3 N.J. Eq. 446 | New York Court of Chancery | 1836
This cause was submitted by Mr. I. H. Williamson, of counsel with the complainant, and Mr. J. S. Green, of counsel with the above named defendant, and the papers left with me since the term, of April last. The bill was filed on the thirtieth of June, eighteen hundred and twenty-six, and among other things sets forth, That John’Caskey, on the eighth of November, eighteen hundred and sixteen, was seized in fee of the premises in question, and executed, with his wife Mary, a conveyance for the same to his son, William Caskey, which was acknowledged in due form, but never recorded;■ and thereupon the said William Caskey took possession of the said premises, and afterwards, on the thirty-first of May, eighteen hundred and nineteen, the said William Caskey, with his wife Elizabeth, executed a mortgage to Joseph Chandler and David D. Chandler, on the same premises, to secure the payment of two thousand dollars, on the first of April, eighteen hundred and twenty-five, with interest, &c. according to the conditions of a bond therein referred to; which mortgage was acknowledged and recorded, and which said bond and mortgage, on the fifteenth of August,
Several answers fey some of the' defendants were filed, and a replication thereto^ a decree pro confesso against other defendants, depositions taken and exhibits made; and the cause was brought to a hearing before the chancellor, assisted by the late chief justice Ewing, one of the masters of this court, in April term, eighteen hundred and thirty-one; and afterwards, on the fifteenth of May, eighteen hundred and thirty-two, a decree was made by the advice of the said master, among other things directing that an ejectment should be prosecuted by the complainant for nine undivided tenth parts of the said mortgaged premises. The question of costs, and further equity and directions, were reserved for the further hearing and final decree of the court. In October following, an order was obtained reviving and continuing the cause against the defendants therein named, and in April term, eighteen hundred and thirty-three, there was another decree pro confesso against other defendants. On the twenty-sixth of November following, the ejectment cause directed by the aforesaid decree
If a mortgage be made of an estate to which the mortgagor has not a good title, and then he who has the real title conveys to the mortgagor or his representatives with a good title, the mortgagee will be entitled in equity to the benefit of it: 1 Pow. on Mort. 190, (6th English edition); Douglass, 710 ; 1 Salk. 276 ; 4 Peters’ R. 85.
The only case I have met with in which a different doctrine is held, is in 5 Wendell, 44 ; but no case is cited by the counsel or court in support of that decision-. In Smith v. Low, 1 Atk. 490, it is said by the chancellor, among other things, Where a person of age makes a lease, and has nothing in the premises, but they afterwards descend to him, this lease shall enure by way of estoppel.
As to the costs of the issue, they do not follow the verdict as of course, but are in the discretion of the court: 1 Grant’s Prac.226. The issue in this case being directed by the court for its satisfaction, and there appearing, to have been a- deed made and
I do, therefore, respectfully advise your excellency to decree, that the plaintiff is entiiled to relief and the aid of this court, to recover the debt and interest secured by his said mortgage, with his taxed costs of the said issue at law, out of the one-tenth part of the said mortgaged premises which descended to the said William Caskey, the mortgagor, upon the death of his father, John Caskey, being one of his heirs at law, together with the complainant’s costs of this suit, to be taxed; — That it be referred to one of the masters of this- court to take and state an account of the debt and interest secured by the complainant’s said mortgage, with the amount of the taxed costs of the said issue at law ;— That the said master make his report with all convenient speed; and also declare that the other nine-tenths of the said mortgaged premises are not incumbered thereby, but are free and clear of and from the said mortgage; — That the decree pro confesso against William Meeker and Sarah his wife, Samuel Caskey and Joseph Caskey; and the decree pro confesso against John Myers and Margaret his wife, Amos Caskey, Benjamin Caskey, William Caskey, Joshua Cole and Charlotte his wife, and John Caskey, be vacated and set aside as irregularly obtained: Seaton’s Decrees, 372; 1 C. C. R. 426; — And that the complainant’s said bill, as against the widow and children of John Caskey, the elder, deceased, who are defendants in this suit, including the children of Jane Buchanan, and also the children of John Caskey, junior, deceased, and the husbands of those that are married, defendants in this suit, do stand dismissed out of this court, without costs. Such dismission is not to extend to the administrator, the widow and her husband, and chil
Decree accordingly.