Supreme Court of Canada
St.
Mary's Parish Credit Union Ltd. v. T.M. Ball Lumber Co. Ltd., [1961] S.C.R. 310
Date:
1961-03-27
St. Mary's Parish Credit Union Limited (Defendant)
Appellant;
and
T. M. Ball Lumber Company Limited (Plaintiff)
Respondent.
1961: February 1, 2; 1961: March 27.
Present: Kerwin C.J. and Locke, Martland, Judson and Ritchie
JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR SASKATCHEWAN.
Real property—Filing of caveat by equitable mortgagee
with knowledge of prior unregistered equitable mortgage—Priority as between
equitable mortgages—Subsequent registered mortgage—Question of merger— The Land
Titles Act, R.S.S. 1953, c. 108, ss. 65(1) (2), 71, 138, 145.
[Page 311]
Z, a building contractor, pledged the title to his house
property by way of equitable mortgage in favour of the defendant credit union
"to secure the repayment of $2,000 and any moneys borrowed" by him
from the defendant. The duplicate certificate of title was deposited with the
defendant pursuant to this agreement. In the course of his business Z made
purchases of building materials from the plaintiff and became indebted to it
for the purchase price. Security was asked for this debt and Z, after telling
the plaintiff that there was a mortgage in favour of the credit union, and that
it had the duplicate certificate of title, executed an equitable mortgage upon
"his equity in" the land in favour of the plaintiff. The latter filed
a caveat claiming an interest in the land by virtue of its mortgage.
Subsequently Z executed, in favour of the credit union, a
mortgage in registrable form, under The Land Titles Act, which was later
registered. The plaintiff commenced action against Z, and the credit union was
added as a party defendant. The plaintiff sought a declaration that it had a
valid charge against the land and foreclosure of its mortgage. At trial
judgment was given in favour of the plaintiff, and this judgment was sustained
by a majority in the Court of Appeal. The credit union appealed to this Court.
Held: The appeal should be allowed, the judgment at
trial should be set aside and the appellant should be entitled to a declaration
that its equitable mortgage had priority over that of the respondent.
In addition to priority as to time, the defendant's mortgage
ranked ahead of that of the plaintiff because of the form of the latter
mortgage, which was not drafted as a registrable mortgage under The Land
Titles Act, but only purported to charge Z's equity in the land. The
defendant had a valid equitable interest in the land at the time that the
plaintiff took the mortgage of Z's equity. The wording of the plaintiff's
mortgage took the form which it did because both Z and the plaintiff knew of
the existence of the defendant's equitable mortgage and intended that Z could
only mortgage his remaining equitable interest in the land.
The two equitable mortgages which were in competition here
were not the same. That of the plaintiff, by its terms, was expressly limited
to a charge upon "my equity". It was, therefore, a mortgage of only a
limited interest in the land. The filing of the caveat could not create a
charge upon more than that which had been charged by Z under the terms of the
instrument itself. Stated at its highest, the plaintiff's position after
registration of the caveat could only be the same as if the equitable mortgage
itself could have been and had been registered as an instrument under the Act.
According to the tenor and intent of that document it only constituted a
mortgage upon a partial interest in the land.
Jellett v. Wilkie (1896), 26 S.C.R. 282, followed; Hackworth
v. Baker, [1936] 1 W.W.R. 321; Clark v. Barrick, [1949] 2 W.W.R.
1009, explained; Bank of Hamilton v. Hartery (1919), 58 S.C.R. 338; Davidson
v. Davidson, [1946] S.C.R. 115; Church v. Hill, [1923] S.C.R. 642; McKillop
& Benjafield v. Alexander (1912), 45 S.C.R. 551, referred to.
