Sledge, McKay & Co. v. Obenchain
Sledge, McKay & Co. v. Obenchain
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
On the twenty-fifth day of Juue, 1877, A. S. Brown was the owner of certain lands in Grenada County, and on that day executed a mortgage thereon to Sledge, McKay & Co., to secure a debt of $4,500 due to them.
On the sixth day of November, 1877, Brown conveyed these, with other lands, and eight mules, to his wife, Jeannette Brown, and the conveyance was duly recorded, the consideration being a credit of $5,000 given by her on a note for $11,000 executed by her husband on the preceding day to-her, which note was executed in consideration of certain property of his wife’s received by him many years before from the estate of Mrs. Brown’s father. The deed recites the fact that Mrs. Brown accepted the conveyance of the land subject to the mortgage to Sledge, McKay & Co., and to other mortgages to other parties.
On the seventeenth day of February, 1878, Mr. and Mrs.. Brown sold to their children, Frank S. Brown and Mrs. Obenchain, the mules named in the conveyance to Mrs. Brown,, and certain other personal property not necessary to be named,, and all the rents, issues, and profits of the lands mortgaged to-Sledge, McKay & Co., for the sum of $900, which sum the-purchasers were to pay to Sledge, McKay & Co. for account, of A. S. Brown. On the same day they executed a voluntary conveyance of the land to Mrs. Obenchain and Frank S. Brown; but the deed was not delivered, if at all, until October, 1878.
On the eleventh day of June, 1878, there remained due and unpaid to Sledge, McKay & Co. the sum of $1,091.33 of the-mortgage debt, and A. S. Brown was then indebted to them, in the further sum of $2,144.16, which amount was unsecured. It was agreed between A. S. Brown and Sledge, McKay &, Co. that he should execute a note for both sums, to be due-
On final hearing the chancellor dismissed, the bill, basing his ■decision, as is shown by the decree, upon the facts found by '.him, that complainants accepted the second mortgage with
We do not concur in the finding of the chancellor that the -security afforded by the first mortgage was extinguished by the dealings between complainants and Mr. and Mrs. Brown. It is a well-established principle that courts of equity, where there has been a mere change in the form of the indebtedness or security, and where the lights of innocent third persons are not affected, will keep alive the original security to enforce the very right and justice of the case. Thomson v. Hester, 55 Miss. 656 ; Cansler v. Sallis, 54 Miss. 446. The evident intention of complainants was to retain a security upon the identical property named in the first mortgage, to secure the identical debt thereby secured ; and the mere fact that a new mortgage was executed to secure that debt and another, and the old security surrendered, does not preclude them from insisting upon the security afforded by the original mortgage. But upon another equally well settled principle complainants were entitled to subject the laud for the payment of the balance due on the first mortgage debt.
The conveyance from A. S. Brown to his wife, Jeannette, ■expressly conveys the land subject to the mortgage of complainants. It is true that because of Mrs. Brown’s coverture she could not incur any personal liability to the mortgagees, nor, perhaps, are the words of the conveyance sufficient to impose such personal liability; but, as between A. S. Brown and his wife, after the conveyance the land in equity is considered the primary debtor, and the obligation of Brown is in the nature of a security. As to the land, Brown occupied the relation of a surety, and if he had been compelled to pay the ■mortgage debt, he would have been considered as an assignee thereof and entitled to foreclosure. Cleveland v. Southard et al., 25 Wis. 479; 7 Paige, 248, 591 ; 2 Johns. Ch. 125; Waters v. Bossel, 58 Miss. 602.
