Judges: Allen, Devens
Filed Date: 6/22/1883
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/9/2024
This is an appeal from a decree that the mortgage held by the plaintiff have priority over the mortgage made by the defendant Ahern to Richard Long, and held by the defendant Phipps as administrator of his estate; and enjoining Phipps against enforcing or transferring his mortgage, except subject to the mortgage of the plaintiff.
The material facts, as found by the master, and shown by the evidence reported by him, are as follows. In June, 1869, Ahern gave his note for $900 to Long, and executed the mortgage to him to secure the note. There was no consideration for the note, and the mortgage was made by Ahern and received by Long with intent to defraud the creditors of Ahern, and on a secret trust for Ahern. The note and mortgage were delivered to Long, and he had the mortgage recorded forthwith. About three months after the execution of the mortgage Long handed it to Ahern, saying that there was his mortgage, and offering to return the note soon. Ahern told him to destroy the note, and he said that he would do so. The mortgage thereafter remained in Ahern’s possession. After the death of Long, in 1877, the note was found among his papers, and came into the possession of his
Upon these facts, the plaintiff was a purchaser for value. The defendant Phipps contends that he was not a bona fide purchaser, and therefore not entitled to a decree. The fact that the plaintiff had notice of the prior mortgage does not show that he did not act in good faith in taking his mortgage with the knowledge that it would have priority over the other. Ricker v. Ham, 14 Mass. 137. Clapp v. Leatherbee, 18 Pick. 131. In Ricker v. Ham, Chief Justice Parker said: “We apprehend the term bona fide, as used in the law upon this subject, means only that the purchase shall be a real and not a feigned one; otherwise the knowledge would not be held immaterial, as it is in all the books.”
The plaintiff is an actual purchaser from Ahern, and can be under no greater obligation of good faith toward the defendant than Ahern was under to Long. But Long paid nothing for his mortgage, and held it under a secret trust for Ahern. If Ahern could not enforce that trust, it was not because it would have been bad faith in him to have done so, but because he was prohibited from so doing by considerations of public policy. As between the parties, good faith required Long to give up and discharge the mortgage, and if the plaintiff has succeeded to Ahern’s rights, but without his disability, there can be no question of bad faith in attempting to enforce them. The only question that can be raised is whether the plaintiff partakes of Ahern’s disability to assert his rights. The defendant Phipps contends that this suit is for the benefit of Ahern, and that he is the real party to it. The facts do not sustain this position.
In the opinion of a majority of the court, the plaintiff stands, to the extent of his debt, in the position of a bona fide purchaser with notice, and not as a mere representative of Ahern, and is entitled to relief as such purchaser. Decree affirmed.