With respect to the question of merger, the defendant could
not be considered to have intended to surrender a prior interest, in favour of
the plaintiff's subsequent interest, by the taking of the legal mortgage in
substitution for its existing security. It could not, in the circum-
[Page 312]
stances have intended to effect a merger of its two
securities. Even if a merger were held to have occurred that would not
automatically increase the interest granted to the plaintiff by the terms of
its mortgage. At no time did Z have a complete interest in the land which he
could mortgage to the plaintiff by a mortgage of "his equity",
because at all times there existed a charge on the land in favour of the
defendant. This situation continued, even if it were held that a merger had
taken place. Ghana Commercial Bank v. Chandiram, [1960] 2 All E.R. 865,
referred to.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal for
Saskatchewan,
affirming a judgment of Davis J. Appeal allowed.
D. A. Schmeiser, for the defendant, appellant.
James L. Robertson, for the plaintiff,
respondent.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
Martland J.:—Anton
Zirtz, who was a building contractor carrying on business in Saskatoon,
borrowed money from the appellant in order to build his own house and to assist
him in his business. On June 14,1957, he executed, in favour of the appellant,
a "Pledge of Title" by way of equitable mortgage upon his house
property, comprising Lots 27 to 30 inclusive, in Block 28, in the city of
Saskatoon, according to plan of record in the Land Titles Office for the
Saskatoon Land Registration District as No. G. 131 (hereinafter referred to as
"the land"), "to secure the repayment of 12,000 and any moneys
borrowed" by Zirtz from the appellant. The duplicate certificate of title
for the land was deposited with the appellant pursuant to this agreement. In
addition to the $2,000 mentioned in the agreement, $4,400 was loaned by the
appellant to Zirtz after June 14, 1957, and prior to June 19, 1958.
In the course of his business Zirtz made purchases of lumber
and other building supplies from the respondent and became indebted to it for
the purchase price. The respondent asked for security for this debt and Zirtz,
on June 19, 1958, executed an equitable mortgage, in favour of the respondent,
upon the land. This document recited a present indebtedness in excess of
$26,000 and that the respondent had requested Zirtz to give a charge and
mortgage on his equity in the land for the sum of $6,000 as collateral security
for his indebtedness as well as for any
[Page 313]
moneys which might become owing to the respondent for lumber
and supplies purchased by Zirtz. It then went on to provide:
NOW THEREFORE the debtor does hereby charge and mortgage his
equity in said Lots 27 & 28, in Block 28, Plan G. 131, Saskatoon,
Saskatchewan, to the extent of $6,000 to the Company as collateral security for
payment of the lumber and builder's supplies heretofore purchased by the debtor
from the Company or which may hereafter be purchased by him from the Company;
It is conceded that this document was not a registrable
mortgage under The Land Titles Act of Saskatchewan, R.S.S. 1953, c. 108,
which was in force at all times material to these proceedings. Even if it had
been in registrable form, it could not have been registered by the respondent
because of the fact that the duplicate certificate of title for the land was in
the possession of the appellant as security for its equitable mortgage.
The circumstances relating to the granting of this equitable
mortgage by Zirtz to the respondent are summarized in the judgment of Gordon
J.A., using Zirtz's own words, as follows:
I told Mr. Ball and Mr. Dingwall that there was a mortgage
against my home for $6,400 in favour of The St. Mary's Parish Credit Union and
that they had the title. I told them the building was worth $15,000. Although
the word "equity" was not used I told them that I could only use my
interest in the property to get material to finish the buildings.
Ball was the President of the respondent at that time and
Dingwall was then a Vice-President.
The respondent filed a caveat on June 20, 1958, claiming an
interest in the land under the document of June 19, 1958, wherein the
respondent stated that Zirtz had "mortgaged and charged the said
land" to the respondent.
On July 15, 1958, Zirtz executed, in favour of the
appellant, a mortgage in registrable form, under The Land Titles Act, which
was registered on the following day. It was not until the time of registration
of this document that the appellant became aware of the existence of the
respondent's caveat.
The respondent commenced action against Zirtz and the
appellant was added as a party defendant. The respondent sought a declaration
that it had a valid charge against the land and foreclosure of its mortgage.
