The obligation of a mortgage contract under which the right of
redemption is barred after lapse of one year from entry and taking
possession by the mortgagee to foreclose, is not impaired by a
state law, enacted after the date of the mortgage but before breach
of condition, and requiring the mortgagee, if he would sustain such
a foreclosure, to make and record, within three months after its
completion, an affidavit of the facts. P.
260 U. S.
680.
119 Me. 581 affirmed.
Error to a judgment of the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine
affirming a judgment for the plaintiff in a suit to redeem property
from a mortgage foreclosure.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Suit to redeem a mortgage which was executed by defendant in
error to one George W. Towle to secure his
Page 260 U. S. 678
promissory note for the payment to Towle of the sum of $2,000
and interest. The note and mortgage were dated October 14,
1905.
On February 20, 1919, a breach of the mortgage was committed and
the holder of it, under the laws of the state, foreclosed it by
taking possession of the mortgaged premises and duly recorded a
certificate of the fact in the registry of deeds of the proper
county.
The bill as originally drawn was based upon an alleged effort to
redeem the mortgaged premises by payment of the amount due upon the
note and mortgage before the time of redemption expired, in which
effort plaintiff alleges he failed by the absence of Conley from
his residence and place of business.
Plaintiff (defendant in error), however, amended his bill to
read as follows:
"The plaintiff further alleges that more than three months have
elapsed since the expiration of one year from the time when the
legal representatives of the mortgagee of the mortgage described in
the plaintiff's bill took possession of the mortgaged property for
the purpose of foreclosing said mortgage, but neither the mortgagee
nor the holder of record of said mortgage, nor the legal
representative or legal representatives, of either the mortgagee or
holder of record of said mortgage nor any other person, has signed
and sworn to an affidavit as required in cases of foreclosure of
mortgages of real estate by § 4 of Chapter 95 of the Revised
Statutes of Maine as amended by Chapter 192 of the Public Laws of
A.D. 1917, and no such affidavit has been recorded in the registry
of deeds where the certificate of said foreclosure is recorded, as
required by said statute, and these facts were not known to the
plaintiff at the time of filing his said bill as said three months
had not elapsed at the time of filing said bill."
Plaintiff in error, answering the amendment, alleges that c. 192
of the Public Laws of 1917 "has no application
Page 260 U. S. 679
and no relevancy to the plaintiff's [defendant in error's]
rights or cause of action herein," and that, if it be claimed that
such chapter grants any additional time beyond the one year as
covenanted in the mortgage deed, the act
"would be contrary to the provisions of Section 10 of the
Constitution of the United States and to the covenant of the
mortgage deed itself, and therefore void and of no effect."
An estoppel was also pleaded.
The mortgage contained a provision by which the mortgagor
covenanted with the mortgagee that the right to redeem the
mortgaged premises should be forever foreclosed in one year next
after the commencement of foreclosure by any of the methods then
provided by law, and one of the methods provided was entry into
possession of the mortgaged premises and holding the same by
consent in writing of the mortgagor, or the person holding under
him.
It is, however, provided by c. 192 of the Public Laws of 1917,
that possession so obtained (or by any other of the three modes
provided) "and continued for one year" will "forever foreclose the
right of redemption," provided, however,
"that an affidavit signed and sworn to by the mortgagee or by
the holder of record of the mortgage, or their legal
representatives, is, written three months after the expiration of
one year from the taking of such possession, recorded in the
registry of deeds where the certificate of foreclosure is recorded.
. . ."
On February 20, 1919, a breach of the mortgage having been
committed, the holder of the mortgage assigned it to the plaintiff
in error, Conley, but two years before that time the act providing
for the filing of the affidavit as above stated was passed, and its
effect is the principal controversy in this case. Defendant in
error urges it to sustain his right to redemption; plaintiff in
error asserts that it is inapplicable, and contends that, if held
applicable, it is invalid as impairing the obligation of his
contract, the mortgage.
Page 260 U. S. 680
The trial court decided that the provision was applicable and
valid. These conclusions were affirmed by the Supreme Court. 119
Me. 581. "There can be no doubt," the Supreme Court said, "that the
amendment, by its terms, relates to all foreclosures begun after
its passage including foreclosures of prior existing mortgages." In
reply to the contention that the statute impairs the obligation of
the contract constituted by the mortgage "by extending the
foreclosure period for three months after the expiration of the
year," it was said:
"But the statute does not extend the foreclosure period. In
effect, it imposes a condition which the mortgagee must perform or
be held to have waived his foreclosure. He may perform the
condition at once on the expiration of the year or at his option at
any time within three months. If the affidavit is seasonably
recorded, the foreclosure is complete at the end of the year. If
not, it is invalidated."
By a rescript by one of the justices, the case is given a
clearer definition. Chapter 192 of the Laws, it was decided,
requires a mortgagee within 30 days after completion of foreclosure
to record in the registry of deeds an affidavit setting forth the
facts and that the affidavit is made the condition upon which the
validity of the foreclosure depends, and further that it applied to
mortgages dated before 1917 and which contain a one-year
foreclosure covenant, which the court denominated "the familiar
form." The conclusion was that such "foreclosure clause" was "not a
contract contemplated and protected by the Constitution," and
further that the act related to the remedy for the enforcement of
rights, and that, while an act may not so far affect the remedy as
to impair the obligation of a contract, the test in such case "is
whether the value of the contract is lessened and whether a
substantial and efficacious remedy remains." It was decided that
the act sustained the test.
The basic principles that determine this case are elementary.
The obligation of a contract cannot be impaired
Page 260 U. S. 681
by a law passed after the contract was entered into, and the
remedy for enforcement of the contract may be so far a part of it
as to be within the principle that protects it. But the remedy may
not have that intimacy of relation, and a regulation or change of
it may not impair its efficiency or lessen the obligation of the
contract.
It is recognized that the legislature may modify or change
existing remedies or prescribe new modes of procedure without
impairing the obligation of contracts if a substantial or
efficacious remedy remains or is given by means of which a party
can enforce his rights under the contract.
Oshkosh Waterworks
Co. v. Oshkosh, 187 U. S. 437;
Barnitz v. Beverly, 163 U. S. 118.
These cases are complementary. In the first, an alteration of the
remedy was sustained; in the second, the remedy was adjudged so
intimate in its relation to the contract as to be within its
obligation and immunity from change. The first is the reliance of
defendant in error; the second, of plaintiff in error. Our inquiry
therefore is: which determines the case at bar?
The statute, in execution of the purpose of the state, enjoins a
duty upon the mortgagee the effect of the nonperformance of which
the mortgagor may avail of. In other words, the duty not performed,
the attempt at foreclosure is null and void, and necessarily,
therefore, it is no impediment to redemption of the mortgage by the
mortgagor. It does not withhold possession of the premises for a
single day, nor does it defeat the efficacy of possession as
foreclosure. And we have seen the supreme court of the state,
passing upon it, decided that compliance with it does not involve
any delay. The mortgagee may perform the condition at once, or, at
his option, any time within 3 months. It therefore only imposes a
condition, easily complied with, which the law, for its purposes,
requires, and the condition was required and its purpose declared
long before plaintiff in error's attempt at foreclosure.
Page 260 U. S. 682
We think it would be extreme to hold that this is outside of the
power of the state over remedies, and the law of the state has
precedents of justification in
Vance v. Vance,
108 U. S. 514, and
Curtis v.
Whitney, 13 Wall. 68.
Decree affirmed.