181 N.Y. 258 | NY | 1905
Lead Opinion
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *260
When this action was before us on a previous appeal no question arose as to the payment of the legacies, or as to the evidence by which such payment was regarded as established. The main controversy then related to the priority of the liens upon the assumption that they were all unpaid, and we held that the lien of the legacies was prior and superior to that of the mortgage. (Conkling v. Weatherwax, *262
The oral declarations of a deceased mortgagor, which have no relation to the res gestæ or to the character or extent of his possession of the realty, made in the absence of the mortgagee many years after the mortgage was given, are incompetent to affect or defeat the lien of the mortgage when there is no identity of interest between the mortgagor and mortgagee. (Foote v. Beecher,
It is insisted, however, that while the objection taken to this testimony was good, the ruling did no harm because the evidence was immaterial, as payment is an affirmative defense and the burden of proving it was upon the defendant. This raises a mooted and difficult question, for the law upon the subject of alleging and proving payment is in some confusion. Quite recently it was held in an action upon contract that the plaintiff need not prove the negative fact of non-payment and that the defendant had the burden of establishing payment. (Lerche v. Brasher,
On the other hand, it has been held more recently, in an action at law, but not upon contract, that an allegation of non-payment is essential and that without it the complaint is subject to demurrer for failing to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. (Lent v. N.Y. Mass. Ry. Co.,
In Cochran v. Reich (91 Hun, 440) it was held necessary to allege and prove non-payment in an action for breach of a covenant to pay rent reserved in a lease. (See, also, Krower v.Reynolds,
The conflict of authority extends to other states. (State exrel. Spaulding v. Peterson,
An effort has been made to establish as the true rule "that the plaintiff should prove, not non-payment generally, but non-payment when due or at maturity, or, in other words, a breach of the contract sued on," leaving it to the defendant to allege, as new matter, payments made after the breach. (16 Enc. Pl. Pr. 179; Douglass v. Central Land Co.,
The learned Appellate Division drew a distinction between actions at law and suits in equity in regard to the burden of proving, in the first instance, payment or non-payment. It declared that "the distinction in the rule as to proof of non-payment in equitable actions to enforce a lien and in ordinary actions for recovery of money, is shown by the fact that in an action for the foreclosure of a mortgage given as collateral to a bond, non-payment upon the bond must be proved, while in an action on the bond alone this is unnecessary." The following *265 authorities, cited in support of this position, tend to sustain it. (Coulter v. Bower, 11 Daly, 303, VAN BRUNT, J.; Davies v. N.Y. Concert Co., 41 Hun, 492, DANIELS, J.)
While in an action upon contract for the payment of money only the allegation and proof of the promise and that it has matured creates the presumption of non-payment and throws the burden of proving payment upon the one who asserts it, there are certain cases in which proof of non-payment is essential to a recovery, because it is part of the cause of action. Such was Knapp v.Roche (
Lent v. N.Y. Mass. Ry. Co. (supra) belongs to the same class, for that was an action upon an award made by commissioners in a proceeding to condemn lands for railroad purposes. Where one sues for a balance of indebtedness for services performed at an agreed price over and above all payments made, no payment being specified, a general denial permits proof of payment without pleading it, because the plaintiff voluntarily invited "examination into the amount of indebtedness and the extent of the reduction thereof by payments." (Quin v. Lloyd,
In White v. Smith (
In an action against the individual members of a joint-stock association under a statute authorizing a recovery after the remedy at law against the company itself had been exhausted (L. 1853, ch. 153), a complaint which alleged an indebtedness against the company for goods sold and delivered *266 was held defective upon demurrer, because there was no allegation of non-payment. (Witherhead v. Allen, 4 Abb. Ct. App. Dec. 628, 633.)
In Krower v. Reynolds (
The action now before us was not brought to recover damages for the breach of a contract to pay money, or for the breach of any contract. No effort was made to recover the amount of the legacies from the executor under the Code of Civil Procedure, or from the devisee or his estate upon the ground that by accepting the devise he became liable personally to pay the legacies. The plaintiff does not seek to enforce a personal obligation against any one, but to foreclose a lien upon land. The action is in the nature of a proceeding in rem. It was necessary for the plaintiff to establish the lien, not as one in existence over thirty years ago, but as existing when the action was brought. One of the parties defendant and the only one who joined issue with the plaintiff, was the owner of a mortgage subsequent in lien to her legacy, if that *267
was still unpaid. That party was in no position to know, unless by hearsay, whether the legacy had been paid or not, while the subject was within the peculiar knowledge of the plaintiff and her family. The loan secured by the mortgage in question was large enough to pay all the legacies, yet it did not appear what was done with the money. The right of the plaintiff to her legacy arose over thirty years before the action was brought, which gave rise to a presumption of fact that it had been paid. (Macaulay
v. Palmer,
"An unexplained neglect to enforce an alleged right, for a long period, casts suspicion upon the existence of the right itself," and "it is the law of courts of equity, independent of positive legislative limitations, that they will not entertain stale demands." (Bean v. Tonnele,
The existence of this lien depended upon the will which made the legacy a charge upon the land and the fact that the land had not been relieved by payment of the charge. A legacy which had been paid would not support the action, because there would be no lien. The same is true of a legacy presumed as matter of fact to have been paid in the absence of evidence to rebut the presumption. Under these circumstances it was necessary to prove non-payment the same as in an action upon a stale demand or of foreclosure or upon a covenant to pay a mortgage or to recover against the officers *268 of a bank or the members of a joint-stock association in the cases cited.
