73 N.Y.S. 334 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1901
The suit was to foreclose a mortgage on real property; judgment followed, the property was sold and the surplus paid to the city chamberlain. The contest as to such surplus is between the assignee of Martin V. Cook, who filed a mechanic’s lien against the property, and one Andrew Mills, who filed a subsequent lien. The referee reported in favor of the Cook lien, and the present is a motion to confirm the report. The. only exceptions filed were by Mills, the junior lienor, who claims that on account of an excessive claim made by Cook his lien became forfeited and unenforcible. It cannot be inferred from the mere fact that the referee decided that Cook claimed too much that the lienor forfeited his equitable claim upon the property, nor is there anything in the evidence warranting that conclusion. In Ringle v. Wallis Iron Works, 149 N. Y. 439, it is intimated that the statements that make a notice of lien ineffectual must be not only untrue, but “ willfully and intentionally ” false in some important or material respect. So, in Aeschlimann v. Presbyterian Hospital, 165 N. Y. 296, the court held that where in such case it appears that the plaintiffs intentionally and by pretense of a fictitious and fabricated demand enormously exaggerated their claim, with intent to defraud, no recovery could be had on the lien. The court carefully observed the obvious distinction between honest mistakes of fact as to value and willful and intentional exaggeration fraudulently made. In this respect the rule is similar to that applicable to false swearing in proofs of loss on insurance policies, which by the conditions thereof vitiates the contract, but to have this effect the swearing “ must be intentionally false, whether by a fraudulent overvaluation of the goods destroyed, or a statement of items which really have no existence, or by an undervaluation of what is saved, or in other particulars.” Richards Ins., § 137. An innocent mistake (Thierolf v. Universal F. Ins. Co., 110 Penn. St. 37), or an innocent though exaggerated estimate of value will not avoid the policy. Maher v. Hibernia Ins. Co., 67 N. Y. 283; Jersey City Ins. Co. v. Nichol, 35 N. J.
Ordered accordingly.