Tuttle v. Jockmus

138 A. 804, 106 Conn. 683
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedOctober 5, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 138 A. 804 (Tuttle v. Jockmus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tuttle v. Jockmus, 138 A. 804, 106 Conn. 683 (Colo. 1927).

Opinion

Wheeler, C. J.

The complaint alleges that on July 3d, 1925, the plaintiff Tuttle, together with his wife, conveyed by warranty deed to Whitney Curry and five others, a tract of land in Florida. On July 25th, 1925, these grantees executed four promissory notes payable to the plaintiff Tuttle, each for $24,000, for the unpaid balance of the purchase price for this tract, and on the same date executed a mortgage to secure their payment. On November 3d, 1925, these grantees conveyed by warranty deed to Palmetto Properties, Incorporated, the above real estate, in which it assumed and agreed to pay the mortgage. On the same day, November 3d, 1925, Palmetto Properties, Incorporated, conveyed this property to Musick as *686 trustee, subject to this mortgage, which he as trustee assumed and agreed to pay. On the same date Musick as trustee, and Jockmus, the defendant, Lalley, and Musick individually, as cestuis que trustent, entered into an agreement, styled therein a declaration of trust. The agreement recites the transfer of this real estate to Musick, trustee, and that the title to it is to be held by him as trustee under this declaration of trust. It then recites that in consideration of the agreements therein and of the property transferred to Musick, trustee, for the purposes of the trust, Musick covenants that he will hold, use and manage the property and the profits arising from its use or sale, for the purposes of the trust and the benefit of the cestuis que trustent, subject to his right as trustee to manage, sell, convey, mortgage, and lease the property, and exercise over it, at his discretion, the powers of the trust for the duration of the trust, and that all moneys, funds and properties arising from the rents, leases or sale of the property, shall be held for the benefit of the cestuis que trustent and be divided as follows: Jockmus, 69.6 per cent; Lalley, 15.2 per cent, and Musick, 15.2 per cent. The cestuis que trustent agreed that they will pay their pro rata share of any and all expenses, including mortgage payment, in the proportions specified for sharing in the profits or proceeds.

The trust is limited to a period of one year, and may be terminated sooner by the sale and disposition of the proceeds to the cestuis que trustent in the proportion outlined, or it may be extended for a period mur tually agreed upon by the cestuis que trustent. In case of the death, disability or refusal of Musick to act as trustee, then the Manatee River Bank and Trust Company, or such person or persons as Jockmus and Lalley shall designate, shall be the successor in the trust, with like powers, and the title to the property *687 shall vest in such successor for the uses and benefits and upon the trusts above specified. This declaration was executed November 27th, 1925, and recorded December 3d, 1925.

Tuttle is the owner of the notes and mortgages referred to and they are wholly unpaid. One of the notes and the indebtedness thereby evidenced became due and payable July 25th, 1926. The notes bear interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum, payable semiannually from date. The mortgage provides: “It is covenanted and agreed, that in case this note or any instalment of interest is not paid when the same is due and payable, according to the tenor and effect of the notes . . . then the whole sum of principal and interest remaining unpaid shall, at the option of the owner ... of the notes . . . become due and collectible at once.” Instalments of interest which became due on these notes and indebtedness on January 25th, 1926, had not been paid on July 25th, 1926.

The demurrer could have been consolidated into three points, and these we will consider in the order of their proper precedence. The first of these contentions is that the law of Florida governs the construction of the conveyances and the declaration of trust, and of the promises and agreements contained therein, and by that law no action, legal or equitable, lies upon a promise contained in the deed to Musick or in the declaration of trust, to pay the mortgages outstanding against the property conveyed at the time of the conveyance. So far as the rights of the parties are affected by the conveyances and the declaration of trust they must be determined by the law of Florida. Braman v. Babcock, 98 Conn. 549, 558, 120 Atl. 150. There the land lies; there the mortgage and notes were executed; there Musick, as trustee and as an individual, and Lalley, executed the declaration of trust, *688 and there the acts of the trustee thereunder and the disposition of the property under the trust were to be performed. The parties to these instruments must have contemplated that the law of Florida should control the determination of their rights thereunder. Fisk’s Appeal, 81 Conn. 433, 438, 71 Atl. 559; Brine v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., 96 U. S. 627, 637.

The complaint contains no allegation that the law of Florida gives to the holder of a mortgage the right to sue a purchaser of the equity of redemption, who, in the deed to him, assumes and agrees to pay the mortgage. The omission is of no legal consequence, since we have the right to take judicial notice of the printed statutes and judicial decisions of other States; General Statutes, §§ 5726, 5727; moreover, counsel for the parties assumed in argument that these might be considered in determining plaintiff’s right to recover. The statutes of Florida do not accord to the plaintiff the right to maintain an action upon an assumption of, and an agreement to pay, the mortgage and the debt for which it is security, contained in the deed to Musick. They do recognize a right in the holder to have a deficiency judgment against the party or.parties liable for the mortgage debt “whether such liability is primary or secondary, and whether such liability is created by the indorsement of the note or as a joint maker of the note or as a guarantor or otherwise of the obligation sought to be enforced.” Florida Cumulative Statutes, 1925, § 3847, p. 756. Florida also has a statute providing that “any civil action at law may be maintained in the name of the real party in interest.” This provision obviates the intervention of nominal parties plaintiffs to work out the rights of the real parties in interest, as was frequently necessary at common law, but it does not purport to create any new rights or liabilities. We must there *689 fore find in the opinions of the Supreme Court of Florida, in the absence of a statute, a right in the plaintiff to maintain an action by the holder of a mortgage against a grantee of the equity upon his promise to the grantor of the equity to pay the mortgage upon the property conveyed.

The right of the mortgagee to bring an action upon an assumption of the mortgage by the grantee of the equity of redemption is ordinarily based upon the principle which permits a third party to bring an action upon a contract made for his benefit. 1 Williston on Contracts (1920 Ed.) § 384. In Hunter v. Wilson, Stearly & Co., 21 Fla.

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Bluebook (online)
138 A. 804, 106 Conn. 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tuttle-v-jockmus-conn-1927.