Torrey v. Deavitt

53 Vt. 331
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 53 Vt. 331 (Torrey v. Deavitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Torrey v. Deavitt, 53 Vt. 331 (Vt. 1881).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Ross, J.

The statute prescribes the formalities with which a deed of real estate, to secure the payment of a loan of money, must [333]*333be executed in order to be effective against subsequent purchasers and attaching creditors; among which is the record of the deed in the land records of the town where the real estate is situated. It also prescribes two methods by which such a deed may be discharged; first: “ by an entry on the margin of the record thereof, in the record of deeds, signed by the mortgagee, or his attorney, executor, administrator, or assignee, acknowledging satisfaction of the mortgage ; ” and declares, “ such entry shall have the same effect as a deed of release duly acknowledged and recorded ; ” and .secondly : “ by the mortgagee or his attorney, executor, administrator or assignee, acknowledging payment' thereof by an entry on the mortgage deed, signing the same, and affixing his seal thereto, in the presence of one pr more witnesses, which entry, upon being recorded on the margin of the record of such mortgage in the record of deeds, shall discharge such mortgage and perpetually bar all actions brought thereon.” The mortgage sought to be foreclosed by the orator, was discharged upon the. record in the method first set forth as of the date of January 21, 1871, by the mortgagee, who then had the mortgage in his possession, and who subsequently delivered it to the mortgagor, of whom the defendant Deavitt is administrator. At the same date the mortgage to the National Life Insurance Company, now owned by defendant Almira Cummings, was executed, and that company advanced the mortgagors $2,500, with which to pay off the mortgage in suit, and another mortgage resting thereon. The company paid the money to thfe mortgagee, E. M. Gifford, on his agreement to discharge the mortgage sought to be foreclosed, if he did not then discharge it, and his further agreement to have the other mortgage on the premises discharged. The other mortgage was properly discharged a few days thereafter. From the entry on the record, and the evidence in the case, we think the Gifford mortgage was discharged the day it purports to be, January 21, 1871. There is no such proof as would warrant the court in reforming the record of the discharge; neither is there a ■ balance of testitimony in favor of the claim that it was made subsequently to that date. It seems'incredible that Mr. Gifford should have hesitated to make the discharge that day, because some of the notes se[334]*334cured thereby were unpaid, when he had the money in his hands with which to pay all said notes, and according to his account all of the notes were subject to his control, and thereafter have made the discharge so readily, when he had used up the money appropriated for the payment of the two notes in suit, in payment of another demand, on which he was holden as surety for the mortgagor, and left these notes outstanding. Nor can it be well accounted for, that Mr. Bingham should have advanced the $2,500 to the mortgagee for the Insurance Company, if the mortgagee had declined to discharge his mortgage upon the record. He might well have felt safe in trusting to Gifford’s agreement to see to paying over the money on the small mortgage to Welch, and obtaining the discharge thereof. The mortgagee did not produce 'the notes secured by the mortgage at the time he discharged the mortgage on the record, but informed the agent of the Insurance Company that the notes were within his control. We are satisfied that all the mortgage notes were then within his control, notwithstanding he had then sold the two now sought to be foreclosed to his father-in-law, whose estate the orators represent. Gifford, the mortgagee, held such relations to the intestate, that if he had carried the money furnished by the Insurance Company for the payment of these notes to him, he would have received the money, although the notes were not then due. The notes are payable to bearer, and passed by delivery to the iutestate, and passed as incident thereto, — no agreement being shown to the contrary — a proportionate interest in the mortgage security. For this purpose no assignment of the mortgage was necessary. Thenceforward the mortgagee held the mortgage pro tanto, in trust for the benefit of the intestate. There is no explanation of how or when the endorsement, on each of the notes, signed by E. M. Gifford, by which he warrants the notes good until paid, was placed on the notes. A suspicion is raised that it might have been done when he concluded to use the money furnished for their payment to pay another debt, on which he was holden as surety for the mortgagor, and that the intestate was made aware of the fact of the discharge of the mortgage by E. M. Gifford on the record, consented to the same, and took the endorsement in substitution for [335]*335the mortgage security. E. M. Gifford was then supposed to be financially responsible. Unless something of the kind transpired it is difficult to account for the non-action of the intestate in his lifetime, or for the delivery of the mortgage by E. M. Gifford to the mortgagors. But if nothing of the kind transpired, on the orator’s theory, the intestate left the mortgage within the control of the mortgagee, and thus placed it in the power of the mortgagee to practice a fraud upon an innocent party, by discharging the same, either upon the record, or upon the mortgage deed itself. Although the mortgagee did not produce the notes secured by the mortgage when he discharged the same upon the record, there is nothing to impeach the good faith of the Insurance Company in the transaction. Its agent was told by the mortgagee that he had all the mortgage notes within his control, and it furnished him the money in payment of then! all. On his own testimony the mortgagee did not disclose to the agent of the Insurance Company that he ■ held the mortgage security in trust for the intestate, or any other person. He excused the non-production of the mortgage notes by saying they were in his control, though not present, and the mortgagors were satisfied therewith. When the purchaser acts in good faith, and has no notice that the vendor holds the property in trust, he obtains a valid title to the property, paramount to the undisclosed trust. Keyes et ux. v. Wood et al., 21 Vt. 331; 1 Jones Mortg., s. 820. In this section the author states the well-recognized doctrine, that the mortgage is an incident to the mortgage debt; that no assignment thereof is necessary between the parties or others having actual notice of the assignment of the notes ; and that the mortgagor is legally charged with knowlédge that this may be done, and should require the production of the notes before paying the mortgage debt on a discharge of the mortgage, and then says : “ But if the moi’tgagee, while the notes are in the hands of the assignee, cancels the mortgage on receiving payment from the mortgagor, who then makes conveyance, or a new mortgage, to another person, who acts in good faith and in ignorance of the fact that the original mortgage had not been paid to the proper party, such purchaser or subsequent mortgagee has the better title. Such subsequent [336]*336purchaser or mortgagee is not bound to take notice of an assignment by transfer of the notes alone. The assignee of the notes can easily protect himself by requiring an assignment of the mortgage and recording it, and thus give notice of.

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Bluebook (online)
53 Vt. 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/torrey-v-deavitt-vt-1881.