39 N.Y.S. 678 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
This is an appeal from a judgment of foreclosure and sale obtained under a mortgage made by William C. Traphagen to the plaintiff upon property on Bradhurst avenue, in the city of New York. The mortgage was dated the 26tli day of February, 1892, was payable immediately and was given subject to other mortgages upon the same premises. At the time the action was brought the title to the property 'was in the defendant, the Workingman’s Co-operative Association of the United Insurance League of New York, to which it was conveyed on the 19th day of June, 1893, by one Delia I. Donihee and her husband, by a conveyance which recited, among other things, that “ the said premises are free from incumbrances, except certain mortgages now liens upon the same.” The mortgaged premises were part of a strip of land extending through from Bradhurst avenue to Edgecombe avenue, having a frontage of about 130 feet on Bradhurst avenue and a depth of about 125 feet. It appears in evidence that in 1890 William B. Donihee held the legal title to these mortgaged premises, together with another parcel contiguous thereto, and that a mortgage which he had given upon both parcels was foreclosed by the Ecputable Life Assurance Society of New York ; that a sale was made under the decree of foreclosure of a portion of the premises in suit to Delia I. Donihee, and that the conveyance to her by the referee, who conducted the sale, was made in June, 1891. In February, 1891, Delia I. Donihee became the purchaser at a foreclosure sale of the other portion of the mortgaged premises which was conveyed to her on the 5th day of February, 1891. It appears in evidence that at this time William 0. Traphagen was
On the trial of the cause all the issues were decided adversely to-the defendants and upon grounds which we think were fully supported. The first contention made by the appellant, the Workingman’s Co-operative, Association, is that Delia I. Donihee was a necessary party to the action, and that it should-not have proceeded without her, and that it was- error for the court below to.proceed with the trial in her absence after the objection taken by the appellant. There was nothing by way of notice to apprise the plaintiff of any interest of Mrs. Donihee in the property such as would make it necessary to-join her as a,party, speaking now of the records alone. At the-time the Crosby mortgage was made all of the interest which Mrs, Donihee had had was by formal conveyance duly recorded, in Traphagen, and at the time this action was brought all of the estate which she acquired by reconveyance from Traphagen was in . the Workingman’s Co-operative Association without anything-to -indicate in any way that there was a trust or condition connected with the title of the association. Therefore, it was not necessary to make Mrs. Donihee a party by reason of the state of the record as furnishing notice, nor was there anything proven on the trial which required the justice presiding to suspend it in order that Delia I. Donihee might be brought in as a defendant. If a bona fide holder of the mortgage, Crosby was in no way bound by any relations of which he was ignorant, existing between Mrs. Donihee and Traphagen, nor by the terms of any secret or undisclosed trust which she might have created concurrently with her conveyance to the Workingman’s Co-operative Association, and there is a total failure to show fraud or bad faith or knowledge of equities on the part of Crosby, when he took from Traphagen the $2,000 mortgage which was given to secure advances of money of. the making of which by him there can be no doubt. According to the allegations of the answer of the Workingman’s Co-operative Association, Traphagen took the title as security for advances made and to be made, and the proof justified the court below in.
Many exceptions to the court’s refusal to admit evidence appear in the case, none of which require especial mention, except one relating to a refusal of the court to allow William B. Donihee to testify to certain conversations had with William C. Traphagen, who died before the commencement of this action. The object of. that testimony was to show relations existing between Mrs. Donihee and William C. Traphagen, and admissions by Traphagen which would affect his title to the mortgaged premises. But it is unnecessary to ...pass upon the admissibility of the testimony of the husband of Mrs.
On the whole case, we think the judgment should be affirmed, with costs;
Van Brunt, P. J., Williams, . O’Brien and Ingraham, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.