McMahan v. McMahan

Knowlton, C. J.

This is a petition under the R. L. c. 182, § 15, to relieve the record title to certain real estate from the incumbrance of an undischarged mortgage held by the respondent. The petition is founded upon that part of the section which originally was St. 1882, c. 237, and it avers that the mortgagor .and those having her estate in the premises have had uninterrupted possession of the real estate for more than twenty years ¡after the expiration of the time for the full performance of the -conditions of the mortgage, and that no payment on account of the debt secured by the mortgage has been made and no act in recognition of its existence as a valid mortgage has been done within twenty years.

At the hearing in the Land Court the petitioners introduced evidence tending to prove the averments of their petition, and evidence was introduced by the respondent that a payment was made on account of the mortgage less than twenty years ago, and other evidence that the mortgage has been recognized by the mortgagor as valid within twenty years. The judge dismissed the petition, and ruled that, upon the introduction of this evidence by the respondent, the court had no authority to enter a decree for the petitioners under this section. The case is before us upon an exception to this ruling.

The statute provides, as to this class of mortgages, that the court may enter a decree for the petitioner reciting the facts and findings, only when no evidence is offered of a payment on account of the debt within twenty years, or of any other act of recognition of the existence and validity of the mortgage. When such evidence is offered, the court has no jurisdiction to proceed further in favor of the petitioner.

The contention of the petitioners overlooks the character of this proceeding. Its nature is shown in the original enactment in St. 1882, c. 237, which is consolidated with other similar statutes in the section of the Revised Laws above referred to. The statute was intended to provide a simple and easy way of *101removing this kind of incumbrance from the record in cases where there is no controversy. It gives no jurisdiction to determine the validity or invalidity of a disputed mortgage of long standing. Even for the purposes for which it was intended, the court, in Tarbell, petitioner, 160 Mass. 407, 409, intimated a doubt as to its effect upon the rights of mortgagees without actual notice of the petition. The only affirmative action that the court can take is to make a decree reciting the facts and findings ; and this it can do only when no evidence is offered of a payment upon the mortgage, or of a recognition of it, within twenty years.

In Brintnall v. Graves, 168 Mass. 384, the court refrained from intimating an opinion as to whether a decree for the petitioner should be entered, and, if so, what would be its effect, if it appeared that there had been no payment or recognition of the mortgage by the mortgagor within twenty years, and at the same time it appeared otherwise that there was a valid mortgage which remained unpaid. But there was a strong intimation, which later, in Mitchell v. Bickford, 192 Mass. 244, 246, was changed into a categorical statement, that the object of the statute is to provide for the removal of a cloud from the title when there has been twenty years’ continuous possession by the mortgagor without recognition of the mortgage. Constitutional questions that might arise, as to interested persons who receive no notice, have not been considered.

Where there is a controversy between the parties as to the validity and effect of a mortgage of this class, there are other ways of settling it. This statute is not applicable to such cases.

Exceptions overruled.