The appellant, in its
[Page 314]
statement of defence, asked for a declaration that its
interest in the land was entitled to priority over any interest of the
respondent.
At the trial, judgment was given in favour of the
respondent. It was held that its mortgage took priority over that of the
appellant and a foreclosure order in favour of the respondent was granted.
This judgment was sustained on appeal to the Court of Appeal
of Saskatchewan,
McNiven J.A. dissenting. The contention of the respondent on that appeal, which
was accepted by the majority of the Court, is summarized in the majority
judgment as follows:
The contention of the plaintiff is that it and the Cerdit
Union were both creditors of Zirtz, each endeavouring to obtain security for
the sums that he owed them; that they knew that the title to the property was
clear but for three mechanic's liens, two of them filed by the plaintiff
itself, and a third by Myers Construction Co., Ltd., for the small sum of $98.
They knew that any equitable mortgage held by the Credit Union was unregistered
and that it passed no interest until registered and that therefore the equity
that Zirtz had to offer as security was the full equity as shown by the title.
The plaintiff relies on the cases of Hackworth v. Baker [1936] 1 W.W.R. 321,
and Clark v. Barrick [1949] 2 W.W.R. 1009.
The following conclusion is stated:
In this case, at the time the respondent obtained the
mortgage from Zirtz, it is fair to say that both Zirtz and the respondent
believed such mortgage would be subject to the prior claim by the appellant.
The priority which the respondent obtained upon registration of the caveat was
simply by the operation of the provisions of The Land Titles Act, a
priority which under the Act is unassailable in the absence of fraud.
It was also held that the appellant's equitable mortgage of
June 14, 1957, had become merged in the registered mortgage of July 15, 1958,
and that, as the latter document had been registered subsequent to the filing
of the respondent's caveat, it ranked subject to the respondent's equitable
mortgage.
McNiven J.A. held that there had been fraud on the part of
the respondent, within the meaning of The Land Titles Act, in the light
of the construction placed on the meaning of that word by the Court of Appeal
of Saskatchewan in Independent Lumber Company v. Gardiner.
[Page 315]
He also held:
Zirtz recognized his obligation to St. Mary's—told the
plaintiff St. Mary's held the duplicate certificate of title and that he could
not and would not mortgage its interest in the home property. The plaintiff
agreed and the agreement prepared by the plaintiff was in my opinion intended
to exclude St. Mary's claim from its operation. It was carved out of the
security given the plaintiff under its mortgage with its consent. In case of
doubt as to its meaning a document is most strongly construed; against the
party who prepared it.
He further held that the respondent's caveat had
misrepresented the document upon which it was based.
The appellant has appealed from the judgment of the Court of
Appeal. Zirtz is not a party to this appeal.
Up to the time of the filing of the respondent's caveat the
situation was that both the appellant and the respondent had equitable
mortgages upon the land. That of the appellant was prior in time to that of the
respondent and ranked first in equity. Neither mortgage was in registrable form
under the provisions of The Land Titles Act, but the appellant had
possession of the duplicate certificate of title for the land. In addition to
priority as to time, it seems to me that the appellant's mortgage ranked ahead
of that of the respondent because of the form of the latter mortgage. It appears
clear, from the terms of that document and in the light of the evidence, that
it was intended to charge, not the whole of the owner's interest in the land,
but only the equitable interest which remained in Zirtz after he had granted to
the appellant the earlier mortgage. The respondent's mortgage, which was drawn
by its solicitors, was not drafted as a registrable mortgage under The Land
Titles Act, but only purported to charge "his equity" in the
land.
