Court Opinion

ID: 7945801
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 23:20:14.32294+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:33:55.105474
License: Public Domain

Hooker, J.
In September, 1904, Holmes, the complainant, owned a farm in Ottawa county. On the 23d of that month he traded it for a dwelling in the city of Holland, Mich., subject to a mortgage for $300, which he assumed, taking from Van Der Meulen, with whom he dealt, two promissory notes for $300 and $2,000, respectively, secured by mortgage upon the farm, which mortgage contained an insurance clause. He subsequently sold the notes and mortgage to Huizenga, the defendant, who required him and his wife to indorse the notes, and who paid down $1,983.6?, and executed the following writing, viz.:
“Whereas Joseph S. Holmes and wife have this day sold and assigned to Gerrit T. Huizenga a certain mortgage dated September 23, 1904, and recorded in the register’s office for Ottawa county, in liber 78 on page 173 of mortgages, and said Gerrit T. Huizenga having paid said Holmes and wife $1,983.67 for said mortgage, it is agreed and understood by the undersigned that whereas said mortgage is of the amount of $2,300 and is represented by two notes, one of $300 and one of $2,000. It is agreed that all the interest which said Huizenga receives upon said $300 note he will pay to P. H. McBride to apply on the mortgage on the house and lot of said Holmes, being No. 248 W. 10th street, Holland, Mich., and when said $300 of principal shall be paid he will pay same on said mortgage on the said homestead of Holmes and wife; the said $300 not having been paid by said Huizenga for said mortgage, but when the same is paid to be used for the payment of said mortgage on said Holmes homestead, to wit, No. 248 W. 10th St.
“Witness our hands this 4th day of January, A. D. 1905.
“G. T. Huizenga.
“Joseph S. Holmes.”
Holmes informed defendant that he had sold the farm to Van Der Meulen for $4,500 in answer to defendant’s question, and that the mortgage was secured by insurance, or as Holmes himself testified:
“ There was some talk about the buildings on that property being insured. The buildings on the farm were in*346sured, and I said the insurance was all right as far as I knew; that is what I said. I don’t know that I told him the amount of the insurance. I had had the property insured, and when I sold it to Van Der Meulen, I assigned the policy to him, and he assigned the policy on his house in Holland to me.
“Q. Was there a clause put on the insurance policy to make it payable to the mortgagee ?
“A. That I heard.
“Q. You never saw to that ?
“A. No, sir; I didn’t care anything about it.
“Q. But you had a mortgage on the place, and you didn’t care whether the insurance was made payable to the mortgagee or not ?
“A. I didn’t have no mortgage there.
C‘Q. Didn’t you have a mortgage on your place from the time you sold the property to Van Der Meulen until the time you sold the mortgage to Huizenga?
“A. Yes; I had it on for a little while there.
“ Q. But in the meantime you didn’t care whether it was protected by insurance or not ?
“A. I supposed it was all right.”
A short time after his purchase of the mortgage, defendant heard that the house was burned, and without delay made inquiry about it, and received somewhat positive assurance that it was other property. However, within three days he wrote the agent of the company about the matter and received a letter from him, stating that the policy had been paid to Van Der Meulen who held it, that the company was ignorant of any claims by Huizenga upon the fund, the policy containing no such provision, but that Van Der Meulen expressed the intention of using the money received ($600) to rebuild, “so it would probably be all right anyway.” Van Der Meulen did not do this, but kept the money, and began to commit waste on the place, and under advice of counsel the defendant foreclosed the mortgage by advertisement, and bid the place in for $2,300, declining to attempt collection from complainant on his indorsement, saying he was as well able to stand his loss as the complainant. He afterwards repeatedly asked complainant to take back the place and *347pay him back $1,983, but complainant refused. After his purchase at the foreclosure sale he endeavored to get full title to the place, made necessary by Van Der Meulen’s continued neglect and. waste, which was injurious to the property. He sued Van Der Meulen on the $300 note, and obtained a judgment for that sum, and finally canceled this judgment, upon which execution had issued, and paid Van Der Meulen $45 for a quitclaim deed and immediate possession of the premises. Again he offered complainant a deed of the premises for $1,983.67, but complainant refused to accept the offer. Holmes after-wards filed the bill in this case on the theory that the defendant accepted the note and mortgage in trust to the extent of $300, and has either received the money through his purchase, or, if not, has failed to collect the sum through his neglect, asking an accounting and payment of the same. These things were decreed, and defendant has appealed.
By the terms of the notes and mortgage the $300 was the first due, and under the terms of the agreement, had it been paid at maturity, it would have been defendant’s duty to apply it on payment of the mortgage. It would seem equally plain that the proceeds of a sale on foreclosure would have to be applied first in payment of the $300 note, and the balance to defendant, unless we are to he unreasonably technical, and say that, unless the note was paid by Van Der Meulen, there was no obligation to pay the note, notwithstanding the fact that the foreclosure produced funds- enough to pay the whole debt. ■ There is some ground for saying that complainant was not free from fault, for he told defendant that he sold the farm for $4,500, when in fact he included considerable personal property, and his statement about the insurance was misleading. But the record does not show that these things were the inducement for defendant’s purchase, for he exacted an indorsement that made the security ample. Had he taken the steps necessary to charge the indorser (if he did not), and been less magnanimous, he need not have *348lost a dollar in the transaction, so far as we are able to discover. He elected to affirm the contract, and the question of fraud becomes unimportant.
We are, however, impressed with the good faith of the defendant, and we think that he is not chargeable with neglect in his failure to collect the insurance, or in failing to collect the judgment against Van Der Meulen, or to realize more from the premises. But his contract requires him to pay the $300 mortgage from the first proceeds of the mortgage. He has the farm, and should pay the note. We are unable to tell from this record what his rights are upon the indorsement made by complainant. No claim is made for it apparently, and there may or may not be any legal obligation growing out of it. Should we say that the complainant has come here without clean hands, and is asking equitable relief when not willing to do equity ? We cannot say so in view of his indorsement' and the apparent failure of defendant to avail himself of all of his security; i. e., his indorsement. If we were able to say that he had not lost his right to relief upon the indorsement, we would deny complainant relief, but apparently the right to enforce payment against the indorser is lost. As we cannot be certain of this, we affirm the decree, with costs, but without prejudice to any rights defendant may have upon the indorsement.
Decree affirmed as modified.
Moore, McAlvay, Brooke, and Blair, JJ., concurred.