218 A.D. 607 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1926
This action was brought to foreclose a second mortgage on property known as Nos 14r-lQ West One Hundred and Twenty-seventh street, New York city, dated January 1, 1924, made by defendant Laura Kafka to one Eva Katz to secure payment of $50,500. It was assigned to Solomon Zlotolow, then to the First National Bank of Jamaica, by the First National Bank of Jamaica back to Zlotolow, and then to the plaintiff. There is alleged a default in the payment of the installment of principal due October 1, 1925, on account of which, under the terms of the mortgage, the entire balance is alleged to have become due at the election of the plaintiff. The complaint was verified November 10, 1925.
The relief sought on the motion was that pursuant to rule 103 of the Rules of Civil Practice the denials contained in the answer be stricken out as sham and frivolous; that pursuant to rule 104 the answer be treated as a nullity on the ground that it is sham and frivolous; that pursuant to subdivision 6 of rule 109 the defense alleged in the answer be stricken out for insufficiency and that pursuant to rule 112 plaintiff be awarded judgment on the pleadings.
The answer, by paragraph first,” denies, by a form of denial referred to below, the allegations of the complaint which allege the execution of the bond by Laura Kafka to Eva Katz, the contents of the bond, the execution and delivery of the mortgage as security for the bond, the recording of the mortgage, its provisions, various assignments of it, the amount paid and the balance alleged to be due; as well as the non-payment of the installment on the principal of the mortgage on October 1, 1925.
The affirmative defense set up in the answer alleges, in effect,that Michele Anastasio and Anthony Anastasio were the owners of certain property known as No. 1360 Grand avenue, borough of The Bronx, the equity in which was $38,000; that one Zlotolow was engaged in dealing in real estate and mortgages, conducting business through dummies; that in the name of one of his dummies, the defendant Laura Kafka, he owned the property affected by the mortgage which plaintiff seeks to foreclose; that, prior to July 8, 1925, Zlotolow was the equitable owner and holder of a mortgage inferior to the mortgage sought to be foreclosed, a third mortgage, standing in the name of another of his dummies, which inferior mortgage was made by the defendant Kafka to the Breeze Realty Corporation whereof the said Zlotolow was an officer; that, this third mortgage was by mesne assignments, through dummies of Zlotolow, eventually assigned to Michele Anastasio and Anthony Anastasio as part of the consideration for their said equity in the parcel of real estate in The Bronx, valued at $38,000, the third mortgage being thus used by Zlotolow as a means of procuring from them their title to the Grand avenue property; that it was the purpose, plan and scheme of the said Zlotolojv, through and in concert with his dummies, that Laura Kafka, the mortgagor, would default in the payments under the second mortgage, so that the mortgage assigned to the Anastasios would be eliminated for the benefit of a dummy and cloak for Zlotolow; that the third mortgage given to the Anastasios was founded on no consideration
The only false or fraudulent representations alleged are that “ Zlotolow, falsely representing himself as a broker, but in reality acting for himself,” negotiated the sale with the Anastasios. This so-called fraud could not have the effect of leading the Anastasios to believe that they were getting anything other than just what they did get. It might have given them some claim against Zlotolow in relation to the brokerage, but it could not change the fact that they received exactly what they bargained for and expected to get. It could not afford a ground for rescinding the transaction because it did not render the transaction or the property received any different from what the same would have been "if Zlotolow were in fact acting solely as a broker. Furthermore, it is not a matter to be redressed at the instance of their assignees, the answering defendants, who are not concerned with it.
They pray that their mortgage, the third, be declared a lien prior to plaintiff’s, the second mortgage. Their allegations show they intended to buy a mortgage which would be subordinate to that which plaintiff seeks to foreclose.
Their counsel cites Goodwin v. Thompson (88 Hun, 598) to sustain their position. In that case there were material, inducing false representations as to the value of certain property and the financial responsibhty of the person who was to pay the indebtedness secured by the mortgages there mentioned. Here the Anastasios took a mortgage knowing it to be a third hen and subordinate to that which plaintiff seeks to foreclose. The alleged lack of consideration for the second mortgage and the circumstances, as alleged, under which it came into existence and was continued, afford no ground for declaring their mortgage to be superior to it.
Their plea is not merely to have it declared inequitable that plaintiff should declare the mortgage due according to its terms. It is to have their mortgage declared prior to plaintiff’s, the very opposite of that for which they bargained. They cannot have a decree giving them something other and better than they intended to and did buy with full knowledge of all the material facts. The alleged defense is insufficient.
The denials are also defective. Instead of setting up, as to each and every allegation contained in a paragraph, a denial of any knowledge or information thereof sufficient to form a belief,the answer sets forth: “First. They deny any knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to the truth of the allegations contained in paragraphs marked ‘Second,’ ‘Third,’ ‘Fourth,’. ‘ Fifth,’ ‘ Sixth,’ ‘ Seventh,’ ‘ Eighth,’ ‘ Ninth,’ ‘ Tenth,’ ‘ Eleventh,’ ‘ Twelfth,’ ‘ Thirteenth,’ and ‘ Fifteenth ’ of the complaint herein and, therefore, deny the same.”
A denial of knowledge is permitted by the statute. (Civ. Prac. Act, § 261.) It should be proper in form. Otherwise it may be so vague and evasive in effect as to be worthless. Especially will-it be of no value, though verified, as the basis of a prosecution for perjury. We are of the opinion that the form adopted in the “ first ” paragraph of this answer is so defective as to render the attempted denial or denials, if they are meant to be plural, insufficient. (Kirschbaum v. Eschmann, 205 N. Y. 127; Dahlstrom v. Gemunder, 198 id. 449, 453.)
The only additional denial is one on information and belief that plaintiff is still the owner of the mortgage. In form this denial is proper. But the complaint alleges the assignment to plaintiff and its having been recorded, allegations not effectively denied. Under the circumstances, we do not believe the denial upon information and belief that plaintiff remains the owner is sufficient to raise an issue.
These views make it unnecessary to consider what allegations of the complaint can be put in issue without directly denying the same.
It may be that the facts warrant denial of some of plaintiff’s allegations or that the answering defendants have a meritorious defense showing the whole transaction to be fraudulent, for which
The order should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements of this appeal to appellant, and the motion granted, with leave to serve an amended answer within twenty days upon payment of said costs and all costs of the action to date, including ten dollars costs of motion at Special Term.
Clarke, P. J., Dowling, Finch and McAvoy, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granted, with ten dollars costs, with leave to the defendants to serve an amended answer within twenty days from service of order upon payment of said costs and all costs of the action to date.