Watt v. Watt

The Chancellor.

An examination of the facts in this case will show, that the vice chancellor erred in permitting the grantee of Archibald Watt to come in and inake a defence in this cause which the grantor himself was not authorized to make, at the time of the conveyance from him to such grantee, in March, 1843. At the time of the filing of the bill in this cause, the title to the equity of redemption, in nearly all of the *373mortgaged premises which had not been released from the lien of the mortgage, was in A. Watt the mortgagor. And the respondent was made a party defendant only because she was the apparent owner of the equity of redemption in eight of the lots covered by the mortgage"; and her sister A.- H. Pinckney was also made a party as the apparent owner of eight other lots. But it is not pretended that any of these sixteen lots wore those which, the mortgagor claimed to have released, 01 which were afterwards decreed to be released from the lien of the complainant’s mortgage. Indeed the interests of both of these young ladies in the mortgaged premises were merely nominal; for it appears by the affidavit of Mr. Butler, that their tots had been sold for taxes, for a term of three hundred years, and had not been redeemed. And it does not appear from any of the papers before me on this appeal, that any of the lots which the decree of the vice chancellor had directed to be released, belonged to A. Watt at the time of the conveyance from him to the respondent, in 1843.

This bill was regularly taken as confessed against Archibald Watt and wife, in August, 1841, about the time of making the decree by the assistant vice chancellor in the other suit; and both verbal and written notice of the order was immediately given. Their solicitor was also repeatedly informed that the complainant ivas determined not to have their default opened. If Watt and wife, therefore, had any defence to the suit originally, they were not in a situation to make it, or to ask to have the order taking the bill as confessed set aside, at the time of their conveyance to the respondent; which was more than eighteen months afterwards. Besides; it is perfectly evident from the answer which the respondent proposes to put in, that she knows nothing of the defence attempted to be set up in that answer, except from the information of A. Watt.

Again; if "the defence of usury in fact existed in this case, which is positively contradicted by the affidavit of the complainant, it would not be proper to open a regular default to let „ in that defence, without an offer on the part of the defendant to waive the forfeiture, and to consent to a decree for the pay*374ment of what was equitably due. The complainant is also right in supposing that the authority of Bell, as the attorney substituted by Ogilvie, ceased by the death of the latter. It is not necessary to say whether that would be the case where there was a general power of substitution, and without giving a right to revoke the authority of the substitute. But in this case the authority given to Ogilvie was to appoint an attorney under him,, and to revoke such appointment at his pleasure. In suclt a case, the death of the principal attorney necessarily revokes the power of the substitute; as he is no longer an attorney under such principal attorney, within the meaning of the original power to substitute an attorney under him.

The right which the appellant acquired by the conveyance of all the interest of Archibald Watt in the mortgaged premises, subject to the several liens and incumbrances thereon, was subject of course to the rights which the complainant had then acquired in this suit, and to the admissions which the grantor had made by suffering the bill to be taken as confessed against him. And while the order taking the bill as confessed remains in full force as to him, his grantee can set up no defence which Archibald Watt himself could not have made if he had continued to be the_ owner of the equity of redemption which he has conveyed to her. (Bank of Utica v. Finch, 1 Barb. Ch. Rep. 75.)

Although the bill was regularly taken as confessed against the respondent, both as to her original interest in the matters in controversy, and also as an heir at law to her sister, I should require the complainant to release her interest in the sixteen lots from the lien of the mortgage, or permit her to put in a proper answer to protect her rights in those lots, if there was any fact sworn to, as being within her own knowledge, constituting a valid defence. But as nothing of that kind appears, the only proper course seems to be to reverse the order appealed from entirely, and to dismiss the respondent’s application.

Order accordingly.