Tierney v. Citizens Savings Bank

7 R.I. Dec. 4
CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 26, 1930
DocketEq. No. 9778
StatusPublished

This text of 7 R.I. Dec. 4 (Tierney v. Citizens Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tierney v. Citizens Savings Bank, 7 R.I. Dec. 4 (R.I. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

BAKER, J.

Pleard on bill, and answer in the nature of a cross-bill.

The case, as presented, depends largely on questions of law, the facts being practical!y undisputed.

The complainant is the wife of the respondent Tierney and has lived separate and apart from him for a number of years, following the decision of the court in a bed and board divorce case. The respondent Tierney and the respondent Mrs. Flanagan, who is his sister, are owners as tenants in common of a valuable parcel of real estate with, a 'building thereon, situated in Providence. The Citizens Savings Bank holds a first mortgage on this property.

The principal question raised in this proceeding is whether the complainant or the respondents Tierney and Flanagan are entitled to compel the bank to make an assignment of this mortgage, the conditions of which have been broken and under which foreclosure proceedings have been started.

The bill prays that the bank may be directed to assign the mortgage to a person designated by the complainant, and the cross-bill contains a prayer of the same general nature on behalf of the respondents Tierney and Flanagan.

The testimony shows that the complainant formally made a request upon the bank for-an assignment a few days prior to that made by the respondents, although it does appear that some more or less indefinite negotiations on behalf of the respondents had been taken up with the bank shortly prior to the time the complainant made her demand.

The complainant is relying chiefly on the right given her, as she claims, by virtue of .Sec. 7 of Chap. 302 of the General Laws of 1923, and in particular to that portion of the statute reading as follows:

“but a requisition of an incum-brancer shall prevail over a requisition of the mortgagor.”

This section has been construed by the Court in the case of Atwood vs. Arnold et al., 23 R. I. 609, which the complainant urges is decisive of the case now before the Court. She claims that as a wife, being possessed of an inchoate right of dower in her husband’s property, she is an incumbran-cer and' entitled to prevail in regard to the matter of the assignment of the mortgage over the respondents Tierney and Flanagan, who are owners and mortgagors.

The facts show that the complainant released her right of dower to the bank when the mortgage was executed, but did not sign the mortgage note and did not execute the mortgage as one of the grantors.

The respondents contend that the complainant is not an incumbrancer within the meaning of the statute and is not entitled to demand an assignment of the mortgage. They urge that the case of Atwood vs. Arnold, supra, should be distinguished from this case in two particulars. First, because here the complainant signed the mortgage releasing her right of dower, and, secondly, because there is no connection or privity between the complainant’s and the respondent Mrs. Flanagan’s interest in the property, there being two distinct respondents in the [5]*5ease at bar, viz. Tierney and Flanagan, each having separate estates and interests, whereas in the case above referred to there was only one principal respondent.

After careful consideration, the Court has come to the conclusion that these claims of the respondents can not be supported. In the first place, it appears that in the Atwood case there were two mortgages, one of which had been signed by .the complainant therein for the purpose of releasing her dower precisely in the same manner as the complainant has acted here. Further, it seems well settled by numerous decisions that a married woman who has released her dower in a mortgage deed may redeem the mortgage to prevent foreclosure, and in this connection the Court can see little distinction in principle between the redemption and the assignment of the mortgage.

iSee the authorities cited in Atwood vs. Arnold, supra.

As to the claim of two distinct respondents in the case before the Court, it should be kept in mind that these two, namely, Mr. Tierney and Mrs. Flanagan, are tenants in common of the property in question, each being entitled to an undivided one-half. That being so, Mrs. Flanagan’s interest is to a certain extent incumbered by the inchoate dower of the complainant.

It seems to the Court that under the decision in the Atwood case, this dower right is clearly in the nature of a lien upon the real estate and is considered an incumbrance to be protected, and the fact that there may be two individual respondents with separate interests or estates should not in principle defeat the complainant’s right.

The Court is therefore of the opinion that the case of Atwood vs. Arnold, supra, is directly in point with the case now under consideration.

See also United States vs. Certain Lands &c. 173 Fed. 676.

In the judgment of the Court the complainant is an incumbrancer within the meaning of the section of the statute above referred to and, as such, should prevail over the respondents in the matter of compelling the assignment of the mortgage.

On the principal issue before the Court, therefore, the prayers of the complainant’s bill are granted, and the prayers of the respondents’ cross-bill are denied and the cross-bill is dismissed.

During the trial several supplemental issues were raised for determination by the Court. The respondent bank requested that the Court allow to it counsel fees covering services in the present case. The bank, in the opinion of the Court, is entitled to charge to its mortgage account, by virtue of the language contained in the mortgage itself, such counsel fees, if any, as may be due its attorneys growing out of the foreclosure of the mortgage and such counsel fees should be paid by the party obtaining the assignment. In the judgment of the Court, however, such person should not be compelled to pay the counsel fees of the bank in the present proceeding. The language of the statute in question does not seem broad enough to cover this charge and, furthermore, the Court feels that equity does not require it, but that it would be proper to allow each party to pay for its own legal services in this case.

It is also suggested by the bank that the party prevailing herein pay into the registry of the court a sufficient sum to cover all the moneys due it in connection with the assignment of the mortgage. The complainant offers to do this in the 16th paragraph of her bill. The 'Court feels that she should do this as evidence of good faith and as an indication of readiness to consummate the assignment. The bank’s request in this regard is therefore granted. The exact amount and the time for making the deposit may be [6]*6determined when the decree is entered herein.

The complainant has questioned the propriety of allowing as foreclosure expenses a portion of the bill of the real estate agents who were employed by the bank to conduct the foreclosure sale. This part of the bill relates to certain expenses incurred in some advertising, showing that the foreclosure sale had been postponed.

The Court feels that these expenses were incurred by the real estate agents and by the bank in good faith and that it was deemed necessary to give such notice in order not to inconvenience or disappoint prospective purchasers at the sale.

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Related

Kempton v. Boyle
124 N.E. 431 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1919)
Ellis v. Sullivan
134 N.E. 695 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1922)
United States v. Certain Lands in Town of Portsmouth
173 F. 676 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Rhode Island, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 R.I. Dec. 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tierney-v-citizens-savings-bank-risuperct-1930.