Citation Numbers: 15 A. 207, 64 N.H. 591
Judges: Clark, Blodgett, Carpenter
Filed Date: 6/5/1888
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The form of action may be changed by amendment in any stage of the proceedings, to prevent injustice (Stebbins v. Inc. Co.,
Whether the plaintiff can maintain her action for injury to the real estate after the death of her husband depends upon whether the estate is insolvent and whether the administration is closed, facts which do not appear in the case. G. L., c. 198 s. 19; Carter v. Jackson,
The motion for a nonsuit, because the action was not brought within two years after the original grant of administration, was properly denied. Gen. Laws, c. 198, s. 7, providing that if any right of action existed against or in favor of the deceased at the time of his death, and survives, an action may be brought by or against the administrator at any time within two years after the original grant of administration, does not limit the time of bringing an action by an administrator upon a claim not barred by the general statute of limitations. The statute was enacted to extend the time within which suits may be brought *Page 593 which would otherwise be barred, and not to limit the time of bringing actions against which the general statute has not run.
Upon the facts reported there is no legal error in the conclusion of the referee that the defendant's mortgage was not executed under duress. Threatening to sue does not constitute duress. Evans v. Gale,
The relation of mortgagor and mortgagee is peculiar, and the decisions touching the rights and interest of each are not entirely harmonious. The confusion, however, arises largely from the use of general expressions, which are correct as applied to the circumstances of the particular case, but misleading unless so limited and understood. A mortgagee is not in a general sense the owner of the mortgaged estate. Before foreclosure, his interest is not, in fact, real estate; but he is entitled to have it treated as such so far as it may be necessary to enable him to prevent waste, and to keep the land from being in any way diminished in value, or to receive the rents and profits, and to give him the full benefit of his security, and appropriate remedies for any violation of his rights under the mortgage. Ellison v. Daniels,
So long as the mortgagee permits the mortgagor to remain in possession of the mortgaged estate, he is regarded as owner so far only as may be necessary for the protection of his security. He may employ any remedies appropriate for that purpose, and may at any time enter and take possession under his mortgage; but until he chooses to take possession the mortgage gives him no right to do any act whereby the mortgagor may be disturbed in his enjoyment of the estate, or its value and earnings may be diminished. "If, without taking possession under his mortgage, the mortgagee flows the mortgaged land by means of a dam upon other land belonging to him, such flowing is not an exercise of any right of possession or of ownership. It is not an exercise of any possession under the mortgage. The injury is an incidental result of the exercise of his riparian rights annexed to other lands. So long as the mortgagor is suffered to remain in possession, he is entitled, by virtue of that possession, to the damages, notwithstanding the person who caused the flowing is the holder of a mortgage upon the premises flowed." 1 Jones Mort., s. 671; Vaugh v. Wetherell,
Chellis v. Stearns,
The present action can be maintained. At the time of the injuries complained of the defendant was not in possession of the mortgaged premises; and nothing appears in the case showing an entry for the purpose of asserting a title under the mortgage, or with a design of enforcing the mortgage lien by foreclosure. The acts of which the plaintiff complains, and for which damages are sought to be recovered, cannot be regarded as a possession under the *Page 595
mortgage, or the legitimate exercise of any right under it, and consequently the mortgage cannot change the character of the acts, or afford a justification or defence to the defendant. The language of Parker, C. J., in Great Falls Company v. Worster,
The plaintiff sues in her representative character, and it is not to be assumed that the referee included in his verdict damages to the premises after the set-off of dower and homestead. The plaintiff is entitled to the damages accruing in the lifetime of her husband not barred by the statute of limitations; and if the estate is insolvent and the administration not closed, she is entitled to judgment on the report, upon amending the declaration and alleging the facts which entitle her to recover the damages accruing subsequent to the death of her husband. G. L., c. 198 s. 19; Forist v. Androscoggin Co.,
Case discharged.
BLODGETT and CARPENTER, JJ., did not sit: the others concurred.
Gagnon v. Connor , 64 N.H. 276 ( 1886 )
Merrill v. Perkins , 59 N.H. 343 ( 1879 )
Page v. Campton , 63 N.H. 197 ( 1884 )
Jones v. Houghton , 61 N.H. 51 ( 1881 )
Stebbins v. Lancashire Ins. , 59 N.H. 143 ( 1879 )
Buckminster v. Wright , 59 N.H. 153 ( 1879 )
Peaslee v. Dudley , 63 N.H. 220 ( 1884 )
Grew v. Boston & Maine Railroad , 83 N.H. 383 ( 1928 )
Frye v. Hubbell , 74 N.H. 358 ( 1907 )
Morrill v. Amoskeag Savings Bank , 90 N.H. 358 ( 1939 )
Pettengill v. Turo , 159 Me. 350 ( 1963 )
Concord Manufacturing Co. v. Robertson , 66 N.H. 1 ( 1889 )
Hayes v. Colby , 65 N.H. 192 ( 1889 )
Sinclair v. Wheeler , 69 N.H. 538 ( 1898 )
Gosselin v. Lemay , 85 N.H. 13 ( 1931 )
Holman v. Manning , 65 N.H. 228 ( 1889 )
Morgan v. Joyce , 66 N.H. 476 ( 1891 )
Sanborn v. Boston & Maine Railroad , 76 N.H. 65 ( 1911 )
Perkins v. Perkins , 68 N.H. 264 ( 1895 )