A provision in a deed of real estate in trust to secure the
payment of a debt, which authorizes the trustee to sell the
property at auction on breach of condition, first giving thirty
days' notice of the time and place of sale by advertising the same
for three successive weeks in a newspaper, is complied with so far
as respects notice by publication of such note for three successive
weeks, the first publication being more than thirty days before the
day of sale.
If such notice describes the property to be sold in the language
of the mortgage, it is sufficient.
A trust deed in the nature of a mortgage may confer upon the
trustee power to sell the premises on default in the payment of the
debt secured by the deed, and a sale thereunder, conducted in
accordance with the terms of the power in the deed, will pass the
granted premises to the purchaser on its consummation by
conveyance, and this rule obtains in Montana notwithstanding the
provisions in § 371 of its Revised Statutes.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case is before us on appeal from a judgment of the supreme
court of the Territory of Montana affirming a judgment of one of
its district courts.
The original action in the district court was ejectment
commenced by the plaintiffs in Silver Bow County for the possession
of two mining claims situated therein. It was
Page 156 U. S. 471
tried by the court without the intervention of a jury, upon
certain agreed facts in the nature of a special verdict.
It appears by them that on the 25th of April, 1882, the
defendant the Bell Silver & Copper Mining Company, a
corporation organized under the laws of Montana, was the owner and
in possession of the mining ground described in the complaint, the
other defendants named being at the time upon the premises under
contract with the company. On that day, the defendant company
executed and delivered to the grantees therein designated an
indenture reciting that it was authorized by the laws of the
Territory of Montana, by its articles of incorporation, and by a
vote of its trustees, to execute trust mortgages of all its
property, real, personal, and mixed, to secure the payment of bonds
issued by it, and it was about to issue sixty bonds, in the sum of
one thousand dollars each, to secure a loan of sixty thousand
dollars to be made to it, and declared that in order to secure the
payment of the bonds to be thus issued, and interest thereon, it
had granted, bargained, sold, and conveyed, and by those presents
did grant, bargain, sell, and convey, to Samuel Wells and Theodore
H. Tyndale, as trustees, and the survivor of them, their successors
in trust, and assigns, the property described in the complaint,
with all the buildings, privileges, franchises, and appurtenances;
this last clause not to be construed so as to prevent the company
from selling old materials in the ordinary course of business, to
be replaced by new, nor to prevent it from mining, reducing, or
selling ore from the mine in the ordinary course of business,
meaning and intending thereby to mortgage all the property, real,
personal, and mixed, of whatever nature or name, owned by the party
of the first part, but upon the following express trusts, that is
to say, that in case the Bell Silver & Copper Mining Company
should fail to pay the principal, or any part thereof, which might
fall due on the bonds secured thereby at any time and place when
and where the same might become due and payable according to the
tenor and effect thereof, and for thirty days thereafter, then and
in that case, upon the written request of the holders of one-fourth
part of the bonds which might at
Page 156 U. S. 472
the time be outstanding and unpaid, it should be the duty of the
parties of the second part, their survivors or assigns to enter
upon an take possession of the premises of the party of the first
part, their successors in trust, and assigns, or they might at
their discretion, upon the written request of the holders of
one-fourth of the bonds then unpaid, cause the premises and
property to be sold at public auction in Butte City, Montana, or in
the City of Boston, Massachusetts, as the parties of the second
part, their successors or assigns, might deem best, first giving
thirty days' notice of the time and place and terms of sale, by
publishing the same once a week for three weeks successively in one
of the principal newspapers for the time being in Boston,
Massachusetts, and Butte City, Montana, and upon such sale to
execute to the purchaser or purchasers thereof a good and
sufficient deed or deeds of conveyance in fee simple for the same,
which should be a bar against the said Bell Silver & Copper
Mining Company, party of the first part, its successors and
assigns, and all other persons claiming under it or them, of all
right, interest, or claim in and to the premises and property and
all parts thereof.
And it was expressly agreed by the indenture in question that
the parties of the second part, their successors and assigns, or
any persons in their behalf, might purchase at any sale thus made,
or made by order of the court, under the laws of Montana, and that
no other person should be answerable for the application of the
purchase money, and that the trustees should, after deducting from
the proceeds of such sale the costs and expenses thereof, and of
managing the property, and enough to indemnify and save themselves
harmless from and against all liability arising from the trust and
for their own compensation, apply so much of the proceeds of the
premises and property as might be necessary for the payment of the
principal and interest of the bonds unpaid. whether matured or not,
and restore the residue to the party of the first part; it being
expressly understood and agreed that in no case should any claim or
advantage be taken of any valuation or appraisement, redemption or
extension, by the party of the
Page 156 U. S. 473
first part, its successors or assigns, nor any process be
obtained or applied for by it or them to prevent such entry or sale
and conveyance.