What was that equity? It was the interest which he retained
in the land, subject to the appellant's equitable mortgage. It is true that the
appellant's interest was an unregistered interest, but it did confer rights on
the appellant and such rights were enforceable against Zirtz. Several cases in
this Court have recognized the validity of equitable interests in lands which
are subject to the Torrens system of titles and which are not themselves
registrable interests
[Page 316]
under that system. The leading case is Jellett v. Wilkie, which held that a writ of
execution registered pursuant to the provisions of the Territories Real
Property Act, 49 Vict. (Can.), c. 51, would only attach the interest of the
registered owner of the lands subject to existing equities and that, therefore,
it would not take priority over a previous unregistered transfer of those
lands.
It was suggested in Clark v. Barrick, a decision of the Court
of Appeal of Saskatchewan, which is cited in the majority decision in the
present case, that Jellett v. Wilkie had been overruled by the judgment
of this Court in Bank of Hamilton v. Hartery. It appears to be clear,
however, from the judgment in Davidson v. Davidson, which was not referred to
in the reasons in Clark v. Barrick, that this conclusion is not correct.
The judgment in the Bank of Hamilton v. Hartery case turned on the
interpretation of certain sections of the Land Registry Act of British
Columbia, R.S.B.C. 1911, c. 127, which had been amended prior to the
decision in the Davidson case. The principle formulated in Jellett v.
Wilkie was applied by this Court in the latter case.
The position of equitable interests under a Torrens system
of titles is clearly stated by Anglin J., as he then was, in Church v. Hill, as follows:
The result of decisions of this court in Jellett v. Wilkie,
(1896) 26 Can. S.C.R. 282, Williams v. Box, (1910) 44 Can. S.C.R. 1, Smith v. National
Trust Co., (1912) 45 Can. S.C.R. 618, Yockney v. Thomson, (1914) 50 Can. S.C.R.
1, Grace v. Kuebler, (1917) 56 Can. S.C.R. 1, and other cases, is that,
notwithstanding such provisions as s. 41 of ch. 24 of the Alberta statutes of
1906, equitable doctrines and jurisdiction apply to lands under the Land Titles
or Torrens system of registration and equitable interests in such lands may be
created and will be recognized and protected.
The section of the Alberta Real Property Act to which
he refers provided as follows:
41. After a certificate of title has been granted for any
land, no instrument until registered under this Act shall be effectual to pass
any estate or interest in any land (except a leasehold interest for three years
or for a less period) or render such land liable as security for the payment of
money; but upon the registration of any instrument in the manner hereinbefore
prescribed the estate or interest specified therein shall pass, or, as the case
may be, the land shall become liable as security in manner and
[Page 317]
subject to the covenants, conditions and contingencies set
forth and specified in such instrument or by this Act declared to be implied in
instruments of a like nature.
The equivalent section of The Land Titles Act of
Saskatchewan provides:
65. (1) After a certificate of title has been granted no
instrument shall until registered pass any estate or interest in the land
therein comprised, except a leasehold interest not exceeding three years where
there is actual occupation of the land under the same, or render such land
liable as security for the payment of money except as against the person making
the same.
(2) Every instrument shall become operative according to the
tenor and intent thereof when registered and shall thereupon create, transfer,
surrender, charge or discharge, as the case may be, the land, estate or
interest therein mentioned.
It will be noted that subs. (1) of s. 65 contains, as s. 41
of the Alberta Real Property Act did not, the significant words "except
as against the person making the same". A similar change in wording had
occurred in the Land Registry Act of British Columbia in the interval
between the decisions in Bank of Hamilton v. Hartery and Davidson v.
Davidson.
In my opinion the appellant had a valid equitable interest
in the land at the time that the respondent took the mortgage of Zirtz's equity
in the land. The wording of the respondent's mortgage is significant and, in my
view, took the form which it did because both Zirtz and the respondent knew of
the existence of the appellant's equitable mortgage and intended that Zirtz
could only mortgage his remaining equitable interest in the land.
What then was the effect of the registration of the
respondent's caveat? The judgment of the Court of Appeal is that the respondent
thereby obtained a priority over the appellant's mortgage by reason of the
operation of the provisions of The Land Titles Act. That decision is
based upon the authority of Hackworth v. Baker and Clark v. Barrick, supra.
