Court Opinion

ID: 6435302
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:11:56.741376+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:52:21.900303
License: Public Domain

Crosby, J.
This is a bill in equity brought to set aside the foreclosure of a mortgage given by Ellen J. Murphy to the plaintiff Clapp and by him assigned to the defendant, together with the note that the mortgage was given to secure. The note was for $200 and was indorsed in blank and delivered to the defendant. The real estate described in the mortgage was subject to a prior mortgage for $1,000. The mortgagor was admitted as a party plaintiff and the case was referred to a master. It is obvious that the judge of the Superior Court intended to confirm the master’s report, and we have treated it as confirmed.
The master found that at the time of the assignment Clapp told the defendant “that in case of any trouble with the mortgage he would take it off the defendant’s hands.”
*190The master also found that no actual notice of the foreclosure proceedings was given to the mortgagor or to Clapp, and that no attempt was made to notify either of them; that on the day before the sale Clapp and the defendant had some talk “about the defendant’s mortgage transactions,” but that the foreclosure sale in question was not mentioned by the defendant; that the latter “knew of the intended sale and had no reason to think that Clapp did know of it;” that neither Clapp nor the mortgagor knew of the foreclosure proceedings until after the sale; that Clapp at all times stood ready to carry out the promise made to the defendant to take the note off his hands if he wished him to do so. An action on the note for an alleged deficiency following the foreclosure sale has been brought by the defendant against Clapp, and is now pending.
The master further found that, while there was a literal compliance with the terms of the mortgage in the foreclosure proceedings, the defendant’s attorney, acting for the defendant, bid off the property for $50 and that there was no other bidder; that the defendant knew the amount for which the property was sold was less than a fair and adequate price and that its fair market value was at least $2,000; that the defendant knew that Clapp would expect a notice of the foreclosure proceedings, and was willing and able to protect the defendant from loss; that Clapp was misled by the failure of the defendant to say anything about the sale at the time of their conversation; that the failure to notify Clapp and the mortgagor was intentional, the purpose of the defendant being to get the property at less than its value, and also to hold Clapp on the note bésides; that "the defendant did not use good faith in the conduct of the foreclosure proceedings and did not use reasonable diligence to protect Miss Murphy, the mortgagor, and Mr. Clapp, the indorser on the note, from loss.” As the evidence is not reported, these findings must stand. Considered together they clearly indicate that the defendant did not exercise that diligence and good faith which the law requires in executing a power even though there was a literal compliance with its terms.
The subsidiary findings amply support the general finding and make it apparent that the defendant’s dominant purpose was to bid off the property for a sum less than its value, and also to hold *191the plaintiff Clapp to the payment of the amount due on the note. In these circumstances the finding that the defendant did not act in good faith or use reasonable diligence to protect the interest of the mortgagor and Clapp was warranted. Montague v. Dawes, 14 Allen, 369. Bon v. Graves, 216 Mass. 440. Winchester Rock & Brick Co. v. Murdough, 233 Mass. 50, 54.
Although at the time of the sale Clapp had parted with Ms interest in the mortgage and the claim thereby secured, he remained liable as indorser on the note. If the amount realized from the sale equalled or exceeded the amount due on the note, together with the expenses of the sale, Ms liability would have been extinguished; accordingly he was interested in the execution of the power in good faith and had a right to expect the defendant would exercise reasonable diligence in an effort to secure a fair price for the property. While he did not have a specific lien upon the mortgaged premises, Ms liability as indorser on the note, especially in view of Ms promise to the defendant to pay the note whenever the latter might request such payment, is sufficient to entitle him to maintain the bill under general principles of equity jurisprudence. Emerson v. Atkinson, 159 Mass. 356. Skolnick v. Greenburg, 230 Mass. 359. Goodell v. Harrington, 76 N. Y. 547. Rohrbach v. Germania Fire Ins. Co. 62 N. Y. 47. Brewer v. Landis, 111 Mich. 217. The demurrers to the bill and the amended bill were rightly overruled.
■ As no appeal was taken from the interlocutory decree overruling the defendant’s exceptions to the master’s report, they are not before us.
No objection is made to the form of the final decree. However, it should be modified by confirming the master’s report and by declaring that the foreclosure sale is void; and as so modified it should be affirmed with costs.

Ordered.accordingly.'. ■