Gorton v. Roach
Gorton v. Roach
Opinion of the Court
This proceeding originated in the office of the circuit court commissioner of Livingston county, where Gorton instituted .it for the recovery of the possession of lands under the statute which authorizes summary proceedings before a commissioner “when any person shall continue in possession of any premises sold by virtue of any mortgage or execution, after the expiration of the time limited by law for the redemption of such premises.” Comp. L. § 6Y06.
The mortgage under which Gorton claimed was given to him by Peter McGraw June 3, 1861, to secure the payment of five hundred dollars in instalments, the last of which was due in five years from date. Margaret McGraw, the wife of Peter, joined in the mortgage. They were at the time living upon the land, and continued to live there until Peter died some time in 1864. The evidence appearing in the record indicates that Peter McGraw never had any title to the land, and that at the time of his death it was owned by Francis Palms. In June, 1866, the defendant John Poach took a lease of the land from Palms, and'went into posses
It seems to be the theory of the plaintiff that Mrs. McGraw, while remaining in possession of the mortgaged premises after her husband’s death, was occupying under a dower or homestead right, and would be estopped from disputing the mortgage or the title which the husband assumed to mortgage; that Poach, marrying the widow and coming to the occupancy with her, took possession in her right and was in like manner estopped, and that both mpst surrender possession before they or either of them can set up an adverse title.
The general principle that a mortgagor cannot dispute the title mortgaged for the purpose of retaining possession adverse to a foreclosure, is familial’. But in this case the adverse title is not set up by one of the mortgagors; it is set up by one who was a stranger to the mortgage. The only way in which he is supposed to be connected with the estoppel which affected the mortgagor is by his having married the widow while she remained in possession. He had an undoubted right before the marriage to evict the widow and take possession, but having entered into possession without doing so, he has in some way, it is supposed, taken upon himself among other marital consequences the estoppel that previously affected the widow. But we are unable to appreciate the force of the reasoning in support of this view.
The judgment must be affirmed with costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Francis R. Gorton v. John Roach and Margaret Roach
- Status
- Published