Gilman v. Wills

Decision Date31 May 1877
Citation66 Me. 273
PartiesELEANOR W. GILMAN v. JOHN WILLS et al. 1876.
CourtMaine Supreme Court

ON EXCEPTIONS.

TRESPASS quare clausum.

Plea, general issue, with brief statement alleging license, and soil and freehold. The writ dated April 7th 1874, alleged a breaking and entering by the defendants August 27, 1873, and September 22, 1873, and a taking and carrying away of certain growing crops.

The plaintiff claimed title to the locus, under deed of warranty from the defendants to her, August 25, 1873, for the consideration of six hundred dollars. On the same day, and as a part of the same transaction, the plaintiff re-conveyed the premises to the defendants, by mortgage, with the usual covenants, to secure the payment of five hundred dollars of the purchase money, in one, two, three, four and five years from date; the mortgage deed containing no provision that the plaintiff should have possession until condition broken.

The farm had been occupied and carried on the season before the sale to the plaintiff, by Albert L. Wills, one of the defendants, and the growing crops alleged to have been taken were planted and cultivated by him; but the plaintiff had taken possession of the farm before the alleged breaking and entering. There was no evidence that defendants entered under their mortgage; but the evidence tended to show that they entered under a claim of title to the crops, and to take and carry them away.

The defendants' counsel requested the presiding judge to instruct the jury that if the premises upon which the alleged trespasses were committed, were conveyed by the defendants to the plaintiff, and at the same time, and as a part of the same transaction, they were conveyed in mortgage to the defendants without any provision in the mortgage deed that the plaintiff should have the right to possession until condition broken, the defendants would have the right to possession; and an action of trespass quare clausum could not be maintained against them by the mortgageor, for an entry upon the mortgaged premises.

For the purpose of having the damages assessed by the jury, the judge declined to give the instruction requested, and instructed the jury, that the action could be maintained for breaking and entering. The jury assessed damages in the sum of $26.10; and the defendants alleged exceptions.

E. O. Bean, for the defendants.

G. C. Vose & L. T. Carleton, for the plaintiff.

VIRGIN J.

A mortgage of land, as usually drawn, is in form a deed of warranty with a condition subsequent defining the means by which the grantor may defeat the conveyance. The legal title therefore, passes immediately upon the delivery of the mortgage; and the mortgagee is regarded as having all the rights of a grantee in fee, subject to the defeasance. Consequently he has the right of immediate possession of the premises, before condition broken as well as after, unless it otherwise appears, either expressly or impliedly, from the terms of the condition of the mortgage or other writing between the parties. Blaney v. Bearce, 2 Me. 132. Brown v. Leach, 35 Me. 39. Norton v. Webb, 35 Me. 218. This...

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16 cases
  • Napolitano v. Green Tree Servicing, LLC
    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — District of Maine
    • 4 February 2016
    ...and the mortgagor complies with the mortgage instrument." Id. at 5 (citing Cook v. Curtis, 125 Me. 114, 131 A. 204 (1925) and Gilman v. Wills, 66 Me. 273 (1877)). The Napolitanos point out that their Complaint alleged that they were not in default of the mortgage loan obligations as of Octo......
  • Stephen v. Dragon Products Co. Llc
    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — District of Maine
    • 22 March 2011
    ...the interference with possession element, Maine courts have long held that the “gist of [a trespass] action is unlawful entry.” Gilman v. Wills, 66 Me. 273 (1877); see also, e.g., Medeika, 957 A.2d at 982 (“graveling the land of another” constitutes unlawful entry). Under current Maine prec......
  • In re Life Ass'n of America
    • United States
    • Missouri Supreme Court
    • 20 December 1888
    ... ... 237; 2 Story Eq. Jur., secs. 1021, ... 1231; Legard v. Hodges, 1 Vesey Jr. 478; ... Thompson v. Foerstel, 10 Mo.App. 299; Ex parte ... Wills, 2 Cox, 233. (2) In the case at bar, the mortgageor ... does not assume to pay rent, but conveys in apt and ... unambiguous terms the net income ... Railroad, 5 Biss. 237; 1 Hill. on Mort. [4 Ed.] p. 187, ... sec. 8; Parkhurst v. Railroad, 19 Md. 472; ... Addison v. Blythe, 75 Va. 70; Gilman v ... Wills, 66 Me. 273; Legard v. Hodges, 3 Brown ... Ch. 531; Ex parte Wills, 2 Cox, 233. (3) An agreement in ... writing to give a mortgage, a ... ...
  • Cook v. Curtis
    • United States
    • Maine Supreme Court
    • 11 December 1925
    ...cannot maintain trespass quare clausum against a mortgagee who enters under his mortgage. Blaney v. Bearce, 2 Greenl. (2 Me.) 132; Gilman v. Wills, 66 Me. 273; Jones v. Smith, 79 Me. 446, 10 A. 254. The same rule obtains in New Hampshire. Chellis v. 22 N. H. 312; Furbush v. Goodwin, 29 N. H......
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