The maker of a promissory note executed, to one who for his
accommodation signed his name on the back of the note before its
delivery to the payee, a mortgage of real estate to indemnify him
against all costs and charges arising from his contract, with a
power of sale in case of the mortgagor's default in paying the
note. The mortgagor failing to pay the note at maturity, the
mortgagee paid the amount thereof to the payee, and entered it upon
his books in general account against the mortgagor, and the payee
endorsed the amount as a full payment on the note, and delivered up
the note to the mortgagee. The mortgagee afterwards assigned to a
third person the mortgage and the obligation therein mentioned.
Held, that the assignee might maintain a bill in equity
against the mortgagor for foreclosure and sale of the land under
the mortgage, and for payment by the mortgagor personally of so
much of the amount of the note as the proceeds of the sale under
the foreclosure were insufficient to satisfy.
A stipulation in a mortgage of real estate that in case of
foreclosure, the mortgagor shall pay an attorney's or solicitor's
fee of one hundred dollars, is unlawful and void by the law of
Michigan, as declared by the supreme court of the state, and
therefore cannot be enforced in the circuit court of the United
States upon a bill in equity to foreclose a mortgage, made and
payable in that state, of land therein.
Bill in equity to foreclose a mortgage. The suit was commenced
in a state court, and was removed to the circuit court of the
United States, where a foreclosure and sale were decreed. The
defendants below appealed.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal by James Bendey and wife from a decree for the
foreclosure of a mortgage of land in Michigan, executed by them at
Houghton, in that state, on April 30, 1873, to Samuel S. Smith and
William Harris; expressed to be made in consideration of the
endorsement by Smith and Harris of several
Page 109 U. S. 666
promissory notes of Bendey therein described, payable to the
order of Thomas W. Edwards at the First National Bank of Houghton;
conditioned that if Bendey should pay the notes at maturity, and
should save and keep harmless the mortgagees "of and from all costs
and charges arising from or on account of said endorsements," and
empowering the mortgagees, in case of default by Bendey in the
payment of the notes, or either of them, to sell the land by public
auction and convey it to the purchasers, rendering the surplus
money, if any, arising from the sale, to the mortgagors, after
deducting the costs and charges of the sale,
"and also one hundred dollars as an attorney fee should any
proceedings be taken to foreclose this indenture under the statute,
and the same sum as a solicitor's fee, should any proceedings be
taken to foreclose the same in chancery."
The other facts appearing by the record are as follows: Smith
and Harris, who were partners, signed their partnership name upon
the back of the notes before their delivery to Edwards. One of
these notes, for $5,000, became payable on May 4, 1876, and, not
being paid by Bendey, was protested for nonpayment, and an action
was brought thereon by Edwards against Smith and Harris, who,
before judgment in that action, paid the amount of the note, with
interest. Edwards endorsed the amount as a full payment on the
note, and delivered up the note to Smith and Harris, and they
entered the amount paid by them upon their books in their general
account against Bendey, and afterwards, on September 5, 1877,
assigned the mortgage, and the land therein described, "together
with the note or obligation therein also mentioned," to "William
Brigham and Amos Townsend, trustees." The assignment was in fact
made in part payment of debts due from Smith and Harris to firms of
which Townsend and Brigham were respectively members.
Townsend and Brigham, who were citizens of Ohio, filed a bill in
equity against Bendey and wife, who were citizens of Michigan, in a
court of this state, alleging the facts aforesaid, and praying for
an account, for the foreclosure of the mortgage by sale of the
land, for the payment by Bendey of any balance remaining
Page 109 U. S. 667
due to the plaintiff of the principal and interest of the note
and mortgage, and for general relief. After the filing of answers
and replication, the case was removed, on petition of the
defendants, into the Circuit Court of the United States for the
Western District of Michigan, and a hearing there had, upon which
the facts above stated were proved, and a decree entered that the
defendants pay to the plaintiffs the sum of $7,996.59, with
interest, together with a solicitor's fee of $100, and that in
default of such payment the land be sold by public auction, and
conveyed under the direction of a master in chancery, and the
proceeds of the sale applied to the payment of these sums, and that
if the proceeds of the sale should be insufficient for such
payment, the amount of the deficiency, with interest, should be
paid by Bendey to the plaintiff. From this decree the defendants
appealed to this Court.
The contract into which Smith and Harris entered, by signing
their names on the back of the note before its delivery to the
payee, though styled in the mortgage an endorsement, was rather, as
toward the payee or a subsequent endorsee of the note, that of
joint makers with Bendey.
Good v. Martin, 95 U. S.
90;
Rothschild v. Grix, 31 Mich. 150. But
whether their liability in that aspect should be treated as that of
promisors or of guarantors or of endorsers, it is clear that,
having signed their names to the note for the accommodation of
Bendey, their relation toward him was that of sureties, and they
had the right, upon being obliged to pay the amount of the note on
his failure to pay it at maturity, to recover from him the sum so
paid. The mortgage, containing a condition to indemnify them
against all costs and charges arising from their contract, was
security to them for the payment by the mortgagors to them of that
sum. The entry, in the regular course of their bookkeeping, of the
amount so paid in general account against Bendey did not merge or
extinguish the mortgage or the personal liability of Bendey to
them. The assignment by them to Townsend and Brigham of the
mortgage, together with the obligation therein mentioned, was a
valid assignment, in equity at least, of the mortgage, as well as
of their claim against Bendey for the repayment of the sum paid by
them on
Page 109 U. S. 668
the note. The assignees were therefore rightly held to be
entitled to a decree for the foreclosure of the mortgage, and also,
under the ninety-second rule in equity, to a decree against Bendey
himself for so much of the sum paid by Smith and Harris, with
interest, as the money obtained by the sale of the land under the
foreclosure should be insufficient to satisfy.
The decree below is therefore right in all respects except in
allowing a solicitor's fee of $100. The land is in Michigan; the
notes and mortgage were made and payable in Michigan, and by the
law of Michigan, as settled by repeated and uniform decisions of
the supreme court of that state, a stipulation in a mortgage to pay
an attorney's or solicitor's fee of a fixed sum is unlawful and
void, and cannot be enforced in a foreclosure either under the
statutes of the state or by bill in equity.
Bullock v.
Taylor, 39 Mich. 137;
Myer v. Hart, 40 Mich. 517;
Vosburgh v. Lay, 45 Mich. 455;
Van Marter v.
McMillan, 39 Mich. 304;
Botsford v. Botsford, 49
Mich. 29. Upon such a question, affecting the validity and effect
of a contract made and to be performed in Michigan concerning land
in Michigan, the law of the state must govern in proceedings to
enforce the contract in a federal court within the state.
Brine
v. Insurance Co., 96 U. S. 627;
Connecticut Ins. Co. v. Cushman, 108 U. S.
51;
Equator Co. v. Hall, 106 U. S.
86.
The result is that the decree must be reversed without costs to
either party in this Court, and the case remanded to the circuit
court with directions to enter a decree for the plaintiffs, with
costs, modified by striking out the allowance of the solicitor's
fee.
Decree accordingly.