[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 106 The action was to foreclose a mortgage given in March, 1842, by the defendants, Allen and wife, to the plaintiff, to secure the payment of the sum of $1200 in six annual installments, with interest annually from 1st of April, 1842. The mortgage was upon two parcels of land; the one of principal value being a lot described as containing twenty-five acres and upwards. Allen paid the interest up to April, 1848, and a part of the principal, but paid nothing afterwards. Brown and Wells were made defendants as claiming to have some interest in, or lien upon the mortgaged premises, or a part thereof, which interest or lien it was alleged accrued subsequently to the lien of the plaintiff's mortgage. *Page 107
The mortgaged promises were sold to Allen in March, 1842, and he gave back to the plaintiff his bond and the mortgage in question to secure the payment of the purchase money. In April, 1850, Allen voluntarily surrendered the possession of the twenty-five acre lot, parcel of the mortgaged premises to the defendant, Brown, the latter claiming title thereto under a deed from one Ingersoll, as commissioner for loaning moneys in the county of Chenango, under the act of April 11, 1808, entitled "An act authorizing a loan of moneys to the citizens of this State." It was proved that the amount due and unpaid on the defendant's bond and mortgage was $1807.82.
Under these circumstances it is difficult to perceive what possible defense Allen, the mortgagor, can have. It is said that the plaintiff covenanted in his deed of the premises that he was the lawful owner thereof, and that the same were free from all legal claims or incumbrances whatever. But suppose he did. It is not disputed that he was seised of the premises; and if there was any breach of the covenant against incumbrances, the defendant had his remedy by action. He could not voluntarily yield up the premises to one who, it will be seen hereafter, had no title whatever thereto, and ask that his equity of redemption shall not be foreclosed, or he made personally to respond for any deficiency. It is urged that the commissioners could have maintained ejectment against him the moment the default in the non-payment of the loan office mortgage occurred; and that he was therefore right in giving up the possession to save himself from the costs of a litigation at the suit of the commissioners, in which he was sure to be beaten. To this there are conclusive answers.
First. It is by no means clear that the commissioners could have maintained ejectment immediately upon the default occurring, or at all. The act, it is true, provides that in case of default in payment of interest or principal, when demanded, the commissioners "shall be seised of an *Page 108 absolute indefeasible estate in the lands, tenements or hereditaments thereby mortgaged to them, their successors and assigns, to the uses in this act mentioned." (Laws of 1808, chap. 216, § 15.) This would not entitle them to maintain ejectment; although the mortgagor would have no legal title that he could directly enforce against the law itself. The uses in the act mentioned are to sell the lands at public vendue, after notice given, to the highest bidder, and from the proceeds of the sale, to retain in the hands of the commissioners the moneys due on the mortgage, with the expenses of the sale, paying over to the mortgagor, his heirs or assigns, any surplus. (§§ 19, 20.) If there are no bids at the time appointed for the sale, or if the person to whom the property has been struck off, shall not pay for the same, the commissioners can enter into and take possession of the lands, and let them on the best terms they can for the benefit of the State, until the third Tuesday in April then next, and on the latter day (having given at least six weeks notice), again to offer them at public vendue to the highest bidder. If upon such sale no person shall bid, or offer to give for the lands the sum of money for which the same were mortgaged and remaining unpaid, with the interest then due thereon; or if any person to whom they shall be struck off shall not pay for the same, then the commissioners are to purchase and hold the same for the benefit of the people of the State; but if the mortgagor, or his or her heirs or assigns, shall at or before the sale of the mortgaged premises, pay to the commissioners all such sums as shall be payable on such mortgage, for principal and interest, together with the charges for advertising the same, then the commissioners are to accept the same, and permit the owner or his heirs or assigns to take possession of the mortgaged premises, and to hold the same until default shall be made in payment of any further sum on the mortgages. (§ 19.) Thus the statute provides for reimbursing the State for the moneys loaned on the lands, *Page 109 either by public sale of them to the highest bidder, or by payment by the mortgagor after default and before sale, or by purchasing them in, under certain circumstances, for the benefit of the State. The commissioners cannot maintain an ejectment; nor does the statute seem to contemplate that they are to enter into and take possession of the lands, until after a failure at public sale to obtain a bid for the amount due on the mortgage, or having obtained such bid, there shall be an omission to pay. If the commissioners make a legal sale and conveyance of the premises, as the act prescribes, the title vests in the purchaser; if they purchase them in, it vests in the State.
