Worcester North Savings Institution v. Farwell

198 N.E. 897, 292 Mass. 568, 1935 Mass. LEXIS 1276
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 198 N.E. 897 (Worcester North Savings Institution v. Farwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Worcester North Savings Institution v. Farwell, 198 N.E. 897, 292 Mass. 568, 1935 Mass. LEXIS 1276 (Mass. 1935).

Opinion

Crosby, J.

In this bill in equity, as amended, the plaintiff seeks to have a mortgage, held by it on certain real estate, given priority over a mortgage held by the defendant Joseph Scarano on the same property which is now a first mortgage as a matter of record, but which, the plaintiff alleges, it was the intention of the parties should be subject to the mortgage held by the plaintiff.

The case is before this court upon an appeal with a report of material facts made by a judge of the Superior Court, in substance, as follows: On June 20, 1924, the defendant Holland A. Harwell bought out the interest of his brother, the defendant Leon C. Harwell, in certain real estate on Highland Avenue in Hitchburg in this Commonwealth theretofore owned by them in common, and mortgaged the whole estate to the Hitchburg Cooperative Bank to secure his note of that date for $3,600, and on the same day gave to Leon a second mortgage for $700 to secure the unpaid balance of the purchase price. The proceeds of the cooperative bank loan were used in part to pay a first mortgage for $2,000 on the property held by the Worcester North Savings Institution. The property, owned by Holland A. Harwell alone, remained subject to the Hitchburg Cooperative Bank mortgage and to the second mortgage to Leon C. Harwell until November 8, 1926. On that day Holland ' A. Harwell gave to the defendant Scarano a note for $900 [570]*570payable on demand, to cover a debt already owed, and a mortgage on the Highland Avenue property of even date to secure that note. That note and mortgage were drawn by one Wilson, an attorney who had previously done some legal business for Scarano, but he was paid for his services in the matter by Holland A. Farwell. Holland A. Farwell had told Scarano that the property was subject to a first mortgage to the Fitchburg Cooperative Bank, but he did not tell him that his brother Leon held a second mortgage on the property. As drawn by Mr. Wilson and executed by Holland A. Farwell, the mortgage to Scarano recited that the property was subject to a mortgage to the Worcester North Savings Institution for $2,000. Scarano accepted the mortgage upon the assumption, which it was reasonable for him to make, that Holland A. Harwell's previous statement that the property was subject to a mortgage to the Fitchburg Cooperative Bank was a mistake, or that the bank mortgage situation had changed and that the property as mortgaged to him, Scarano, was subject only to a mortgage for $2,000 to the Worcester North Savings Institution. Neither Holland A. Farwell nor Mr. Wilson told Scarano at the time the mortgage to Scarano was executed and delivered that the reference therein to the holder and the amount of the first mortgage was not true. It did not appear that Mr. Wilson examined the title for Scarano, and Holland A. Farwell having said nothing about the second mortgage to his brother or the incorrect reference in the Scarano mortgage as to the holder and amount of the bank mortgage, Scarano relied upon the assumed correctness of the reference in his mortgage to the bank mortgage. At the conclusion of this transaction the property was, in fact, subject to the following mortgages in the order named: 1. First mortgage to the Fitchburg Cooperative Bank for $3,600. 2. A second mortgage to the defendant Leon C. Farwell for $700. 3. A third mortgage to the defendant Scarano for $900. The property remained subject to these mortgages until early in November, 1927.

About August, 1927, the mortgagor, Holland A. Farwell, finding it difficult to meet the monthly payments to be made [571]*571to the Fitchburg Cooperative Bank, and being under financial pressure on account of conditions affecting his business, consulted Scarano as to how he could secure relief from his financial obligations. Scarano suggested that he might obtain some relief if he could substitute a mortgage to a mutual savings bank for the mortgage held by the cooperative bank. Farwell did not ask Scarano whether he would release his mortgage to enable Farwell to effect such substitution if it could be made, nor did Scarano offer to do so. Nothing was said in that talk about Scarano’s being requested to discharge his mortgage in order to enable Far-well to replace the cooperative bank mortgage, nor did Farwell mention in that conversation that the property was actually subject to a second mortgage to his brother which was prior to Scarano’s mortgage. Shortly before November 9, 1927, Holland A. Farwell made application to the plaintiff for a mortgage loan on the property. The application was granted and on November 9, 1927, the plaintiff issued its check for $3,000 payable to the Fitch-burg Cooperative Bank, which was used to pay that bank the amount then due on its first mortgage. The cooperative bank’s mortgage was discharged, Leon C. Farwell’s second mortgage for $700 was discharged, and a new mortgage for $3,000 to the plaintiff to secure the defendant Holland A. Farwell’s note for that amount and a new mortgage from Holland A. Farwell to his brother Leon were executed and recorded. The new mortgage to Leon, however, was for the principal sum of $750 instead of for the principal sum of his original mortgage of $700. It is found that Scarano had not been approached by anyone at that time or previously with a request that he join in the transaction by releasing his mortgage, and the transaction was completed without the knowledge of Scarano. It is further found that the plaintiff’s attorney had examined the title to the premises and presented it with a written certificate as to the state of the title as of November 9, 1927, which did not mention the Scarano mortgage. “The plaintiff’s attorney simply failed to discover the Scarano mortgage in his examination of the title, although it had been duly recorded for about a [572]*572year. The result of this transaction was that the mortgages on and after November 9, 1927, ranked as follows in order of execution and delivery and recording: first, the mortgage to the defendant Scarano for $900; second, the mortgage to the plaintiff for $3,000; third, the mortgage to the defendant Leon Farwell for $750. The latter was by its terms subject to the plaintiff’s mortgage, and it was intended at all times by the parties (other than Scarano) that the defendant Leon Farwell as mortgagee should be junior to the plaintiff.” It was further found that after November 9, 1927, the mortgagor paid Scarano the interest due on his mortgage; that he never was asked to pay and did not pay any part of the principal. The plaintiff did not discover until early in 1932, about four and a half years after it took this mortgage, that it “was not in first place.” Scarano, late in 1931, had attempted to secure a loan from one Cate, named as a defendant in this suit, on the proffered security of the assignment of Scarano’s mortgage. Apparently Cate inquired into the state of the title to some extent at least, for he informed Scarano that the Scarano mortgage was not what it appeared on its face to be, a second mortgage, but was at that time in fact the first mortgage on the property in order of date and of record. “Thereafter and early in 1932 Scarano went to the plaintiff bank, examined its mortgage and note, and on returning home and comparing his mortgage with that of the plaintiff, learned for the first time . . . that his mortgage was prior to the bank’s mortgage both as to date of execution and of record.” The plaintiff’s attorney sent for Scarano and asked if he would release his mortgage and take another subject to the bank’s mortgage. Scarano declined to do so. No payment was tendered to him.

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Bluebook (online)
198 N.E. 897, 292 Mass. 568, 1935 Mass. LEXIS 1276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/worcester-north-savings-institution-v-farwell-mass-1935.