67 N.Y. 437 | NY | 1876
This case involves a question as to the priority of mortgages, as liens upon the premises mortgaged.
The mortgage foreclosed in this action was executed by the mortgagors, Ethan M. Pierce and wife to Aurora M. Pierce, and by the mortgagee was assigned to the plaintiff's testator. The mortgage and the assignment were both duly recorded. At the time when the mortgage foreclosed was executed, the mortgagor, Ethan M. Pierce, had possession of the land under a contract of sale, and held only an equitable title. A deed was executed to him after the mortgage was given, and subsequently the owner and mortgagor conveyed the premises to J. Denison Pierce, and took back a mortgage from him, which was duly recorded. The grantee had notice of the existence of the prior mortgage, and the grantor assigned the last-mentioned mortgage to the defendant, Robert Turner, which assignment was also placed on record. Turner searched the records back to the date of the deed to Ethan M. Pierce, inquired of the latter and was informed that the mortgage assigned was the first lien. The defendant claims that the mortgage assigned to him was entitled to priority over the mortgage held by the plaintiffs. We think that this position is without foundation, and cannot be upheld, as is manifest by a reference to recent cases decided in this court. The principle is settled beyond peradventure, that an assignee of a mortgage must take it subject to the equities attending the original transaction. If the mortgagee himself cannot enforce *440
it, then the assignee has no greater rights. The true test is, to inquire what can the mortgagee do by way of enforcement of it against the property mortgaged, and what he can do the assignee can do and no more. As a purchaser of a chose in action he must always abide the case of the person from whom he buys, and he stands entirely in the place of the latter. (The Trustees ofUnion College v. Wheeler,
As the recording act does not aid the defendant, and no ground is shown upon which he is entitled to a priority, it necessarily follows that there was no error upon the trial, and the judgment of the General Term must be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.