Plummer v. Doughty , 78 Me. 341 ( 1886 )


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  • Poster, J.

    This case comes before us upon exceptions to the refusals of the presiding justice to give certain requested instructions, and to certain instructions given.

    The action is a writ of entry, brought for the purpose of foreclosing a mortgage which had been given to the deceased mortgagee to secure a bond for the support of himself and his wife during their natural lives. The mortgagee died. His interest and title vested as assets in his administrator. The plaintiff, as administrator of the deceased mortgagee, was the proper party to any proceedings for the foreclosure of that mortgage. When a mortgagee is dead, the process for foreclosure must be in the name of his executor or administrator, and the same proceedings for that purpose may be had by such executor or administrator, declaring on the seizin of the deceased, as the deceased mortgagee might have had if living. B. 8., c. 90, § § 11, 12.

    Several of the questions whieh have been discussed are not before us. The only consideration which can be given by this court to questions arising in this case, must be in relation to those which are brought before it b3r the bill of exceptions. It would not be proper for this court, sitting as a court of law, to go outside of the exceptions and pass upon matters which were settled by the evidence presented to the jury, and to which no objection appears to have been raised at the trial. Whether the defendants were or were not properly joined in the suit as joint disseizors, or whether the description of the premises demanded *344was such as the law requires, is presumed to have been decided correctly in accordance with the evidence and upon proper instructions in regard to the law from the court, inasmuch as neither of those questions is presented by the bill of exceptions. The case is not before us on report of the evidence upon which to settle the legal rights of the parties, and therefore our attention must be confined to questions raised by the exceptions.

    I. The court properly declined to give the first requested instruction, — which was in substance, that in order for the plaintiff to recover it must be shown that there had been a breach of the bond during the lifetime of Abel Tracy, the deceased mortgagee. The instructions given, however, by the court were, that a breach of the bond must be shown, but that such a breach need not be shown to have occurred during the lifetime of the husband; that if there had been a breach since his death, and before the commencement of this suit, it would be sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to maintain this action.

    The instructions given were correct. The mortgage was given as security for a bond for the support not only of the deceased mortgagee, but of his wife also, and was for their natural lives. This would constitute an obligation continuing as long as either lives. Pike v. Collins, 33 Maine, 43; Merrill v. Bickford, 65 Maine, 119. The bond and mortgage remained in force after the decease of the husband for the benefit of the widow, and as security for her maintenance during her life. There may have been a breach of condition in the lifetime of the husband, or there may have been none until after his decease.

    The instructions given were in accordance with the rule of law laid down in Marsh v. Austin, 1 Allen, 235, in which the court hold that the administrator of the mortgagee, in a mortgage given to secure an agreement for the support of the mortgagee and his wife during their lives, is entitled to foreclose the mortgage for breach of condition accruing both before and after the mortgagee’s death, although the mortgagee’s widow is living and does not join in the suit.

    II. The next requested instruction was that the plaintiff would not be entitled to maintain this action without showing that the *345widow had made a claim upon the administrator of the deceased mortgagor for her support out of the mortgaged estate before the commencement of this suit.

    The services to be performed in the support of the mortgagee and his wife were personal. It nowhere appears, either in the bond or mortgage, that they were to be rendered by any other than the mortgagor or his personal representatives. Such being the fact, it has been held that a personal trust is reposed in the mortgagor, and that the obligation which he assumes is such that he can not assign the duty over to third persons, substituting them in his place without the consent of those to whom the services are to be rendered. Clinton v. Fly, 10 Maine, 292; Bryant v. Erskine, 55 Maine, 156; Eastman v. Batchelder, 36 N. H. 141. Therefore, upon the decease of the mortgagor, the conditions must be kept by his heirs, executors, or administrators. It is a duty devolving upon them by express contract, and, to save any breach of the conditions of the bond, must be performed by those obliged by law to fulfill those conditions. This dutj^ is not made conditional or dependant upon any claim or demand on the part of the widow of the mortgagee for her support. It was equally incumbent upon them to see that the conditions of the bond were fully performed in respect to her as ■when both were living. Therefore the requested instruction could not properly have been given.

    III. The defendants’ last request cannot be sustained, and the court was correct in declining to give it to the jury. The gist of this request was, that the widow, by virtue of her right to unassigned dower in the mortgaged premises, had the right to lease to one of the defendants such an estate in the demanded premises that he would not be a disseizor as against this administrator of the deceased mortgagee. It is not intimated by the pleadings that this defendant sets up any rights under the widow as tenant or otherwise, nor is it pretended that the widow has ever had her dower assigned; and not being assigned she could not, as against this plaintiff, claim to occupy any part of the estate. Bolster v. Cushman, 34 Maine, 428; Wyman v. Richardson, 62 Maine, 295; Clarke v. Hilton, 75 Maine, 432. *346Having no legal estate in the premises which she could convey at that time, the defendant could derive none from her. The estate and title, as we have stated, at the decease of the mortgagee vested in the administrator of his estate as assets of the deceased (Crooker v. Jewell, 31 Maine, 313), which it is his duty to protect and enforce. Felch v. Hooper, 20 Maine, 163.

    The plaintiff elected to treat the defendant Bowie as a disseizor, and as the requested instructions presented no legal claim of the defendant against the plaintiff’s right of possession, ( Gregory v. Tozier, 24 Maine, 308) the defendant was not injured by their being refused.

    Exceptions overruled.

    Peters, C. J., Walton, Virgin, Libbey and Haskell, JJ., concurred.

Document Info

Citation Numbers: 78 Me. 341

Judges: Haskell, Libbey, Peters, Poster, Virgin, Walton

Filed Date: 8/5/1886

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/24/2021