The former case involved the issue of priority as between
two transfers of the same land. The one which had been executed the later was
registered and the earlier one was not. The Court ruled in favour of the
transferee who had registered his transfer. It held that the fact that a
person,
[Page 318]
who obtained a transfer of land and registered it, knew that
there was an outstanding unregistered transfer of the same land did not amount
to "fraud" within the meaning of s. 216 of The Land Titles Act, R.S.S.
1930, c. 80.
Clark v. Barrick was a case in which the competing
interests were as between two agreements for sale of the same lands. The
purchaser under the agreement which was later in point of time registered a
caveat against the lands to protect his interest. The purchaser under the
earlier agreement did not. The Court held in favour of that purchaser who had
filed a caveat, holding that an unregistered instrument, protected by a caveat
claiming an estate or interest in land, must, when the claim is established, be
given its full effect according to its tenor, regardless of any other
unregistered instrument, whether prior or subsequent, not protected by a
caveat, or protected by a caveat subsequent to the one first mentioned.
Clark v. Barrick was overruled in this Court, but on other grounds.
The relevant sections of The Land Titles Act which
deal with the filing and the effect of caveats are ss. 138 and 145, which
provide as follows:
138. Any person claiming to be interested in land may file a
caveat with the registrar to the effect that no registration of any transfer or
other instrument affecting the land shall be made, and no certificate of title
to the land granted, until the caveat has been withdrawn or has lapsed as
provided by section 146, 147, 148 or 149, unless such instrument or certificate
of title is expressed to be subject to the claim of the caveator as stated in
the caveat.
145. While a caveat remains in force the registrar shall not
enter in the register any memorandum of a transfer or other instrument
purporting to transfer, encumber or otherwise deal with or affect the land with
respect to which the caveat is registered, except subject to the claim of the
caveator.
The matter of the priority of registered instruments is
dealt with in s. 71 of the Act, which reads:
71. Instruments registered in respect of or affecting the
same land shall be entitled to priority, the one over the other, according to
the time of registration and not according to the date of execution.
Counsel for the appellant argued that a caveat filed under
s. 138 of the Act did not have the effect attributed to it in the judgment in Clark
v. Barrick. His contention was that the caveat would serve only as a stop
order to preserve the
[Page 319]
status quo as of the time of its filing, so as to
prevent any further dealing with the lands thereafter, save subject to the
unregistered instrument which the caveat protected. He pointed out that the
Saskatchewan Act does not contain any provision such as s. 148(1) of the
Manitoba Real Property Act, R.S.M. 1954, c. 220, or s. 152 of the
Alberta Land Titles Act, R.S.A. 1955, c. 170, the relevant portions of
which sections provide as follows:
148(1) The filing of a caveat by the district registrar or
by a caveator gives the same effect, as to priority, to the instrument or
subject matter on which the caveat is based, as the registration of an
instrument under this Act;
* * *
152 Registration by way of caveat, whether by the Registrar
or by any caveator, has the same effect as to priority as the registration of
any instrument under this Act …
Each of the Manitoba and
the Alberta Acts contains a provision similar to s. 71 of the Saskatchewan Act
dealing generally with the priority of registered instruments.
I do not find it
necessary to resolve this question because, even if the view of the effect of
filing a caveat in Saskatchewan as stated in Clark v. Barrick is
correct, I do not think that it establishes the respondent's claim in this
case. In both that case and Hackworth v. Baker the competing interests
were the same in form. In the former case a caveat had been registered by one
purchaser, under an agreement for sale, who was thereby held to have obtained a
priority over another purchaser, under an earlier agreement for sale, of the
same lands. In the latter case a transferee who registered his transfer
obtained priority over the holder of an earlier, unregistered transfer of the
same lands. In each case it was held that under the provisions of the Act the
registration of the instrument conferred priority.
