Thornberg v. Jorgensen

60 F.2d 471, 1 V.I. 606, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2545
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJuly 11, 1932
DocketNo. 4811
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 60 F.2d 471 (Thornberg v. Jorgensen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thornberg v. Jorgensen, 60 F.2d 471, 1 V.I. 606, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2545 (3d Cir. 1932).

Opinion

WOOLLEY, Circuit Judge.

This appeal concerns broadly the right of a mortgagor under the law of the Virgin Islands to redeem property sold under foreclosure proceedings, and involves particularly the questions, first, what was the law of the Islands in respect to the right of redemption in force at the time of the execution of the mortgages and at the time of sale, and next, if there were different laws at these times, which is applicable in this instance?

From the well pleaded case we extract these facts:

(a) In 1918, Svend Jorgensen executed in favor of N. W. Thornberg a mortgage for Fres. 75,000 ($15,000), being a first lien upon three estates, “Longford,” “Castle Nu-gent,” and “The Springs,” situate, in St. Croix, Virgin Islands, and upon live stock found thereon.

(b) At or about the same time Svend Jorgensen executed in favor of the Plantation Company of the Danish West Indies, Limited, Copenhagen, a mortgage for Fres. 55,000 ($11,000), being a second lien upon the same three estates and lafer assigned to O. H. Schmieglow of Denmark, and on his death distributed to his widow, Mrs. O. II. Schmieglow. The record of the mortgage shows payment of Fres. 10,000 on account, and the petition alleges other payments which have reduced the principal debt to less than Fres. 25,000 ($5,000).

(e) In 1919, Svend Jorgensen executed [472]*472in favor of N. W. Thornberg another mortgage for Eres. 6,000 ($1,200), being a first lien upon the estate known as “LaPrevalois,” and upon the live stock thereon.

After the death of Svend Jorgensen, the District Court of the Virgin Islands in 1924 awarded these four estates to his wife, Elinor Jorgensen, with full power of disposal.

(d) In 1927, Elinor Jorgensen executed a mortgage in favor of N. W. Thornberg for Eres. 23,700 ($4,740), being a lien upon all four estates, a third lien upon the three estates mentioned in the first and second mortgages (a & b) and a second lien upon the estate mentioned in the third mortgage (e).

Following default of interest, Thornberg filed in the District Court of the Virgin Islands a petition of foreclosure in the nature of a bill of foreclosure in equity against Elinor Jorgensen, as mortgagor and terre tenant of the four estates (a, b, e & d) and against the Plantation Company of the Danish West Indies, mortgagee under the second mortgage (b), and Mrs. O. H. Schmieglow, the present holder thereof, alleging a balance due upon the first mortgage (a) of Fres. 81,-300 ($16,260), a balance of Fres. 6,722.50 ($1,344.50) due upon the third mortgage (e) and a balance of Fres. 25,870 ($5,174) due upon the fourth mortgage (d), together with costs and attorneys’ fees, making a total in excess of Fres. 106,095.50 ($22,778.00).

Elinor Jorgensen appeared and contested the mortgage foreclosure.

The court appointed a receiver and later issued execution. This was in 1931. The estates and the cattle upon them were sold to Thornberg, the petitioning mortgagee, for Fres. 106,000 ($21,200). After exceptions by the respondent, Elinor Jorgensen, claiming a year within which to redeem the property, the court confirmed the sale and ordered a deed by the sheriff to the purchaser without right of redemption. From this decree of confirmation Elinor Jorgensen has appealed, raising several more or less related questions. The first is:

Did the local law in force in the Virgin Islands when the United States acquired them on the seventeenth day of January, 1917, grant to a mortgagor the right to redeem property sold under foreclosure of a mortgage within a period of one year from the date of sale?

This ouestion is complicated not only by the usual disturbing problem of finding what local Danish laws remain in force in the Islands when “compatible with the changed sovereignty,” 39 Stat. chapter 171, title 48, USCA, § 1392, but by the necessity of searching for the law in force before the acquisition of the Islands by the United States and finding it in human repositories — the memory of one-time Danish subjects — rather than upon statute books.

The appellant cites the Code of Christian V as authority for the right of redemption extended to Danish subjects residing in the Island of St. Croix. That code was in effect from 1646, about the time the Islands were being settled by the Danes, and expressly provided for redemption within a year and a day by the mortgagor of property sold under mortgage foreclosure. But the provisions of that code have through nearly three centuries been largely repealed, modified and supplemented. It is not shown whether the redemption feature was in force when the first two mortgages (a & c) were given Thornberg, and, more particularly, it is not shown that the Code of Christian V with its right of redemption was ever extended to-the Virgin Islands.

The appellant relies more strongly upon the “Placard of April 22,1817” issued by the King of Denmark. This placard deals mainly with the cancellation of a junior mortgage when the proceeds of foreclosure sale do not reach it, somewhat in the nature of our state laws which provide generally that a sale under a first mortgage discharges the lien of the second. It says nothing about a right of redemption but provides for “three auctions.”' This last feature was not, according to the-record, raised by an exception to the sale or otherwise directed to the attention of the District Court, nor can we find it in an assignment of error. Anyhow, there is nothing in evidence that proves this placard was ever extended to the Virgin Islands.

There follows the Code of Civil Procedure of March 26, 1909, which, whatever its bearing, all admit was never extended to the Islands. Thus on the appellant’s side there is no affirmative showing that a right of redemption existed under the law of the Virgin Islands at the time of the execution of the first and third mortgages (a & c). This leaves the appellant to her rights under the Code of St. Croix, passed by the Colonial Council on August 1, 1920, which expressly gives a mortgagor a right to redeem within a year. The citation of this law raises two other questions: One, whether it is retroactive- and therefore embraces the first and third mortgages (a & e) previously given in 1918 and 1919; the other, whether it controls the [473]*473sale under the fourth mortgage (d) subsequently given in 1927.

The appellee-mortgagee, having taken the nega Live side of the question of the right of redemption, cites and relies upon the Danish Act of 1916, a date prior to the execution of all mortgages in question, which, saying nothing about a right of redemption, provides that, within four weeks after sale an indefeasible title vests in the purchaser. Here, too, there is nothing of a record character to show that this act was extended to the Virgin Islands and there Core to prove that the right oí redemption was not within the Island law. We shall therefore disregard the acts of 1817 and 1916 and turn to the evidence.

C. G. Thiele, Esquire, an attorney, long a resident of St. Thomas and learned in local law, was produced to state the law of the subject. After qualifying, he testified:

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Bluebook (online)
60 F.2d 471, 1 V.I. 606, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thornberg-v-jorgensen-ca3-1932.