1. A North Carolina statute providing that, when the mortgagee,
payee, or other holder of an obligation secured by real estate
causes a sale of the property by a trustee becomes the purchaser
for a sum less than the amount of the debt and afterwards brings an
action for the deficiency, the defendant may show, by way of
defense and set-off, that the property sold was fairly worth the
amount of the debt or that the sum bid was substantially less than
the true value of the property, and thus defeat the claim in whole
or in part,
held valid in application to notes secured by
deed of trust executed prior to the passage of the law. P.
300 U. S.
129.
2. The obligation of a contract is not impaired by a law
limiting the remedy, if a remedy adequate for enforcing the
obligation remains or is substituted. P.
300 U. S.
128.
210 N.C. 29, 185 S.E. 482, affirmed.
In an action to collect a balance due on a mortgage debt, the
plaintiff, appellant here, was defeated in a General County Court
in North Carolina. The judgment was affirmed by the Superior Court,
whose judgment was in turn affirmed by the Supreme Court of the
State.
Page 300 U. S. 126
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS, delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court of North
Carolina [
Footnote 1]
sustaining the validity of a statute claimed to impair the
obligation of a contract, contrary to Article 1, § 10, of the
Federal Constitution. The act provides that, when the mortgagee,
payee, or other holder of an obligation secured by real estate or
personal property causes a sale of the property by a
Page 300 U. S. 127
trustee, becomes the purchaser for a sum less than the amount of
the debt and afterwards brings an action for the deficiency, the
defendant may show, by way of defense and set-off, that the
property sold was fairly worth the amount of the debt or that the
sum bid was substantially less than the true value of the property,
and thus defeat the claim in whole or in part. The provision is
copied in full in the margin. [
Footnote 2]
In 1928, the appellees borrowed $8,000 from the appellant for
which they executed negotiable promissory notes. As security they
delivered a deed of trust pledging real estate. Upon default, the
appellant demanded that the trustee declare the indebtedness due,
in accordance with the terms of the notes and deed of trust, and
exercise the power of sale given by the deed. The trustee
Page 300 U. S. 128
advertised the property as required by the deed and the laws of
the state, and made sale June 19, 1933, and one acting in
appellant's interest purchased the land for $3,000. Upon expiration
of a ten-day period of redemption, the property was conveyed to the
purchaser. The appellant credited on the notes the sum realized by
the sale which left $4,534.79, with interest, due and unpaid, and,
on June 18, 1934, brought action to recover this balance. The
appellees pleaded the statute and alleged that the property, at the
time and place of sale, was fairly worth the amount of the debt. In
reply, the appellant asserted that, as the notes and deed of trust
had been executed prior to the passage of the law, the statute
violated the contract clause of the Federal Constitution. At the
trial, exception was taken to the court's refusal to enter judgment
for the appellant on the pleadings. The court, over the appellant's
objection and exception, submitted to the jury the question of the
fair value of the property at the time and place of sale, and the
jury found its value to be $8,000. An intermediate appellate court,
and the Supreme Court of the state, affirmed judgment for the
appellees.
Although admitting that the challenged legislation affects only
a remedy for enforcement of the contract, the appellant urges that
the alteration is so substantial as to impair the obligation of the
contract. The applicable principle is not in dispute. The
Legislature may modify, limit, or alter the remedy for enforcement
of a contract without impairing its obligation, but, in so doing,
it may not deny all remedy or so circumscribe the existing remedy
with conditions and restrictions as seriously to impair the value
of the right. [
Footnote 3] The
particular remedy existing at the date of the contract may be
altogether abrogated if another equally effective for the
Page 300 U. S. 129
enforcement of the obligation remains or is substituted for the
one taken away. [
Footnote 4]
The matter in dispute is whether the questioned enactment falls
beyond the boundary of permissible regulation of the remedy for
enforcement of the appellant's contract.
The loan rendered the appellees debtors to the appellant. For
that debt, the borrower pledged real estate as security. The
contract contemplated that the lender should make itself whole, if
necessary, out of the security, but not that it should be enriched
at the expense of the borrower or realize more than would repay the
loan with interest. The state provided remedies whereby the
security could be made available for solution of the debt.
