198 A.D. 83 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1921
Prior to and on the 23d day of March, 1903, Mary A. Willis, an aged resident of Chautauqua county, was the owner of a farm located in that county of the reasonable value of $4,500".
On the 23d day of March¿ 1903, she sold and conveyed said farm to her son-in-law, Chauncey Heath. He paid no money for the farm, the principal consideration being a mortgage which he that day executed, acknowledged and delivered to said Mary A. Willis, the mortgage covering said farm, and reciting that the mortgagor was indebted to Mrs. Willis in the stun of $4,000, which he covenanted to pay, with interest at five per cent, as follows: “ The party of the first part shall pay the party of the second part the interest on said principal sum quarterly, that is to say, the sum of $50.00 June 23, 1903, and $50.00 at the expiration of each and every three
At the time the mortgage was given George H. .Willis, husband of the mortgagee, was living, and Mr. and Mrs. Willis and their son-in-law, the mortgagor, were living together on the farm.
For some unexplained reason in August, 1906, Mr. and Mrs-. Willis removed from the home farm to the home of a neighbor, where the husband died in October of that year. Both Mr. and Mrs. Willis were aged people at the time the mortgage was given, each being past seventy years of age, and Mrs. Willis was blind, and remained so until her death in March, 1920.
Chauncey Heath, the mortgagor, had married the only daughter of Mary A. Willis, but this daughter died in 1893, and the mortgagor remarried in February, 1894, and died in April, 1911, leaving a last will and testament which was admitted to probate in Chautauqua county in July, 1911. By the terms of this will he devised the farm in question, with other property, to his wife, Mary E. Heath. In April, 1913, she died, leaving a last will and testament which was admitted to probate in the Surrogate’s Court of Chautauqua county in June, 1913. By her will she devised her property to one Fred P. Lathrop, and he in turn, on the 29th day of January, 1914, sold and conveyed the farm in question to defendant and appellant, Henry J. Haverkamp.
The deed of this farm to Haverkamp contained a provision
The payments were made from time to time, and were continued until May 6, 1919, when defendant declined to make further payments on the ground that there had already been paid more than enough to pay and satisfy the mortgage in full.
This action was then begun to foreclose the mortgage because of Haverkamp’s failure and refusal to pay sufficient moneys to support and care for Mrs. Willis, she being indebted at that time, for such support and care since the last payment on the mortgage, about $865.
After this action was begun Mrs. Willis died, and it was continued by the plaintiff, as administratrix with the will annexed, she having been substituted in place of the original plaintiff.
It is the contention of defendant, as set forth in his answer, that prior to the commencement of this action he had advanced and paid to the mortgagee all sums secured by the mortgage in full, and had satisfied said mortgage by such payments, and that there were no sums of money whatsoever due, or owing, or unpaid on the mortgage, plaintiff’s contention being that the obligation he assumed under the mortgage was to pay for the support of Mr. and Mrs. Willis during their lives, without reference to the amount named in the mortgage.
When Mr. Heath received a deed from Mrs. Willis of this farm he paid no money, but instead gave back the mortgage -in question. He wanted a farm, and Mrs. Willis wanted a home and care for herself and husband. He received the farm, but Mrs. Willis did not receive the care and support for fife, as he obligated himself to furnish by the express terms of the mortgage, which were assumed by defendant Haverkamp when he purchased the farm.
In construing this mortgage the intention of the parties must be discovered, and that intention must be ascertained by an examination of the entire instrument. (Matter of Pulis, 220 N. Y. 202; Cammann v. Bailey, 210 id. 19; First Nat. Bank v. Jones, 219 id. 312; Gillet v. Bank of America, 160 id. 549.)
It appears that the mortgage in question was drawn by the attorney for the mortgagor. Any uncertainty or ambiguity
By the terms of this mortgage she was entitled to support and maintenance for herself and her husband during their joint lives, and also during the life of the survivor. (Tucker v. Tucker, 122 App. Div. 308; Borst v. Crommie, 19 Hun, 209.)
The mortgagor entered into this transaction as a pure speculation. Before the mortgage was made and executed there was no legal obligation on his part to support and maintain either Mrs. Willis or her husband. If Mr. and Mrs. Willis had both died within a week of the time he received the deed of the property and ■ executed back the mortgage, he would have received for little or nothing this farm worth at the time $4,500, for the mortgage expressly provided that on the death of both Mr. and Mrs. Willis “ all payments of interest and principal shall cease, and the indebtedness secured by this mortgage shall be deemed entirely paid and cancelled.” He took his chances. These elderly people evidently lived longer than he anticipated, and now the owner of the farm, who assumed the obligations under the mortgage, seeks to evade carrying out its terms.
The learned and experienced referee before whom this case was tried decided against his contentions, and in our opinion, under the evidence and a fair construction of the mortgage, no other decision was possible.
It is plain from the language used in the mortgage that the primary purpose of the parties was to have Mr. and Mrs. Willis furnished support, care and maintenance during their Uves regardless of the precise amount named in the mortgage.
No other construction seems reasonable when we consider the surrounding circumstances at the time the mortgage was made and Mrs. Willis conveyed away her home farm.
The mortgage was given not to secure the payment of the $4,000 and that alone. That amount was inserted in the mortgage and furnished a convenient basis for computing interest that was to be paid in quarterly payments, but the mortgage was given to secure to Mrs. Willis and her husband their life support.
Defendant paid nothing for the care and support of Mrs. Willis from May 6, 1919, to March 8, 1920. The learned referee has found that at that time Mrs. Willis was owing $865 for her care and support. The mortgage was given as security for her care, maintenance and support, and it was a valid and subsisting lien on the real estate therein described until such care, maintenance and.support had been paid for.
The judgment appealed from was justified under the evidence, and should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.