Judges: Morton
Filed Date: 6/30/1899
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/9/2024
This is an action under Pub. Sts. c. 120, § 25, for an alleged neglect and refusal to execute and deliver a deed of release of a mortgage. The only exception is to the refusal of the judge who heard the case to rule as requested by the defendant, that upon all the evidence the plaintiff could not recover. There was evidence tending to show that the plaintiff paid all that was due on the mortgage within the time agreed upon, and also a sum agreed to between the defendant’s' attorney and himself as the costs of the foreclosure proceedings. It is immaterial
This, with the other evidence in the case,
Exceptions overruled.
The defendant’s counsel contended that payments under the agreement were to be made at his office, but there was no evidence on which this could be found as a fact. The defendant testified that she had never signed a discharge of the mortgage, and the plaintiff offered evidence to the effect that because of the neglect and refusal of the defendant to discharge the same, he lost an opportunity to exchange the land for property of greater value. The defendant’s counsel testified that he had not been paid for his legal services in connection with the foreclosure, but there was evidence that neither the defendant’s counsel nor the defendant herself ever made further demands upon the plaintiff, and that there was never any effort on the part of the defendant or the defendant’s counsel to proceed with the foreclosure sale. The defendant testified on direct examination that she had an affliction which affected her mind, but the nature of it did not appear, nor was there any evidence that she was not of ordinary intellectual capacity except from her appearance on the witness stand. The defendant also testified, on cross-examination, that she had previously held two real estate and one personal property mortgages, and that she had collected her interest personally.