When the loan was made, two such remedies were available. The
mortgagee could proceed by bill in equity to foreclose the
security. If it did, the chancellor who controlled the proceeding
could set aside a sale if the price bid was inadequate. In
addition, he might award a money decree for the amount by which the
avails of the sale fell below the amount of the indebtedness, but
his decree in that behalf would be governed by well understood
principles of equity. An alternative remedy sanctioned by state law
was available if the deed of trust so provided. This was the sale
of the pledged property by the trustee. If this were the remedy
authorized by the contract, and the mortgagee himself became the
purchaser at the trustee's sale, he might thereafter, in an action
at law, recover the difference between the price he had bid and the
amount of the indebtedness. The statute under attack effected
certain alterations of this remedy. Sections 1 and 2, not here in
issue, provide that, if the mortgaged property be sold under power
of sale, and
Page 300 U. S. 130
the sum bid be inadequate, so that consummation of the sale
would be inequitable, the mortgagor may apply to the superior court
for an order enjoining such consummation, and the judge may direct
a resale by a trustee or by a commissioner appointed for the
purpose, upon terms he may deem just and equitable. These sections
modifying the procedure under a power of sale so as to assimilate
it to the procedure in strict foreclosure, have been sustained as
constitutional by the state Supreme Court. [
Footnote 5] The section with which we are concerned
adds that, if the mortgagee becomes the purchaser at the trustee's
sale, and afterwards brings an action at law for a deficiency, the
jury shall determine the actual amount needed by him to make him
whole for his debt by finding the true or fair value of the
property at the date of sale, the judgment being for the difference
between that value and the amount of the debt remaining unpaid, or,
if the value found equals the amount of the debt, for the
defendant. The statute has no application if the purchaser at the
trustee's sale be other than the mortgagee. The act alters and
modifies one of the existing remedies for realization of the value
of the security, but cannot fairly be said to do more than restrict
the mortgagee to that for which he contracted, namely, payment in
full. It recognizes the obligation of his contract and his right to
its full enforcement, but limits that right so as to prevent his
obtaining more than his due. By the old and well known remedy of
foreclosure, a mortgagee was so limited because of the chancellor's
control of the proceeding. That proceeding, as has been said, has
always been available to the mortgagee in North Carolina. Granting
that, by the alternative remedy of trustee's sale, the
mortgagee
Page 300 U. S. 131
might perchance obtain something more, or might obtain only that
which was his due somewhat more expeditiously, than he could in
chancery, it remains that the procedure to foreclose in equity is,
and has been, the classical method of realization upon mortgage
security and has always been understood to be fair to both parties
to the contract, and to afford an adequate remedy to the mortgagee.
If, therefore, the Legislature of the state had elected altogether
to abolish the remedy by trustee's sale, we could not say that it
had not left the mortgagee an adequate remedy for the enforcement
of his contract. But the Legislature has by no means gone so far.
The law has merely restricted the exercise of the contractual
remedy to provide a procedure which, to some extent, renders the
remedy by a trustee's sale consistent with that in equity. This
does not impair the obligation of the contract.
The judgment is affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
210 N.C. 29, 185 S.E. 482.
[
Footnote 2]
Section 3 of Chapter 275, of the Public Laws of 1933:
"When any sale of real estate or personal property has been made
by a mortgagee, trustee, or other person authorized to make the
same at which the mortgagee, payee, or other holder of the
obligation thereby secured becomes the purchaser and takes title
either directly or indirectly, and thereafter such mortgagee,
payee, or other holder of the secured obligation, as aforesaid,
shall sue for and undertake to recover a deficiency judgment
against the mortgagor, trustor, or other maker of any such
obligation whose property has been so purchased, it shall be
competent and lawful for the defendant against whom such deficiency
judgment is sought to allege and show as matter of defense and
off-set, but not by way of counterclaim, that the property sold was
fairly worth the amount of the debt secured by it at the time and
place of sale or that the amount bid was substantially less than
its true value, and, upon such showing, to defeat or offset any
deficiency judgment against him, either in whole or in part;
Provided, this section shall not affect nor apply to the
rights of other purchasers or of innocent third parties, nor shall
it be held to affect or defeat the negotiability of any note, bond,
or other obligation secured by such mortgage, deed of trust, or
other instrument;
Provided, further, this section shall
not apply to foreclosure sales made pursuant to an order or decree
of court nor to any judgment sought or rendered in any foreclosure
suit nor to any sale heretofore made and confirmed."
[
Footnote 3]
Worthen Co. v. Kavanaugh, 295 U. S.
56, and cases cited.
[
Footnote 4]
Home Bldg. & Loan Assn. v. Blaisdell, 290 U.
S. 398,
290 U. S. 434,
and cases cited,
note 13
[
Footnote 5]
Woltz v. Deposit Co., 206 N.C. 239, 173 S.E. 587;
Hopkins v. Swain, 206 N.C. 439, 174 S.E. 409;
Miller
v. Shore, 206 N.C. 732, 175 S.E. 133;
Barringer v. Trust
Co., 207 N.C. 505, 177 S.E. 795.