The agreed statement of facts further showed, aside from other
things, that thereafter, on the twenty-fourth day of June, 1885,
one Harriet M. Pitman, being then the owner of thirty-five of the
bonds mentioned therein, which had been due more than thirty days,
wrote to Wells and Tyndale a letter directing them, in their
discretion, to proceed and sell the premises upon the terms
described in the instrument, and thereafter, on the fourteenth day
of July, 1885, the bonds being past due and unpaid, Samuel Wells
and Theodore H. Tyndale prepared and published a notice of sale,
the substance of which, as to time, was published in the Boston
Traveler and the Butte Miner, papers of general circulation in the
cities and vicinities respectively where they were published.
And in pursuance of such notice, on September 2, 1885, Wells and
Tyndale offered for sale to the highest bidder the property
described in the notice, when the same was struck off to the
holders of the bonds in the mortgages mentioned, for the sum of
forty-five thousand dollars, they being then and there the highest
and best bidders, and thereafter, on the twelfth of October, 1885,
Wells and Tyndale made and delivered to the plaintiffs, the
purchasers at the sale, a deed of the premises described.
This deed is the source of the title of the plaintiffs, and the
ground upon which their present action rests for recovery.
When the case was pending in the supreme court of the territory,
it was objected that he deed was void upon several grounds -- one,
that the notice of sale was not in conformity with the requirements
of the contract; second, that the description of the property was
insufficient in law; and, third, that the power and authority under
which the mortgagees and trustees executed the deed was void under
section 371 of the Compiled Statutes of Montana. These several
objections were considered at length by the supreme court of the
territory, and held to be untenable.
By the first objection was meant, though not happily
expressed,
Page 156 U. S. 474
that the notice of sale was not sufficient in the length of time
for which it was given. The instrument provides for
"thirty days' notice of the time and place and terms of such
sale, by publishing the same once a week for three weeks
successively in one of the principal newspapers for the time being
in Boston, Massachusetts, and Butte City, Montana."
The notice of sale, in fact was published on the 15th, 22d and
29th of July, 1885, in the Boston Traveler, and in the Butte Daily
Miner on the 21st of July, and each succeeding day, including the
11th of August, 1885, and the sale took place on the second day of
the following September. Between the 15th of July, the date of the
first publication in the Boston Traveler, and the second of
September, more than thirty days elapsed, and between the 21st of
July, the date of the first publication in the Butte Daily Miner,
and the second day of September, was also more than thirty days,
and the publication in each paper was once a week for three weeks
successively. It is contended that unless the last notice in each
of the papers preceded the sale by thirty days it was insufficient.
This position was held untenable by the supreme court of the
territory, and, we think, correctly. It is sufficient that the
notice of sale was published in each of the papers for three weeks,
and that the notice preceded the sale thirty days. The first
publication was notice, as the supreme court of the territory
observed, as much as the second or last.
Leffler v.
Armstrong, 4 Ia. 485. The second objection is sufficiently
answered by the fact that the description in the notice of sale is
a transcript of that contained in the mortgage, and if it is
defective in any respect in the description of the personalty it is
sufficient that it is complete in the description of the real
property for the recovery of which the action is brought. The third
objection was that the power under which the trustees executed the
deed was void under section 371 of the Compiled Statutes of
Montana. This objection requires further consideration. The statute
declares that
"a mortgage of real property shall not be deemed a conveyance,
whatever its terms, so as to enable the owner of the mortgage to
recover possession of the real property without a foreclosure and
sale.
Page 156 U. S. 475
It was taken from a similar statute in the laws of California.
It constitutes section 260 of its Practice Act, and has frequently
been the subject of construction by its courts."
In
Koch v. Briggs, 14 Cal. 256, which was a case in
which Briggs was indebted to Koch on a promissory note, and to
secure its payment executed to one Swift, as trustee, a deed of a
parcel of real property, containing a provision for its sale upon
default in the payment of the note and interest, or any part
thereof, and that upon application of the holder he would sell the
premises at public auction at a designated place in the county, to
the highest bidder for cash, after fifteen days' previous
publication of notice in one of the newspapers of the county of the
time and place of sale, and execute to the purchaser a good and
sufficient deed of the same, and out of the proceeds, after
satisfying the expenses of the advertisement and sale and of the
trust generally, pay the principal and interest due upon the note,
and render the surplus, if any, to the grantor, or his
representatives, the court held the instrument to be a deed of
trust, and distinguishable in some features from a mortgage, though
executed as security for the debt of the grantor. By the common
law, a mortgage was a conveyance of a conditional estate, which
became absolute upon breach of its condition. The instrument being
intended as security for a debt, it became operative as a
conveyance if the condition -- that is, the payment of the debt --
was not complied with.
A court of equity, however, considering that the instrument was
intended principally as security, gave to the mortgagor a right to
redeem the premises from forfeiture after a breach of its
conditions -- that is, after the grantor's failure to pay the debt
secured -- which constituted the mortgagor's equity of redemption.
