45 N.Y.S. 479 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
This action is brought to. recover damages for the negligence of the defendants’ testator, who passed the title to certain lands in Westcliester county, examined by him at the instance of the plaintiff, who became the purchaser thereof. The plaintiff was ousted from the possession of his lands by the judgments in two actions of ejectment brought against him by Hawley D. Clapp and Nelly V. B. Clapp. The report of the decision of these two cases on appeal is found in 3 Appellate Division at page 284. The defect in the title and the question of its effect were previously decided in Clapp v. McCabe (84 Hun, 379). The-difficulty with the title is this : One Hawley D. Clapp, in 1861, was seized in fee of a tract of land-including the premises purchased by the plaintiff ; he mortgaged the tract for $10,000 to Rachel S. Rogers; the mortgage was subsequently assigned to. Elias H. Van Brunt; in August, 1863, he - released to Clapp a portion of the mortgaged premises. Just here is the source of. all the-difficulty. Instead of particularly describing the premises'released, the instrument releases “ all the said mortgaged ' lands and property described in said mortgage, except the lands, premises and property hereinafter mentioned and described, which are not released or intended to be released by this indenture, and which lands and premises and property not released or intended to-be released by this indenture'are described as follows,, viz.: All that certain piece, parcel or lot of land,” etc. That is to say, the instrument described by metes and bounds not the premises released, as is usual in instruments of the kind, but the premises retained as subject to the lien of the mortgage.. Afterwards Huldah H. Clapp, the
There can be no question that an attorney- is liable to his client for negligence in the discharge of his employment causing that client injury. “ An attorney is also liable to his client for the consequences
In this view of the duty of an attorney examining titles, we proceed to consider the question of law presented by the title of the plaintiff. There can be no question but. the release showed distinctly what property was released by it, and that by the release the plaintiff’s premises were discharged from the lien of' the mortgage. Therefore, no title to those premises can be traced through the foreclosure of the mortgage, unless the judgment granted in that foreclosure was a binding adjudication of the right of the plaintiff to have the premises sold for the satisfaction of the mortgage, despite the fact that the mortgage no longer covered the premises. The complaint in the action clearly did not include the plaintiff’s lands, for it alleged that Van Brunt had released, a portion of the premises therein described from the lien of the mortgage, as would appear by reference to the release, the date and place of record of which were set forth. It was, therefore, only the lands still subject to the mortgage, of which a sale was sought. I am inclined to differ from the learned referee who decided Clapp v. McCabe (supra). He thought that the decree directed a sale of the lands described in the complaint and subject to the mortgage. I think that it directed a sale of the lands exempted from the mortgage, instead of those subject to the mortgage ; at least, that that is the proper construction of the description of the premises, except so far as that construction is modified by the reference in the decree as to the release itself. I shall assume this to be the correct construction of the decree, for that is the most favorable view to the defendants. The case then presented is the effect of a decree directing the sale of certain lands, where the action is brought solely for the sale of other and different lands:
Moreover, 1 think that a jury might have found from the "evidence that the error of the attorney was not in his construction of
“ Conveys the premises in question, by virtue of a sale under the above judgment, and excepts therefrom the part released, from said mortgage, by Elias H. Van Brunt, and described in Liber 508 of Mortgages, page 229.”
This deed has precisely the same description as that contained in the decree of foreclosure. Under the construction of that description as I have given it, this statement as to the premises conveyed by it is entirely erroneous, for it conveyed the'released lands, not the mortgaged lands. If the description is to be construed as conveying the lands not released, then it did not include the plaintiff’s purchase, and was not part of his chain of title. It thus appears that whichever view the attorney took of this description, he must have been. under the belief that the lands described in the release by metes and bounds were those released from the mortgage, not those retained by its liens. This, evidently,.was the foundation of his error, and could only have occurred from a careless reading of the instrument of release. I think it can hardly be denied that a fault of this kind would constitute negligence. There is nothing in the abstract to show that the question of law, as to the effect of the judgment, was ever considered or decided bv the attorney.
The objection that the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial was made too late would have been good had it not been waived. The intention of the limitation prescribed in section 1002 of the Code of Procedure is to prevent the unsuccessful party having any longer time in which to review an adverse judgment by a motion for a new trial than he would have by an appeal from the judgment; but the defendants admitted “ due and timely service of * * * notice of motion,” This operated as a waiver of the objection that the motion
The order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred, except Barlett, J., not sitting.
Order affirmed, with costs.