Court Opinion

ID: 6640586
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:44:59.691589+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:59:13.633081
License: Public Domain

Flandeau, J.
By the Court. The answer of the Defendants Wilcox and Barber contains two separate defences. The first one is a prior suit in which the rights of the parties have been litigated and determined in favor of the Defendants, and the second, that the Plaintiff’s mortgage has become merged and extinguished by the union in the Plaintiff of the legal and .equitable estates in the land.
The first defence is well pleaded and issue is taken upon it. The second is demurred to.
In examining the sufficiency of the second defence, we must look to the complaint. It is evident that the pleader in drawing the complaint, was aware that the purchase by the Plaintiff of the first mortgage while he held the fee of the land, would operate as an extinguishment of it by way of merger, unless there was some exception to the rule in his case to save it. He therefore alleged, that the “ Plaintiff with intent to hold the said first mortgage and retain the same as a lien upon said property, did purchase the same and pay a full and adequate consideration therefor and receive the assignment thereof as hereinbefore stated and set forth.”
If the intention with which the Plaintiff purchased the *200mortgage is well pleaded in the above quoted averment, then the mortgage would not be merged, because in equity, the question of merger depends upon the intention of the party in taking the estate. I will therefore first consider the objections made by the Defendants to this allegation; and after showing that the intention of the Plaintiff is well pleaded, apply the second defence stated in the answer to the complaint, and show that without a denial of the intention alleged in the complaint, the defence fails.
The counsel for the Defendants contends that an allegation cannot be made directly that a party acted with a certain intention. That the intention is a conclusion to be arrived at by the establishment of facts and circumstances. That as a witness cannot testify directly concerning the intention of a party, nor can a party himself so testify concerning his own intention, but must state facts and circumstances, therefore such facts and circumstances and not the intention itself must be pleaded.
This position is not well taken. Intention or motive, is an operation of the mind, a mental act, which may take place, but remain confined in the mind which conceived it, and never be susceptible of proof unless it is evidenced by some act or declaration of the party which betrays it. "We say a man’s motives must be judged by his acts ; the act therefore becomes the evidence or proof upon which we convict of the intention. In pleading, the fact to be established must be stated, and not the evidence upon which it depends, and which will be introduced on the trial in support of it.
Suppose in this case, the Plaintiff wishing to procure this mortgage to enforce it as a prior lien, had been doubtful as to the legal effect of a purchase of it by him while he owned the fee, and not intending it should merge, had, before purchasing, consulted his counsel to ascertain if he could do so without its becoming extinguished by meeting the fee, and had been assured that the result in equity would depend upon his intention at the time he made the purchase, and he had thereupon taken the assignment, declaring that he did so for the sole purpose of controlling the first lien on the premises, and did not mean that it should merge. In such case, the intention of the *201Plaintiff, would be a particular condition or status of Ms mind; a position mentally assumed, wMch would be made known to others by his acts and declarations, which acts and declarations would be the evidence upon which the intention would be determined, but by no means the intention itself.
When the intention with which the Plaintiff made the purchase becomes material in a court of equity, can it be possible that the Plaintiff in pleading it, must set out all the facts and circumstances above detailed ? or would it be the better pleading directly to allege the intention ? I feel no hesitation in saying that the former course would be pleading evidence and therefore unwarrantable, and the latter, facts, and therefore proper.
In pleading title, a party always alleges that he is seized 'of the fee, etc., and not that it was conveyed to him by another. The former is the fact, and the latter the evidence of it.
So also in criminal pleading, where the intention with which an act is done constitutes the crime, it is always sufficient directly to charge that it was done with a feloneous intent, which upon trial is made out by the proof of such facts as would naturally indicate the requisite state of mind.
The allegation of intent is well pleaded in the complaint, and not being denied by the answer, stands admitted.
The second defence set up in the answer, consists of a series of facts and- circumstances which are designed to show that the Plaintiff’s mortgage merged in the fee when he purchased it. It seeks to show a condition of things incompatible with an intention in the Plaintiff to keep alive the lien of the mortgage, and would perhaps be available for that purpose if accompanied by a denial of such intention as alleged in the complaint; but as it leaves the fact admitted that the mortgage was purchased by the Plaintiff with intent to keep up the lien, it may all.be true and yet not make out a defence, as the whole doctrine of merger in equity hinges upon the intention with which the estates are united.
In 1 Maddock's Chancery, at page 540, the rule in equity is laid down as follows : “ On this subject the general rule appears to be, that a person becoming entitled to an estate liable ‡0 a charge, (a mortgage for instance) for his own benefit, may *202if he chooses, at once take the estate and keep up the charge. Upon this subject a court of equity is not guided by the rules of law. It sometimes holds a charge extinguished where it would subsist at law; and sometimes preserves it where at law it would be merged. The question is upon the intention actual or presumed of the person in whom the interests are united. In most instances it is, with reference to the party himself, of no sort of use to have a charge upon his own estate, and where that is the case it will be held to sink, unless something shall have been done by him to keep it on foot.”
This is the language of Sir William Grant, Master of the Rolls, in the case of Forbes vs. Moffat, 18 Ves. Jun. 393. It is cited as the law of merger by Justice Sutherland in James vs. Morey, 2 Cow. 303. Chief Justice Savage in the case last cited, at page 313, gives the law of merger as follows :
“ The doctrine of merger as derived from the decisions of Great Britain and this State, seems to be this, that when the legal and equitable estates become united in the same person, the equitable is merged in the legal estate unless, first, the party in whom they unite manifests an intention to keep them separate; or, second, it is manifestly his intention to keep them so ; but when it is indifferent whether they unite or not, or when an intention to unite them is shown, then they shall be united.”
In the same case on page 318, Mr. Senator Cramer states it to be as follows:
“ From all the authorities which I have been able to examine, I consider the rule well settled, aud I think it a rule founded upon good sense and justice that when the legal and equitable claims are united in the same person the equitable title is merged, and no longer exists except in special cases.” He cites as ££ explicit and decisive ” of this point, 3 John. Ch Rep. 53; 5 Ib. 214; 6 Ib. 309; 2 Ves. Jun. 361. He then proceeds:
££ The only exceptions to this rule are, first, when there is a declared intention on the part of the mortgagee that the equitable and legal titles shall continue distinct; secondly, where an intention to continue the mortgage may be fairly presumed from the acts of the mortgagee; and thirdly, where the law *203will presume such intention from the circumstances of the case without regard to'the acts of the mortgagee, which it will do in two cases. First, when for the interest of the party the mortgage should continue; and secondly, when from the situation of the parties (as in the case of an infant,) he cannot make his election. These are all the cases to he found in which the mortgage will be deemed a subsisting incumbrance, when the mortgagee has the legal and equitable estates united in himself. But when it is indifferent to the party whether the charge should or should .not subsist, it always merges.”
The doctrine of merger is clearly and correctly expressed in the above quotations, as it is understood and administered by courts of equity. The difference between the doctrine at law and in equity, being, that at law when the superior and inferior estates meet in the same person they always merge, and in equity the merger will be controlled by the idtention of the party in whom the estates meet in uniting the same; or where there is an union of the estates without the act of the party, as by inheritance, the merger will be governed by the circumstances of the case, and the interest of the party under the rules above mentioned.
The complaint shows that there was no merger. The answer does not deny the fact in the complaint which saves the mortgage, and in this respect fails to make out the second defence. The court therefore did right to sustain the demurrer.
The judgment is affirmed, and the case remanded.