This is an appeal from an order "Report dismissed. No prejudicial error found” of the Appellate Division for the Western District. The appellants are the defendants in an action of contract brought on their joint and ° several promissory note by the plaintiff, a banking corporation in possession of the commissioner of banks, in liquidation under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 167. The trial judge *281made a finding for the plaintiff for $4,810.44. In their brief the defendants state that “At the trial, the defendants admitted their execution of the note” and that “Their defences were payment and accord and satisfaction.” They “admit the evidence was not sufficient to sustain their burden of proof on their answer of accord and satisfaction” and “They rely upon their plea of payment, as set up in their answer, and specifically referred to in their requests for rulings of law.” The defendants state the question presented to be, “Was there evidence introduced at the trial upon which the trial court was required to find payment in whole or in part of the defendants’ nóte?” and we shall consider the quoted question as presenting the sole issue.
Succinctly stated the facts are as follows: In May, 1925, the plaintiff lent the defendants $5,000, and they gave the note declared on in the plaintiff’s declaration and executed a mortgage deed to the plaintiff as security for the loan on property owned by the defendant Thomas Corey at 76 Lake Avenue, Worcester.' On February 17, 1926, they paid $1,000 on the principal of said note. The back of the note bore the following words and figures: “Payments on Account of Principal Date Feb. 17, 1926 Amount $1000 Balance Due $4000.” On January 1, 1932, the defendants defaulted in payment of the quarterly interest on their note.
There was evidence that the plaintiff as mortgagee on December 7, 1932, made an open, peaceable and unopposed entry on the premises described in said mortgage for the purpose of foreclosing the mortgage for breach of conditions thereof; that this declaration of purpose was duly recorded; that after due and sufficient legal notice the plaintiff on January 5, 1933, sold the premises described in said mortgage to itself for $100; that just before the foreclosure sale the value of the mortgaged property was between $4,000 and $5,000; that the defendants occupied the premises until they received notice to leave from the plaintiff; and that the plaintiff never made to the defendant Thomas *282Corey any accounting of the proceeds of the foreclosure sale. It was also in evidence that a leaf taken from the ledger of the plaintiff was headed "Thomas F. Corey and Emma E. Corey.” In the left column appear the debits and then follow the credits. The balance represents the book value the property stands the plaintiff. A notation, December 7, 1932, indicates the day on which the plaintiff took possession of the real estate. The ledger sheet shows two undated entries immediately following the entry of November 14, 1933, which read respectively as follows: "Transferred to Main Street Realty Corporation” and "Transferred to Bancroft Trust.” There was uncontradicted evidence that the undated entry on the ledger sheet "Transferred to Main Street Realty Corporation” was a record of the transfer of this particular property to the Main Street Realty Corporation; that the Main Street Realty Corporation gave back to the plaintiff a note and mortgage for $3,500 on this property; that the note and mortgage were assigned by the plaintiff to a corporation controlled by the plaintiff, known as the Bancroft Mortgage Loan Corporation; that the latter corporation assigned said note and mortgage as security for a loan from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation; that after the loan from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation was received the Main Street Realty Corporation deeded the equity back to the plaintiff; and that the sums realized from loans from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation were used in paying dividends to the depositors of the plaintiff.
The defendants’ contention as we understand it is that the mortgaged property has been carried as an asset of the plaintiff at a valuation of $4,000 and not as mere security for the payment of the $4,000 note. The defendants also contend that the property after the foreclosure was carried as an asset of $4,000 during the years of 1933 and 1934 to the end of the record. It is also contended by the defendants that the ledger record shows that the plaintiff transferred the property to a holding corporation to secure a loan and took a retransfer of the mortgaged property. *283Finally the defendants contend “that the plaintiff took the defendants’ property at its own valuation of $4,000, and thereby set up a credit for that amount to the named note makers, the defendants.”
It is plain the evidence does not require such a legal conclusion. The property was held in mortgage, and not as an asset of credit at a fixed value. There was no surplus for which the plaintiff is bound to account and no payment of principal or interest after October 1, 1931, and there is no evidence of any voidable foreclosure sale. Johnston v. Cassidy, 279 Mass. 593. Cambridge Savings Bank v. Cronin, 289 Mass. 379.
Order dismissing report affirmed.