Vaughan v. Black

29 N.W. 523, 63 Mich. 215, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 651
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 14, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 29 N.W. 523 (Vaughan v. Black) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vaughan v. Black, 29 N.W. 523, 63 Mich. 215, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 651 (Mich. 1886).

Opinion

Campbell, C. J.

In the fall of 1883 the original bill in this ■ease was filed against Black and wife as mortgagors, and Ball and Watters as subsequent purchasers. A decree of foreclosure was made, which not only ordered a sale of the [218]*218land and personal liability against Black, but also proceeded to decree a similar liability against Ball and Watters, who-were claimed in the bill to have become personally liable by reason of a letter claimed to have been written by them in. the following language:

“ Grand Rapids, Oct. 25, 1882.
“Wesley Vaughan, Esq. — Sir: Yours of the twenty-fourth at. hand, and we would say that as soon as possible, which wilL be inside of two weeks, one of us will be in your place, and pay you the interest on your mortgage. Would be there' sooner if we could get away. We don’t want the mortgage foreclosed, but will take care of it.
“Respectfully yours, etc.,
“Ball & Watters.”

The note secured by the mortgage was for 8500, with interest at 10 per cent., payable October 6, 1882, “with the' privilege of extending the time of payment of said principal to October 6, 1884; interest payable annually, at JO percent., according to a mortgage bearing even date.” Under the mortgage the right to make the principal as well as-interest payable could only have been after thirty days’ default, which had not expired when this letter was written.

A subpoena was served, of which the underwriting left in blank the names of the defendants against whom a personal decree was to be sought, and containing the usual conclusion applicable where no such decree is sought, — “and the bill is filed to reach interests in property, and not to obtain further relief against the remainder of the defendants.”

When the decree was obtained it was on default, and the-proof of service went no further than the original subpcena.. It makes no reference to the underwriting as being served,, and the petition for a rehearing shows that the underwriting upon the copy bore no signature. This might have been important, if the case were not otherwise defective.

A sale was made, resulting in a deficiency. In January, 1885, a hearing was had on a petition for execution for [219]*219deficiency, and a decree was ordered accordingly on the nineteenth of January, 1885. A petition for rehearing was made within the time for appealing, and denied on argument.

It is objected, as a preliminary objection, that this application is too late. As the rule leaves this matter open to discretion, we do not think the objection should prevail where gross injustice would follow.1 But the complainant is mistaken in this regard. It has been settled by repeated decisions of this Court that it is not within the power of courts of chancery to grant absolute personal decrees against parties claimed to be collaterally liable for the mortgage debt in the original decree, and, if done, the decree is so far nugatory. The remedy is purely statutory, and cannot be invoked until after a balance is reported unsatisfied. The proceeding, then, is substantially a new one, equivalent to the legal process of fieri facias. It cannot be sought against persons not properly charged in the bill, and it cannot be adjudicated except upon the occasion of a deficiency reporte d. Parties so charged have every defense open to them. They are not called on to defend until cited. It is singular that so little attention has been paid to our reported decisions. See Howe v. Lemon, 37 Mich. 164; Mickle v. Maxfield, 42 Id. 304; Johnson v. Shepard, 35 Id. 115; Gies v. Green, 42 Id. 107; McCrickett v. Wilson, 50 Id. 513.

So far as any personal decree is concerned, it cannot be regarded as operative effectively until the order of January 19, 1885, and the application was strictly within the rule.

Had the service of subpoena been such as to notify Ball and Watters that a personal decree would be sought against them, we have no doubt that the bill made out no cause of action. Under the statute, and the decisions under it, [220]*220the liability must be one that could be sued independently at law as a legal obligation (Johnson v. Shepard, 35 Mich. 123), and under the statute it must be a liability to pay the mortgage debt.1

The 'letter above quoted is not shown by the bill to have been accepted by any notice, and, if it had been, it contains no promise to pay the mortgage debt at all, unless possibly the interest. Under the note and mortgage a payment of interest at that time would extend the principal' two years. That interest is not included in the deficiency, and its amount would have been trifling. Upon the facts now developed, it appears plainly that Watters never authorized any obligation, and had no title in the land, and that the deed of the land to Ball did not obligate him to pay the mortgage.

But the failure to serve a proper underwriting left the defendants to understand that no personal decree would be sought against them, and that they need not defend unless they desired to save the land. The object of the present rule changing the form of subpoena was to prevent the necessity of defendants looking into the 'record (.which would usually involve the employment of counsel), unless notified that specific relief would be sought against them. Parties complaining must see to it that defendants are not misled, and must be responsible for the correctness of their process.1

As the petition filed was broad enough to call for the immediate rescission of the order for execution, and as it is impossible on any ground to sustain it, the' court should have set it aside; and as we on appeal may do the same thing, we shall, in reversing the order of the circuit court refusing the prayer of the petition, at the same time vacate [221]*221and set aside the order of January 19, awarding execution against Ball and "Watters.1

As tbe original decree cannot, of itself, furnish any personal relief against the present petitioners, no review is necessary to protect them. They will recover costs below and here, of the present proceedings, including the petition for execution, and proceedings thereon. The execution will be set aside, also, as a necessary consequence.

The other Justices concurred.

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.W. 523, 63 Mich. 215, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 651, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vaughan-v-black-mich-1886.