Many attempts were made at different times by special provisions to
lessen and deprive the mortgagor of this right, and to treat the
instrument as an absolute conveyance.
The object of the provision of the three hundred and
seventy-first section of the statute of Montana, and of the similar
law of California from which it was taken, was to preclude any
arrangement between the mortgagor and the
Page 156 U. S. 476
mortgagee by which the former's right to the property could be
cut off without a sale of the same. It therefore held that the
mortgage should not operate as a conveyance, whatever its terms,
until a foreclosure and sale. The foreclosure might be by judicial
proceedings in equity or by any other regular proceedings which
resulted in extinguishing the mortgagor's right of property by
sale.
In deciding
Koch v. Briggs, 14 Cal. 262, and in
distinguishing it from a mortgage in its strict form, the court
said:
"Where there is a mortgage, there is a right, after condition
broken, to a foreclosure on the part of the mortgagee, and a right
of a redemption on the part of the mortgagor. It matters not
whether we consider the instrument a conveyance of a conditional
estate in the land, as at common law, or as creating a mere lien or
encumbrance for the purpose of security, as by our law. The right
to foreclose, whether resulting in vesting an absolute title to the
property in the mortgagee, as formerly in England, or in a judicial
sale of the premises, as in this state, exists in all cases of
mortgage, after breach of condition, as does also the right to
redeem the property from forfeiture, or from the encumbrance of the
lien. These two rights are mutual and reciprocal."
In the case of
Fogarty v. Sawyer, 17 Cal. 589, the
instrument under which the property was conveyed was intended as
security, the property to be sold by the trustees named upon breach
of its condition for payment. It was similar in form to the
indenture under consideration in this case, and the court said:
"Under the section [260 of the Practice Act of California]
referred to, the mortgage creates a mere lien for the purposes of
security, and, as in other cases of lien upon real property, can
only be enforced by judicial proceedings, except by the authority
of the owner of the property. By virtue of the mortgage alone, the
mortgagee can neither acquire the possession nor dispose of the
premises, but the existence of the mortgage does not prevent the
owner from making an independent contract for the possession or
from authorizing a sale of the premises, the mortgagee consenting
thereto, to pay off
Page 156 U. S. 477
the debt. Nor is it perceived that there is any legal obstacle
to making such contract with the mortgagee or to clothing him with
the power of sale. If the owner of the property sees fit to enter
into such an arrangement with him or to confer such power upon him,
it would be going a great way for the court, for that reason alone,
to invalidate the proceedings. The right to dispose both of the
possession and estate follows necessarily from the ownership of the
property, and, this being so, no valid objection can be urged
against incorporating the contract and power in the same instrument
with the mortgage. They do not become in that way any part of the
mortgage, but are as much independent of it as though contained in
separate instruments. Some stress is placed by the respondent upon
the use of the words 'whatever its terms' in the statute. This
language is supposed to prohibit separate stipulations between the
parties for the possession and for the sale of the premises upon
default. We do not thus construe the language, but, on the
contrary, are clear that it was only intended to control the terms
of grant, bargain, and sale generally employed in mortgages."
We agree to what is stated by the court in that case. There is
nothing in the law of mortgages, nor in the law that covers what
are sometimes designated as "trust deeds in the nature of
mortgages," which prevents the conferring by the grantor or
mortgagor in such instrument of the power to sell the premises
described therein upon default in payment of the debt secured by
it, and, if the sale is conducted in accordance with the terms of
the power, the title to the premises granted by way of security
passes to the purchaser upon its consummation by a conveyance.
Grant v. Burr, 54 Cal. 298;
Bateman v. Burr, 57
Cal. 480.
The power of sale in the indenture, whether we call it a deed of
trust or a mortgage, does not change its character as an instrument
for the security of the indebtedness designated, but it is an
additional authority to the grantee or mortgagee, and, if he does
not choose to foreclose the mortgage by any of the ordinary methods
provided by law, he can proceed under the power added for the sale
of the property
Page 156 U. S. 478
to obtain payment of the indebtedness. The insertion of a power
of sale does not affect the mortgagor's right to redeem so long as
the power remains unexecuted and the mortgage is not, as it may be,
foreclosed in the ordinary manner; but when a sale is made of the
interest of the mortgagor, his right is wholly divested, embracing
his equity of redemption.
Mr. Jones, in his careful treatise on Mortgages, observes
that
"the delay and expense incident to a foreclosure and sale in
equity have brought power of sale mortgages and trust deeds into
general favor both in England and America, and, although their
general use is now confined to a part only of our states, the same
influences which have already led to their partial adoption and use
are likely to lead to their general use everywhere at an early day.
. . . A power of sale, whether vested in the creditor himself or in
a trustee, affords a prompt and effectual security."
The sale made by the trustees in the case under consideration
complied in all essential particulars with the conditions contained
in the deed of trust or mortgage, whichever it may be called, and
the deed executed by the trustees passed to the purchasers a good
title to the premises covered by the indenture.
Judgment affirmed.