36 Barb. 195 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1862
By the Court,
The only question in this case is whether the plaintiff is entitled to a lien as vendor, upon the property which he conveyed to the defendant at the corner of Atlantic and Clinton streets, in Brooklyn, for that por
The plaintiff was nonsuited at the trial, and we are therefore to assume the case made by his evidence as true. Taking that statement of the facts, they are substantially these: In May, 1858, the parties made a verbal agreement for a sale or exchange of real estate. The plaintiff agreed to sell and convey to the defendant a store and lot on Atlantic street, Brooklyn. The consideration named in the deed, or the price or value put upon this property, was thirty thousand dollars. Of this, a part was to be paid by assuming certain existing incumbrances on the property; a part was to be paid by an assignment of a chattel mortgage and debt against a third party; a part was to be paid in cash; and for the residue, $5100, the defendant was to convey to the plaintiff a house and lot in President street, valued at that sum. The plaintiff executed a conveyance of the Atlantic street property to the defendant, on the 16th of June, 1858. On the same day the defendant paid the money which was stipulated, and assigned the chattel mortgage. The specified incumbrances on the plaintiff’s land were at the same time assumed by the defendant, by the acceptance of the deed with a suitable clause inserted in it. The defendant was ready to convey to the plaintiff, or to a person designated by him, the house in President street, which was to satisfy the residue of the consideration. " But it appeared that there were incumbrances
The lien of a vendor upon the estate conveyed, for the purchase money of that estate until it is paid, rests upon the • doctrine that it is inequitable that the purchaser should have the land, and yet refuse to pay the consideration. The doctrine of such a lien on lands sold is an anomaly. There is the same equity in the case of a sale of chattels, but no such doctrine obtains in reference to these. The lien of a vendor of real estate, however, is perfectly recognized, and the general rule creating it is never denied. " But it is subject to this marked qualification, that whenever the vendor has manifested an intention not to rely upon his lien on the lands sold, for the purchase money, he is considered to have waived his lien. Farther, it is well settled that whenever any distinct or independent security is taken, as by a mortgage of other
It does not weaken the force of this objection to the plaintiff’s case, that by the misconduct of Alker the depositary,
It need not be denied, that if by the fraud of the vendee a part of the purchase money remains unpaid, when the vendor supposed it had been paid at the time, a lien may be asserted for that portion. That is the doctrine declared by Chancellor Walworth in Bradley v. Bosley, (1 Barb. Ch. Rep. 125, 152.) If in the present case the defendant had fraudulently represented that he was the owner of a house and lot worth $5100, and so induced the plaintiff to accept the conveyance of it in payment of that sum, when in reality rio such property existed, or he was not its owner, or if he had fraudulently misrepresented its value, or his title, the result would have been that the purchase money would have remained unpaid pro tanto, by the fraud of the purchaser, and the court might have seen no reason to suppose that the ordinary lien was relinquished or waived.
But the plaintiff is embarrassed here, not by any fraud of his vendee in the sale or the payment made at the time, but by the misconduct of a third party in respect to the security, or the mode of payment which he accepted. His grievance is not that the defendant did not pay him, because the payment was completed by the delivery of the deed, but that he has prevented the completion of the transaction
Mnott, Brown and Scrugham, Justices.]
The judge at special term was correct in holding, that no case was shown here for the enforcement of a vendor’s lien, and his judgment must be affirmed with cost.