Mrs. Brown, being a married woman, was unable to bind, by mortgage or otherwise, the corpus of her estate to secure the
The amount ($892.59) paid complainants by Frank S. Brown ought to be appropriated to the payment of that portion of the debt which bound the lands convejmd to Mrs. Jeannette Brown, and which were by her conveyed to defendants. Mrs. Brown, when she accepted the conveyance from her husband, took the land encumbered only with the debt then owing complainants, all of which, except the sum of $1,091.33, was paid by her husband before the eleventh day of June, 1878, when she executed the mortgage. On the 12th of February, 1878, she sold the mules and personal property to her son and daughter, in consideration of the payment by them to Sledge, McKay & Co. of the sum of $900 for account of A. S. Brown. At this time A. S. Brown owed no debt to-Sledge, McKay & Co. except the $4,500 moi’tgage debt, or so-much of it'as was then due and unpaid. It is therefoi’e evident that Mrs. Brown intended this payment to be applied to-the discharge of the debt for which her property was bound. But there is another and conclusive reason for requiring the appropriation of this payment to the balance due on the first mortgage debt, which is, that at the time (December 11,. 1878) when it was made there was no other demand which Frank S. Brown and Mrs. Obenchain could be called upon to-pay ; but this bound the land conveyed to them, and in addi
In this view of the rights of the parties, it is evident the tender made by Mrs. Obenchain was not of the amount for which complainants could subject the land. She tendered the ■difference between the amount paid by Frank S. Brown and $900, which he and she had agreed to pay in consideration of the sale to them of the personal property. Complainants •ought to be paid the difference between the sum paid by Frank S. Brown and the amount due on the debt secured by the first mortgage, and interest.
The decree is reversed and cause remanded, for a decree in :accordance with this opinion.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Sledge, McKay & Co. v. Anna L. Obenchain
- Cited By
- 7 cases
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- Syllabus
- 1. Mortgage. Change in form of security. Obligation of married woman.. Her death. On the 25tb of June, 1877, B. executed a mortgage on certain land owned by him, to secure a debt of $4,500 which he owed S. On the 6th of November, 1877; B., by a deed duly recorded, conveyed the same land to his wife, subject to the-mortgage to S. On the 12th of February, 1878, B. and wife sold and assigned to their children the rents and profits of this land for $900, which was to be paid to S. for-the account of B. On the same day they executed to their children a voluntary conveyance of the land, though it was not delivered, if at all, till October, 1878. On the 11th of June, 1878, B. was owing S. a balance of $1,091.33 on the mortgage debt and $2,144.16 unsecured, and gave his note for the aggregate amount due, and to secure the same he and his wife executed a mortgage on the land covered by the first mortgage. S., having no actual knowledge of the conveyance of the land by B. to his wife, and by them to their children, cancelled the mortgage of the 25th of June, 1877. B. and wife both died in the autumn of 1878. Their children paid to S. the $900, according to their agreement with their parents. In February, 1880, S. filed a bill to enforce the mortgage given by B. and wife on the 11th of June, 1878, if that could be done; and if not, then to enforce the mortgage given by B. on the 25th of June, 1877. Held, that the land cannot be subjected to the payment of the-$2,144.16, but may be subjected for the payment of the balance of the $1,091.33 of the first mortgage debt. For such balance the land is bound, (1) because-the first mortgage was not extinguished by the taking of the subsequent mortgage, which in the circumstances thereof was a mere change in the form of the security, not affecting innocent third persons; and (2) because Mrs. B. took the land subject, expressly, to the first mortgage to S., and while she could not ordinarily bind the corpus of her estate to secure the debt of her husband, she could by the new mortgage bind it for the debt for which it was-already bound by the old mortgage. The corpus of her land was not bound for the $2,144.16, and by her death the income was discharged from liability therefor. 2. Same. Fraudulent conveyance. Subsequent encumbrancer. In the case above stated, S. is not in a condition to assail the conveyance from-B. to his wife on the ground that it was made to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors, because as to such conveyance he is both a subsequent encumbrancei- and a subsequent creditor, with constructive notice. 3. Same. Appropriation of payment. Case in judgment. The $900 paid to S. by the children of B. and wife, as above stated, should be applied to the unpaid balance of the first mortgage debt, for the reason that, at the time they assumed the payment of that amount there was no debt due by B. to S. except that on the first mortgage, and at the time they made the payment there was no other debt which they could be called on to pay to S. j but for this debt the land conveyed to them was bound, and they had personally assumed liability to the extent of $900.