Second, There was no eviction of the defendant; nor was any threatened; nor did they take any steps to enter into and dispossess the defendant summarily or otherwise. Indeed there are strong grounds to suspect collusion between Allen and Brown in the matter of the pretended sale and purchase under the mortgage to the loan commissioners. They were partners, doing business on the premises covered by the mortgage, and to which Allen had title. The payment was demanded of a mortgage taken by the commissioners. of loans in 1808, for the trifling sum of twenty-six dollars, in which one Steward was the mortgagor, and which covered the twenty-five acre lot. It is found that it was properly demanded, and it is to be inferred that not only the mortgagor, but his assignee in possession of the premises, had notice. The interest had been paid on the mortgage up to June, 1849, so that only the principal sum of twenty-four dollars was due. Instead of discharging this trifling lien on property valued at over $1200, and looking to the plaintiff's covenant against incumbrances for indemnity, or at least notifying the plaintiff that the principal of the mortgage had been demanded, Allen, the owner of the premises, allows them to be sold to his partner, Brown, for the sum of $43.83, and then voluntarily surrendered their possession to the latter. *Page 110
Nor did the defendant Brown establish any defense. The Steward mortgage for $26 was given in June, 1808, in pursuance of the act of that year, entitled "an act authorizing a loan of moneys to the citizens of this state." That act provided for the appointment of two commissioners in each of the counties of the state, to discharge the trusts and duties under it. (§ 3.) The commissioners in the several counties were to be bodies politic and corporate, in fact and in law, by the name and style of "the commissioners for loaning money of the county," of which they were respectively commissioners, with full power to every of the said bodies politic to have and use a common seal, and, under the same seal, and in the name of the same bodies politic, to give receipts, to take mortgages, and to execute releases and conveyances of the mortgaged premises, and to sue and be sued, and generally with all such powers as are necessary for the due execution of the trusts reposed in them by this act." (§ 6.) All the powers conferred were upon this quasi corporation, and the trusts and duties prescribed by the act could only be discharged by the commissioners as such. It is extremely doubtful whether one commissioner could demand the principal sum due on a mortgage, so as to put the mortgagor in default for non-payment, and justify a sale of the mortgaged premises. But, however this may be, it is very clear that a notice and sale by one commissioner would be a nullity, and a conveyance executed by him to a purchaser at such sale a void act. In this case, the interest was paid on the Steward mortgage given to the loan commissioners in 1808, up to the 5th June, 1849. The principal was not called for by the comptroller until the 1st August, 1849, and then payment was required to be made on the 1st November following. In 1849 and 1850 there was but a single loan commissioner under the act of 1808 in the county of Chenango, the person appointed in 1849 refusing to qualify or act. The commissioner proceeded to notify the mortgagors *Page 111 (Steward included) that payment of the amount due on their mortgages would be required on the 1st November, 1849. On the latter day he caused a notice to be first published in a newspaper printed in the county of Chenango, of a sale of the premises embraced in the Steward mortgage, on the 7th February, 1850. This notice was signed "Laman Ingersoll, loan commissioner," and was published in the newspaper once in each week for twelve weeks successively. On the 7th of February, 1850, he attended in pursuance of the notice, and the premises were put up by him at public auction, and sold to the defendant and Brown for $43.83, he being the highest bidder. Whether this was the amount due on the mortgage, and the expenses of the sale, or whether Brown, in fact, paid his bid, does not appear. Ingersoll, however, after the sale, gave Brown a deed of the premises, not in conformity with the act of 1808, or executed as that act required. The parties to the deed are Laman Ingersoll, commissioner for loaning money of the county of Chenango, and Ansel Brown. Ingersoll acknowledges the receipt of the consideration money instead of the commissioners. The grant is by him and not by the commissioners, and does not convey (as the statute prescribes), all "the estate, right, title, interest, claim and demand whatsoever" of the commissioners, and their successors, to the premises. The seal of office of the commissioners is not affixed to the deed, nor were there two witnesses thereto, as required by the act. (Laws of 1808, chap. 216, § 23.) The deed was subscribed "Laman Ingersoll, loan commissioner," with his seal attached, and there were no witnesses thereto.
The whole proceeding, therefore, by which Brown was invested with any claim or title to the mortgaged premises, was a nullity. Ingersoll had no authority either to sell or convey. (Powell v.Tuttle, 3 Comst. 396; Olmsted v. Elder, 1 Seld. 144.) It is the commissioners, in their corporate capacity, that the statute provides, in case of default *Page 112 in payment of principal or interest, shall be seised of an absolute indefeasible estate in the lands, tenements and hereditaments mortgaged to them; they are required to give the notice and make the sale, and they only, under their seal of office, can convey to the purchaser. The statutory system is complete in all its parts. The commissioners are created a body politic and corporate. As such they are to loan the public moneys, taking mortgages in their name of office. If the borrower make default in payment, the statute vests an indefeasible estate in the lands in the commissioners, and their successors and assigns, and forecloses and bars all equity of redemption of the mortgagor in the mortgaged premises. The commissioners are then, after notice, to sell the premises at public vendue, to the highest bidder, if such bid shall be equal to the sum of money for which the lands were mortgaged, and the interest thereon, and the purchaser shall pay the same (and not otherwise), the commissioners are to convey the lands to him by deed, affixing their seal of office, and subscribing their names to the instrument in the presence of two witnesses; and the statute declares that such purchaser "shall and may hold and enjoy the said lands, for such estate as was conveyed to the commissioners by the mortgage executed by the mortgagor, clearly discharged and freed from all benefit and equity of redemption, and all other incumbrances made and suffered after the execution of such mortgage by the mortgagor, his heirs or assigns." It is very plain that all that was done by Ingersoll, either in giving notice or selling under the Steward mortgage, or in conveying the lands to the defendant Brown as purchaser, was nugatory, and Brown acquired no title thereby.
The defendant Wells has no defense. In December, 1851, Brown mortgaged to him the premises in question to secure the payment of four hundred dollars. This mortgage is no lien on the premises, as against the plaintiff's mortgage.
I am of the opinion, therefore, that the judgment of the *Page 113 supreme court should be affirmed. In that judgment, as modified by the general term, the mortgage executed by Steward to the commissioners of loans of Chenango county was treated as a subsisting lien, and the amount due thereon directed to be deducted from the amount due on the plaintiff's mortgage, and applied to its redemption and payment; and that the plaintiff have leave to redeem, pay and discharge the said mortgage by paying the amount due thereon. This was all that the defendant Allen was legally entitled to ask. The deed under which Brown claimed to hold was void, and of no effect; and Wells' mortgage was void as against the plaintiff's mortgage, and as a lien upon the premises covered by such mortgage.
All the other judges concurred, except SELDEN, J. — who expressed no opinion — and HOGEBOOM, J., who was for reversal, for the reasons given as follows: