Abbott v. Sturtevant
Abbott v. Sturtevant
Opinion of the Court
— The statute of Massachusetts, passed March 17, 1784, chap. 57, <§, 2, provided, that where land should beset off' on execution to a creditor, and seizin and possession be given to him by the officer who should make the levy, and the-execution and the doings thereon be returned to the clerk’s office, and be recorded within three months in the registry of deeds, in the county where the land should lie, such proceed
In decisions under these statutes, it has been held, that when the creditor has extended his execution upon the real estate of the debtor, and received from the officer seizin and possession, he not only acquired all the title which the debtor had in the premises, but if the debtor was disseized and had not lost his right of entry, the disseizin was so far purged, that the creditor could maintain a writ of entry, or an action of trespass at his election. Gore v. Brazier, 3 Mass. 523; Nickerson v. Whittier, 20 Maine, 223; Woodman v. Bodfish, 25 Maine, 317.
When the levy was made by a sale of the mortgager’s right of redeeming, the purchaser acquired the title and the seizin of the debtor, inasmuch as the debtor’s deed would convey both if they were in him, and might recover in a writ of entry against the debtor or a stranger, unless the latter had in fact disseized the mortgager, before the sale of the equity. Wellington v. Gale, 7 Mass. 138; Porter v. Millett, 9 Mass. 101;
In the Revised Statutes, essential changes have been introduced touching the levy of executions, both by an extent upon the land and by the sale of the mortgager’s right of redemption. In the former case, all the debtor’s interest in the premises shall pass by the levy, unless it be larger than the estate mentioned in the appraiser’s description. R. S. chap. 94, <§> 10. And the officer shall deliver seizin and possession so far as the nature of the estate taken and the title of the debtor will admit. Sect. 17. When an execution is leyied upon land, into which the debtor has, or is supposed to have the right of entry, and of which any other person is then seized, the officer shall deliver to the creditor a momentary seizin and possession of the land, so far as to enable the creditor to maintain an action therefor in his own name, and on his own seizin ; but he shall not actually expel and keep out the tenant then in possession, against his will. Sect. 18. The right of redeeming mortgaged estate, may be taken and set off on execution for the mortgager’s debts, in like manner as though they were not mortgaged, excepting that the appraisers shall deduct the amount of the mortgage debt. Sect. 31. , Or the right of the mortgager may be taken and sold, in the same manner as under former statutes, and the deed to be given by
It is obvious from these modifications, that it was not designed that the creditor’s or the purchaser’s rights should be enlarged, but in some respects restricted. Where the debtor is not seized of the land, upon which an extent is made, the creditor is not to be put into the actual possession of the land as he would be by virtue of a' writ of possession, so that he could maintain trespass against the one in its occupation, but is to have a momentary seizin, so as to be able to sustain an action upon his own seizin to obtain possession, if he has the title. The Legislature has provided, that the creditor should be placed in the same situation after the levy, that the debtor was before, and has afforded him the opportunity to try the title with the tenant, upon the seizin obtained from the officer, but has restrained him from substituting himself without judgment of law, in the place of one having peaceable possession.
When the levy was made by a sale of the debtor’s right, as a mortgager, and the debtor was disseized, the condition of the purchaser under the statute of 1821 was not materially different from that in which he is placed by the Revised Statutes. By the former statute, he obtained the same rights, which he would have done by the debtor’s deed; this was the title of the debtor, but not seizin, because it was not in the debtor or any one claiming under him. By the present provisions, the officer’s deed gives him the debtor’s interest in the land, but if the debtor is disseized, he does not acquire the possession.
If the debtor has the possession at the time of the officer’s sale of the equity of redemption, the purchaser succeeds to that possession as he did under the statute of 1821.
It is contended by the counsel for the defendant, that if the mortgager conveys the land after its attachment on the writ, and before the seizure and sale on the execution, the possession of the grantee under the deed is a disseizin of the mortgager; and that the purchaser of the equity does not obtain thereby
The levy of an execution by an extent upon land attached upon the writ, made within thirty days after judgment, by the statute, passes the title which the debtor had at the time of the attachment, by relation to that time as effectually as it would pass by the conveyance of the debtor. Brown v. Maine Bank, 11 Mass. 153; Nason v. Grant, 21 Maine, 160. The sale of an equity of redemption w'ill have a similar effect upon the mortgager’s rights previously attached, and will defeat all titles subsequent to the attachment. Bigelow v. Wilson, 1 Pick. 485. The purchaser of an equity of redemption attached before the conveyance by the mortgager acquires all the interest, which the latter had at the time of the attachment; the grantee holds the title and the possession of the grantor as it was, when attached; and when the sale is perfected, the rights of the grantee are as perfectly extinguished as the rights of the grantor would have been, if no conveyance had been made.
The disseizin of the debtor, which will operate to prevent the creditor from obtaining actual possession of real estate by virtue of a levy made in pursuance of R. S. chap. 94, sect. IS and 31, or by a sale under sect. 39, is that, when the debtor was disseized by a possession adverse to his title, and not by a conveyance made by him.
George C. Hall was the owner of the equity of redemption,
Another question involved in the case is in reference to the damages. Is the plaintiff entitled to recover on account of the occupation of the land by the defendant, after the officer’s sale and before the delivery of the deed to him ? The debtor’s right to redeem, being seized on execution, advertised and sold in pursuance of the provisions of the statute, and a good and sufficient deed thereof executed and delivered by the officer to the purchaser, duly recorded, conveys all the title of the debtor in the premises. R. S. c. 94, $ 39. To become effectual, these different steps of the proceedings, must be parts of the same transaction and have relation to each other. The deed required, though not delivered, or actually made on the day of the sale, does not necessarily fail to be operative on that account. The officer may be prevented by causes over
Judgment for the plaintiff.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John S. Abbott versus Albert Sturtevant
- Status
- Published