead of John Howe as a former owner of the premises, and the person who held a life lease upon the same. In other respects the description is correct. The error is apparent upon an examination of the deeds referred to in the description : the plaintiff and her husband were living upon the premises when the mortgage was executed ; Jonathan Howe had never conveyed to them or either of them any land in Lebanon ; the premises were the same conveyed by Richard S. Howe and wife, as stated in the mortgage; and, rejecting that portion of the description which is erroneous, sufficient remains to designate the premises intended to be conveyed. Drew v. Drew, 28 N. H. 489; Eastman v. Knight, 35 N. H. 551; Packard v. Putnam, 57 N. H. 43, 51. The plaintiff also claims that the mortgage is void, because, as she alleges, she did not understand when the mortgage was executed that it included any of her own land ; and the case finds that she supposed and understood the mortgage included only her husband’s four sevenths of the land, and that she did not intend to give a mortgage of any part of her land. It also appears that the defendant was guilty of no fraud in procuring the mortgage, and was ignorant of the plaintiff’s understanding in regard to it, until a short time before he commenced proceedings for foreclosure. Can the plaintiff avoid the mortgage because she was ignorant of its contents ? It appearing that no fraud was practised upon her, and that she was under no restraint or coercion, we think she cannot. The defendant, in good faith, relying upon the secuiity of the mortgage, loaned his money to the plaintiff’s husband, which has not been repaid. He was not in fault for the plaintiff’s ignorance of the contents of the mortgage. If she neglected to read it or to ascertain its contents, it was her own negligence. No deception was practised upon her, and there is no principle of equity upon which she can avoid the mortgage upon the facts stated. White v. Graves, 107 Mass. 325; Faucett v. Currier, 109 Mass. 79; Thacher v. Churchill, 118 Mass. 108; Withington v. Warren, 10 Met. 434; McCobb v. Richardson, 24 Me. 82; Kerr on Fraud and Mistake 407; Comegys v. Clarke, 44 Md. 108; II Washburn on Real Property 576, s. 17, where it is said, “ If a party can read, it is not open to him, after executing it, to insist that the terms of a deed were different from what he supposed them to be when he signed it. Nor could one who is unable to read be admitted to object that he was misled in signing a deed, unless he had requested to hear it read, and this had not been done, or a false reading had been made to him, or its contents falsely stated.” See, also, Story’s Eq., s. 146.

March 8, 1875, the defendant, at the house of the plaintiff, on the mortgaged premises, in the presence of two witnesses, declared that he entered peaceably for the purpose of foreclosing his mortgage, and at the same time the plaintiff and her husband executed an agreement in writing, under seal, that the plaintiff would occupy the premises as tenant of the defendant for the term of one year, paying rent *493 and taxes, and at the end of the year quit the same. Subject to the plaintiff’s exception, the defendant put in evidence the affidavits of the defendant as to the entry for foreclosure, and of one witness only, sworn Feb.

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Bluebook (online)
58 N.H. 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-ela-nh-1878.