161 N.E. 321 | NY | 1928
The complaint is for the foreclosure of a purchase-money mortgage. The answer is a counterclaim for breach of a covenant of seizin. Whether seizin was lacking is the question to be answered.
Plaintiffs sold the land to the defendant Francis Tallman in April, 1925. A predecessor in title was Miller Lockwell, Limited, a Canadian corporation. By a decree of the courts of the Province of Quebec, made in 1911, the corporation was adjudged insolvent, and its property, real and personal, was ordered to be sold by *36 two liquidators duly appointed according to the laws of the Province. The liquidators conveyed the land to the plaintiffs, who thereafter sold to Tallman with covenant of seizin. The land is located in the city of New York. The defendants insist that title does not pass under a deed by foreign liquidators.
A second and confirmatory deed, made in December, 1926, is also the subject of attack. After the sale to Tallman, the plaintiffs procured the execution of a quit-claim deed by the Canadian corporation. This deed, made by the corporation to the defendant Francis Tallman, contains a recital that it is given "in confirmation of a deed" made by the liquidators, "it being the opinion of the liquidators that this deed is necessary for the beneficial winding up of the party of the first part and they having requested the execution of the same." The statutes of Canada are to the effect that the corporate life survives the appointment of a liquidator until the winding up is finished, but that the powers of the directors cease "except in so far as the court or liquidator sanctions the continuance of the same." The defendants insist that the later deed, being made under compulsion, adds nothing to the first one, and leaves the title where it was.
The answer demands judgment for the cancellation of the purchase-money mortgage, the return of the cash payment, and reimbursement for the value of subsequent improvements.
We think the counterclaim must fail.
There is no need to determine what effect would be given to the liquidators' deed considered by itself. If they were chancery receivers (Sterrett v. Second Nat. Bank,
If the deed by the liquidators be assumed to be inoperative, there was none the less a conveyance of title upon delivery by the corporation of a confirmatory deed of grant. A judgment of a foreign court will not avail of its own force to transfer the title to land located in this State. It will not avail though a conveyance be executed by the sheriff or a master or other agent of the court in fulfillment of its mandate (Fall v. Eastin,
A different question would be here if we were required to determine whether the title would prevail against the remedies of creditors (cf. Huntington v. Chesapeake, etc., Ry. Co.,
98 Fed. Rep. 459, 464; Osborn v. Adams, 18 Pick. 245). A title acquired in foreign insolvency proceedings is subordinated to local creditors with executions or attachments against the goods and chattels of a debtor (Security Trust Co. v. Dodd, Mead Co., supra; Barth v. Backus,
The defendants make the point that the deed of 1926, which they admit that they accepted, was ineffective, however voluntary, to destroy a cause of action for breach of a covenant of seizin in the deed of 1925, since the breach was complete when the covenant was made. If it did not destroy the cause of action, it made the damage nominal. The confirmatory deed was given before the counterclaim was served and before demand was made for the repayment of the purchase price. Consideration has not failed now that title has been cured (Murphy v. U.S. Title Guaranty Co.,
App. Term.,
The order of the Appellate Division and that of the Special Term should be reversed, with costs in the Appellate Division and in this court, and judgment ordered in favor of the plaintiffs for the relief demanded in the complaint; the first question certified is answered "no;" the second question is not answered; and the third, fourth, and fifth questions are answered "yes."
POUND, CRANE, LEHMAN, KELLOGG and O'BRIEN, JJ., concur; ANDREWS, J., not sitting.
Ordered accordingly. *40