43 N.J. Eq. 396 | New York Court of Chancery | 1887
Bradley was the owner of a lot of land. About June 8th, 1882, he agreed to sell that lot to Edlestien for $1,500, and also to loan to him, for the purpose of building thereon, $900 more. He, at that date, executed a deed for the lot to Edlestien, and Edlestien executed a mortgage. The testimony shows that the money was all advanced in cash or goods before October 6th, 1882. On that day the deed was delivered to Edlestien, when he delivered his mortgage to-Bradley. As between the parties to this suit, that entire claim of $2,400, together with the inter■est which has accrued, is good and is allowed.
Prior to this 6th of October, 1882, the defendants, Buchanan, Snock & Snock, furnished lumber and materials to Edlestien for the house which he built on said lot. The lumber and materials so furnished were of the value of $900. For this they had a
But the defendants Crisy & Crisy demand judgment in their behalf as between themselves and Buchanan, Snock & Snock.
The question, therefore, is, Was there such a breach or gap in the transaction, between the delivery of the deed by Buchanan, Snock & Snock to Edlestien, and the delivery of the mortgage by Byran to Buchanan, Snock & Snock, as will, under the rules of law, let in the judgment of Crisy & Crisy, and give it precedence to the mortgage ? Of course, if this mortgage be a purchase-money mortgage, in the sense of the statute, then the Crisy ■& Crisy judgment must stand aside for the mortgage. Rev. p. 167 § 77. Was it such mortgage? I have no doubt but that the parties so intended it. It was part of the payment; nothing else stands in place of it.
When, on November 26th, 1882, they surrendered the title which they had acquired on October 6th previously, as security for their claim of $900, they accepted this mortgage from Byran on the same premises. The sale or transfer was not directly to
But a purchase-money mortgage for what ? If for anything, for the interest which Buchanan, Snock & Snock had in the lot. Crisy & Crisy say they are not bound by the agreement which made the deed from Edlestien to Buchanan, Snock & Snock simply a mortgage, which is no doubt true, as they had no notice of it, and it was not recorded; but it works no injury to
Again, I think that the rule which prevents the attaching of a lien when the act of receiving and conveying the title is instantaneous, or one and the same act, applies. There is nothing upon which the judgment could rest, or to which it could adhere. The very act (or agreement embodied in the living act) which carried the title from Buchanan, Snock & Snock to Byran carried it back to Buchanan, Snock & Snock. However numerous the transfers intervening, they formed but one circuit. There was no immediate stoppage or suspension; nor could there be; for Buchanan, Snock & Snock retained their first title until they were assured that it would be carried instantly back to them. I can discover no resting place for any lien claimant who was outside of that particular transaction. There was no breach or gap through which he could pass.
It was urged upon the argument that no adjudication of this question had been made in our courts. I think a case quite similar, involving, at least, the same legal principles, was before Vice-Chancellor Van Fleet. I refer to Clark v. Butler, 5 Stew. Eq. 664- In that case the holder of two mortgages surrendered them and took another in lieu thereof at the same time. Before this surrender Butler furnished to the owner and mortgagor materials for a building on the mortgaged premises. For these materials he afterwards took a general and special judgment. In the suit by the mortgagee to foreclose, Butler insisted that his lien was entitled to precedence, because the exchange of the old mortgages for the new was, in point of time, after the lien of material-man attached under the statute. The court decided that in such case the seizin was so transitory or instantaneous that the lien could not attach. I would also call attention to the following cases: Wallace v. Silsby, 13 Vr. 1, 6, and the cases cited; Clark v. Munroe, 14 Mass. 351; Jackson v. McKenny, 3 Wend. 233; Stow v. Tifft, 15 Johns. 458; Beebe v. Austin, 15 Johns. 477; Lynde
T will so advise.