In the present case,
however, the two equitable mortgages which are in competition are not the same.
That of the respondent, by its terms, was expressly limited to a charge upon
"my equity". It was, therefore, a mortgage of only a limited interest
in the land. The filing of the caveat gave notice of that interest in the
respondent, and any one dealing thereafter with the land could do so only
subject to that interest of the respondent, but the filing of the caveat could
not and did not increase the extent of the respondent's
[Page 320]
interest in the land. It could not create a charge upon more
than that which had been charged by Zirtz under the terms of the instrument
itself.
This proposition is
clearly stated in the judgment of Duff J., as he then was, in McKillop &
Benjafield v. Alexander, where
he said, in reference to the Saskatchewan Land Titles Act, 6 Edw. VII,
c. 24:
The fundamental
principle of the system of conveyancing established by this and like enactments
is that title to land and interests in land is to depend upon registration by a
public officer and not upon the effect of transactions inter partes. The
Act at the same time recognizes unregistered rights respecting land, confirms
the jurisdiction of the courts in respect of such rights and, furthermore,
makes provision—by the machinery of the caveat—for protecting such rights
without resort to the courts. This machinery, however, was designed for the
protection of rights—not for the creation of rights. A caveat prevents any
disposition of his title by the registered proprietor in derogation of the
caveator's claim until that claim has been satisfied or disposed of; but the
caveator's claim must stand or fall on its own merits.
Duff J. dissented in
this case on the issue as to whether the respondent, Alexander, had acquired an
interest in the lands in question, but the majority of the Court did not
disagree with the above statement of the law.
Subsection (2) of s. 65
of the Act previously quoted, referring to the effect of a registered
instrument under the Act, says that, when registered, it shall become operative
"according to the tenor and intent thereof".
Stated at its highest,
the respondent's position after registration of the caveat could only be the
same as if the equitable mortgage itself could have been and had been
registered as an instrument under the Act. According to the tenor and intent of
that document it only constituted a mortgage upon a partial interest in the
land.
For these reasons,
therefore, I do not agree that, by virtue of the filing of its caveat, the
respondent obtained, under the provisions of The Land Titles Act, a
priority over the prior equitable interest of the appellant.
I turn now to the
question of merger. The respondent's argument is that the rule stated in
Halsbury, 3rd ed., p. 420, para. 819, applies:
As a general rule a
person, by taking or acquiring a security of a higher nature in legal valuation
than one he already possesses, merges and extinguishes his legal remedies upon
the inferior security or cause of
[Page 321]
action; thus the taking of a bond or covenant, or the
obtaining of a judgment for a simple contract debt, merges and extinguishes the
simple contract debt. For this purpose, however, the superior security must be
co-extensive with the inferior security and between the same parties; and a
security, given by one of two co-debtors to secure a simple contract debt, does
not merge the simple contract debt.
He also relies on para.
821, which states:
A mere charge created by
deposit of deeds is extinguished by the taking of a formal mortgage, even
though the mortgage does not confer a legal estate, and the sum thenceforth
secured is the sum mentioned in the mortgage, notwithstanding that other sums
were covered by the deposit. But, where a charge on two estates is kept alive
in equity in favour of a person paying it off, he does not lose the benefit of
the charge by taking a mortgage of one estate, and an equitable security is not
merged by taking a security which is ineffectual.
The rule at common law
as to merger in relation to a mortgage was that, if a mortgage on land and the
ownership of the land subject to the mortgage became united in the same person,
the mortgage was merged in the ownership and the mortgage was extinguished. In
equity merger did not necessarily follow upon the union of the two interests
and whether or not such union did occur depended upon the intention, express or
implied, of the mortgagee. Dealing with the matter of intention, Falconbridge
on The Law of Mortgages, 3rd ed., p. 372, para. 204, says:
In the absence of evidence
of actual intention, either express or implied from the circumstances of the
transaction, the presumption of merger ordinarily arising from the union of a
charge and the estate subject to the charge may be rebutted by the
consideration that it is more for the benefit of the owner of the charge and
the estate that merger shall not take place, as, for example, if the effect of
merger would be to confer priority upon subsequent encumbrancers.
