Land Law Mortgage
Land Law Mortgage
Land Law Mortgage
ADVANCED ASSIGNMENT
REG.NO. : 2002/LLB/081
QUESTION:
‘ONCE A MORTGAGE, ALWAYS A MORTGAGE’ DISCUSS
THIS STATEMENT IN LIGHT OF LAW RELATING TO THE
RIGHT OF REDEMPTION.
DATE : 20 Jan. 04
A mortgage from time immemorial particularly the
merchant era has developed as a concept of security to
provide security to the commercial world. It is defined as
1
sec 18 of the mortgage decree
2
[1999] 2 CH 474
3
sec 115 of the RTA cap 205
4
sec 18 mortgage decree
The mortgage must then cause a caveat to be entered5
this caveat then constitutes registration as required by
Sec. 18 MD. if the mortgage does not register the caveat,
then he is not treated as a mortgagee in terms of the
Mortgage Decree i.e. he cannot avail himself of the
remedies available to a mortgageee under the Decree.
The duties of a mortgagor to include; to repay the
mortgage money, to perform and observe other covenants
in the mortgage and to preserve or keep the mortgaged
property from diminishing in value.6
The above duties of a mortgagor conversely amount to
the rights of a mortgagee. These include the right to; be
paid, demand that the mortgagor fulfils the conditions in
the deed, demand that the mortgagor does not diminish
the value of the mortgaged property, sue the mortgagor,
and to realise security. Sec. 2 of the Mortgage Decree
provides for the modes of realising security and these
include; by appointing a receiver, by taking possession of
the mortgaged land, by foreclosure7
5
sec 148 RTA
6
sec 1 of the mortgage decree
7
see also sec 3-10 of the mortgage decree
the right of redemption are termed as a clog on equity
of redemption.
In the case of REAVE V.LESLIE8 property was mortgaged
to secure a loan of money, At a later date it was
agreed if within five years the mortgages should
elect to enter into partnership with the mortgagors,
they should be entitled to do so on the terms, inter
alia, that the mortgagors should be relieved of the
liability to repay the loan and that a ship (which was
part of the security) should be transferred free from
the mortgage for the purposes of the partnership.
The House of Lords construed these two transactions
as being separate and independent and held that the
agreement was binding on the mortgage.