Court Opinion

ID: 6431040
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:08:15.165871+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:52:11.761471
License: Public Domain

Knowlton, C. J.
This case presents a question in regard to the construction of the R L. c. 182, § 15, (St. 1882, c. 237,) which has been referred tojn former cases, but not decided. The facts come within the language of the statute, and give the court jurisdiction to enter a decree for the petitioner, within the decision in McMahan v. McMahan, ante, 99, unless by implication the finding 16 that the condition of the mortgage has not been performed ” takes the case out of the statute and leaves the mortgage in full force.
It has been said in former decisions that the object of the statute is to provide for the removal of a cloud from a title when there has been twenty years’ continuous possession by a mortgagor after the mortgage becomes due, without recognition of the mortgage. Mitchell v. Bickford, 192 Mass. 244, 246. McMahan v. McMahan, ante, 99. But there is no provision for reaching this result except when the statutory requirements are availed of in proceedings under this statute. By the terms of the statute, if the mortgage is to secure the payment of money, they can be availed of only when no evidence is offered of a payment on account of the debt secured by the mortgage within twenty years after the expiration of the time limited for the performance of the condition thereof, or of any other act within said time, in recognition of its existence as a valid mortgage. Unless the necessary facts are proved without the introduction of evidence tending to show the contrary, no action can be taken under the statute. McMahan v. McMahan, ubi supra. If the petitioners’ averments are met with evidence of payment or other recognition of the mortgage within the twenty years referred to, the petitioners are left to their rights at common law, where they have the benefit of a presumption of payment after the expiration of twenty years, but are still subject to a determination of the fact whether the condition of the mortgage has been per*500formed. Their rights in such a case are fully stated in Jenkins v. Andover Theological Seminary, ante, 376.
If the mortgage is to secure the mortgagee against a contingent liability, the court, under the St. 1885, c. 283, embodied in the R. L. c. 182, § 15, may determine whether this contingent liability has ceased to exist, and whether the mortgage ought to be discharged.
In mortgages to secure the payment of money the presumption of payment after the lapse of twenty years is so strong that if, in addition, we have the neglect of the mortgagee to offer any evidence of payment or of a recognition of the mortgage when notified of an application to obtain a discharge under this statute, the Legislature may well treat it as establishing an absolute limitation upon the right of the mortgagee to enforce the mortgage. The words, “ and no action to enforce a title under said mortgage shall thereafter be maintained ” create this limitation.
The question is raised whether this statute was intended to apply to mortgages whose condition was to be performed before its enactment, or only to those in which the twenty years would begin to run afterward. The language seems plainly to apply to mortgages in which a part or the whole of the period had already expired, as well as to those, all of whose conditions were to be performed after the enactment of the statute. Upon the respondent’s contention, no proceedings could be taken under the act until the expiration of twenty years or more from its enactment.
It is contended that this construction makes the statute unconstitutional, as impairing the obligation of contracts. But the Legislature may make a statute of limitations applicable to existing contracts, provided a reasonable time is given for the enforcement of them. A statute of limitations does not take away any substantive rights secured by the contract, but only affects the remedy. All the questions that arise upon this contention are fully answered in Mulvey v. Boston, 197 Mass. 178, and the cases there cited. When one has waited twenty years or more after the time fixed for the performance of a condition of a mortgage, without receiving any payment or other recognition of it, the Legislature may determine that, if he wishes to *501enforce it by suit, he shall take action within thirty days. All the reasons for sustaining the validity of the act in Mulvey v. Boston, ubi supra, exist in the present case.
Inasmuch as the facts are established under this statute, and there is no evidence of any payment or other recognition of the mortgage within twenty years after the time when the condition of it was to be performed, we are of opinion that the case is within the express terms of the statute, and that these facts create an absolute bar under a special statute of limitations applicable only in proceedings of this kind. The fact that the condition of the mortgage has not been performed cannot be set up against the statute in this case. In Mitchell v. Bickford, 192 Mass. 244, 246, is this language: “We are of opinion that the object of the statute is to provide for the removal of such a cloud, and to make twenty years’ possession by the mortgagor without recognition of the mortgage, if availed of in these proceedings, an absolute statutory bar to all claims under the mortgage.”

Exceptions overruled.