While this proposition,
as stated by Falconbridge, relates to a merger of a mortgage and the estate, it
is also, in my opinion, applicable with respect to the matter of the merger of
a security of a lower nature into one of a higher nature in legal valuation.
Authority for this view
is found in a recent decision of the Privy Council in Ghana Commercial Bank
v. Chandiram. That
was a case in which it was argued that the appellant bank, possessed of an
equitable charge on land, had merged that charge in a legal mortgage of the
[Page 322]
same land which was subsequently taken. The legal mortgage
proved to be invalid. The argument in favour of merger was rejected and it was
said at p. 871:
While not disputing that
the Ghana Bank's intention was to substitute the legal mortgage for the
equitable charge, they find it impossible to accept the view that the Ghana
Bank intended the equitable charge to be extinguished in the event of the legal
mortgage proving for any reason to be invalid or ineffective. In other words,
their Lordships take the intention of the Ghana Bank to have been to replace
the equitable charge by a valid and effective legal mortgage, but to keep it
alive for their own benefit save in so far as it was so replaced.
In that case the legal
mortgage was invalid. The appellant's legal mortgage in the present case was
valid, but, if it were to rank subsequent to the respondent's caveat, so that
the respondent's mortgage would charge the entire interest of Zirtz in the
land, it would be ineffective. I think the same reasoning is applicable in the
present case in seeking to determine what was the appellant's intention. I do
not see how the appellant could be considered to have intended to surrender a
prior interest, in favour of the respondent's subsequent interest, by the
taking of the legal mortgage in substitution for its existing security. It
cannot, in the circumstances, have intended to effect a merger of its two
securities.
In any event, even if a
merger were held to have occurred, I do not see how that would automatically
increase the interest granted to the respondent by the terms of its mortgage.
At no time did Zirtz have a complete interest in the land which he could
mortgage to the respondent by a mortgage of "his equity", because at
all times there existed a charge on the land in favour of the appellant. This
situation continued, even if it were held that a merger had taken place.
For these reasons, in my
opinion, the appeal should be allowed, the judgment at the trial should be set
aside and the appellant should be entitled to a declaration that its equitable
mortgage had priority over that of the respondent.
There is one further
point to be determined and that is as to the amount of the appellant's prior
charge. At the time the respondent took its mortgage on the equity of Zirtz he
was indebted to the appellant in the principal amount of $6,400. Subsequent to
the execution of the equitable mortgage to the respondent and the registration
of
[Page 323]
its caveat, a further $3,000 was advanced to Zirtz by the
appellant, making a total of $9,400, which appears as the principal amount of
the appellant's legal mortgage. The appellant contended that it was entitled to
priority for the entire amount, but I cannot accept that contention. The
respondent's mortgage, protected by caveat, applied to the equity of Zirtz as
it existed at the time of the execution of the respondent's mortgage. At that
time and at the time of the filing of the caveat the principal amount of the prior
mortgage was $6,400. As from the time of the registration of its caveat the
respondent had a valid charge upon the remaining interest of Zirtz in the land.
In my opinion, therefore, the appellant's priority is limited to the extent of
$6,400, together with simple interest, at the rate of one per cent per month as
provided in the appellant's equitable mortgage, from time to time on unpaid
balances to June 19, 1958.
The appellant, in my
opinion, is entitled to its costs throughout, including the costs of the
motions for leave to appeal to this Court made before the Court of Appeal and
this Court.
Appeal allowed with costs.
Solicitor for the defendant, appellant: Douglas A.
Schmeiser, Saskatoon.
Solicitors for the plaintiff, respondent: Moxon,
Schmitt, Estey and Robertson, Saskatoon.