I think, however, that we should go farther and attempt to reconcile the conflict of authority upon the general subject by laying down the following rules as fairly deducible from the adjudged cases:
1. In an action upon contract for the payment of money only, where the complaint does not allege a balance due over and above all payments made, it is sufficient for the plaintiff to allege and prove a breach of the obligation by the non-payment thereof when it matured, as the presumption of non-payment continues until met by the allegation and proof of payment.
2. When the complaint sets forth a balance in excess of all payments, owing to the structure of the pleading, it is necessary for the plaintiff to prove the allegation as made and this leaves the amount of the payments open to the defendant under a general denial.
3. When the action is not upon contract for the payment of money, but is upon an obligation created by operation of law, or is for the enforcement of a lien where non-payment of the amount secured is part of the cause of action, it is necessary both to allege and prove the fact of non-payment.
The case before us falls under the third paragraph of this classification, and hence the exception to the ruling which admitted the declarations of the deceased mortgagor against the objection of the mortgagee, raised reversible error, aside from the effect of such evidence in tending to rebut the presumption of payment from the lapse of time. The order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed and judgment absolute rendered against the appellants upon their stipulation, with costs in all courts.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur with Judge VANN in the view that the declarations of the mortgagor that the legacy had not been paid were incompetent as against the mortgagee. I also concur with my brother in the proposition that the lapse of *269 time created a presumption that the legacies, which are the subject of the action, had been paid or, at least, that the trial court might so find. The admission of incompetent evidence (the only evidence on the question) to rebut this presumption was, therefore, a vital error for which the judgment of the Special Term was properly reversed by the Appellate Division.
I dissent, however, from the doctrine that the burden of proof rested upon the plaintiff to establish the non-payment of an obligation for the payment of money. While it is necessary that the complaint should allege the breach of such an obligation, to wit, a failure to pay the money owing thereon (Lent v. N.Y. Mass. Ry. Co.,
As to the law in other states, it is said in the American and English Encyclopædia of Law (Vol. 22, p. 587): "The general rule is well settled that payment is an affirmative defense and will not, in the first instance, be presumed, but after the antecedent *275
existence of the indebtedness has been proved by the creditor, the burden of proving its discharge by payment is upon the debtor or person alleging the payment." It would be impossible, within the limits of an opinion, to review all the authorities cited to support the text. It will be sufficient to refer to a few which are found in the leading states. In Massachusetts, in an action on a contract for the payment of money or to perform some duty, the plaintiff is not bound to give evidence of non-payment, but it is incumbent on the defendant to prove payment or performance, the court saying: "The objection that the plaintiff gave no evidence of non-performance is against first principles." (McGregory v. Prescott,
The suggestion is made in the Encyclopædia of Pleading and Practice (Vol. 16, p. 179) that the true rule is "that the plaintiff should prove not non-payment generally, but non-payment *277
when due or at maturity, or in other words a breach of the contract called on," leaving it to the defendant to allege his new matter, payment after the breach, and this suggestion seems to meet with the approval of my associate. I cannot find any authority for such a rule. The text writer refers to Douglass
v. Central Land Company (
Concurrence Opinion
I concur with Judge VANN's opinion, that the order should be affirmed, upon the ground that it was error to admit the oral declarations of the deceased mortgagor that the legacies had not been paid. I, also, agree with him that the nature of the cause of action was such as to impose the burden upon the plaintiff to prove the non-payment of the legacies. It was not in the nature of an obligation for the payment of money; in which case I should agree with the views of Chief Judge CULLEN as to the onusprobandi.
Concurrence Opinion
I agree with Judge GRAY that this action is not on an instrument for the payment of money, and I consequently express no opinion on the general questions of law discussed as to the burden of proof. In this case the plaintiff rests under the onusprobandi.
WERNER, J., concurs with VANN, J.; O'BRIEN and HAIGHT, JJ., concur with CULLEN, Ch. J.; GRAY and BARTLETT, JJ., concur in result in memoranda.
Order affirmed, etc.