Philbrook v. Clark
Philbrook v. Clark
Opinion of the Court
The demandant’s title is based on the mortgage from Sarah Ladd to Nathan Weston, dated October 18, 1858, to secure two notes of the same date, on one and two years respectively. The tenant claims the mortgage debt is paid and relies upon the presumption of payment, arising from the lapse of more than twenty years from the maturity of the mortgage, to wit. October 18, 1860, the writ being dated September 27, 1883. The demandant offered evidence to rebut the presumption and claims that it is rebutted.
The demandant was assignee of the mortgage, through mesne assignments, and he put in evidence, the mortgage and both notes secured thereby. George W. Ladd, a son of the mortgagor, testified that he bought the mortgage of Weston, August 29, 1862, and held the mortgage and notes as his own till he assigned them to his nephew in 1877, that he then held them for his nephew till 1879, when they were assigned to the demand-ant, his daughter, that he has been his daughter’s agent,
The tax title is not valid. The tax was assessed to "Estate of Sarah Ladd.” Fairfield v. Woodman, 76 Maine, 549. Indeed the claim by tax title is not insisted on.
Judgment for demandant.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.