Lead Opinion
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 32
The assumption clause, in the deed from Fuller to Mrs. Leavitt, was in effect a covenant on her part to pay the plaintiffs' mortgage, as part of the purchase-price of the land. Her grantor, Fuller, in his conveyance from the mortgagors, had bound himself by a similar covenant. If the covenant by Mrs. Leavitt to pay the mortgage is still binding upon her, no doubt can be entertained of the right of the plaintiffs in this action to enforce it for their security, and to a judgment over against her for any deficiency which may arise on the sale of the mortgaged premises. (Halsey v. Reed, 9 Paige, 446; Burr v. Beers,
But the consideration for her covenant wholly failed upon her eviction from the premises under paramount title. The grantors of Fuller had no title or estate in the land when they executed the mortgage, or when they conveyed to him, nor did Fuller have any when he conveyed to the defendant. The legal title was in the Howell heirs, and the defendant in 1858 was evicted under judgment founded upon their title. The substantial consideration for the defendant's assumption of the mortgage was the conveyance of a title by Fuller. Fuller covenanted to convey a good title, and the supposed acquisition of such title by his conveyance was the real consideration of her covenant. It is true, she acquired possession with the deed, but of that she has been deprived, and the rents and profits *Page 34 during her possession were in law received to the use of the real owners of the land.
It was said by the chancellor in Tallmadge v. Wallis (25 Wend. 117), that upon an eviction under paramount title, the consideration for a note or bond given by a purchaser for the purchase-money of the land wholly failed, and that covenants of title in the deed of the grantor could not be regarded as a consideration which would support the promise to pay. This doctrine has been held in other cases and is in accordance with the general current of authority. (Knapp v. Lee, 3 Pick. 452;Rice v. Goddard, 14 id. 293; Trask v. Vinson, 20 id. 105; Rawle on Covenants for Title, 607.) In Rice v. Goddard the court say: "The promise is not made for a promise, but for the land; the moving cause is the land; and if that fails to pass, the promise is a mere nudum pactum." The authorities sustain the proposition that if Fuller had paid the mortgage in fulfillment of the covenant in his deed from the Fishers, and had brought an action against Mrs. Leavitt on her covenant to pay the mortgage, or if Mrs. Leavitt had been the mortgagor and the plaintiffs had brought an action on her bond given with the mortgage, neither Fuller in the one case, nor the plaintiffs in the other, could have recovered. The facts found sustain the defense of a total failure of consideration for the defendant's covenant.
On what principle then can it be held that the plaintiffs can recover against Mrs. Leavitt in this action, on a cause of action which could not have been enforced against her by Fuller, her immediate promisee, if he had paid the mortgage debt. The action cannot be sustained on the principle of Halsey v. Reed,
because there is no fund in the hands of Mrs. Leavitt which, as between her and Fuller, she is equitably bound to apply to relieve him from his covenant to pay the mortgage. The land has been taken from her by a paramount title, and the land was the only source from which the supposed fund was to arise. The acquisition of the title under the conveyance from Fuller was the consideration for her covenant, and no title was acquired. *Page 35
There can be no subrogation in equity for there is no liability of Mrs. Leavitt to Fuller, to which the right of subrogation can attach. It is said that the action can be sustained upon the doctrine of Lawrence v. Fox (
There is no justice in holding, that an action on such a promise is not subject to the equities between the original parties springing out of the transaction or contract between them. It may be true that the promise cannot be released or discharged by the promisee, after the rights of the party for whose benefit it is said to have been made, have attached. But it would be contrary to justice or good sense to hold that one who comes in by what Judge ALLEN, in Vrooman v. Turner, calls "the privity of substitution," should acquire a better right against the promisor than the promisee himself had. This case is an illustration. The plaintiffs, when they took their mortgage, did not rely upon the covenant they now seek to enforce. The covenant was not made until several years afterward. There was no consideration for it passing between the plaintiffs and Mrs. Leavitt. They now seek to avail themselves of it, and insist that although the consideration has failed, this defense is not available to the defendant, and that Mrs. Leavitt, although she has paid $10,000 in cash for property to which her grantor had no title, must pay $15,000 more, *Page 36 if need be, and be remitted for her remedy to the covenants in her deed, which may, from the insolvency of her grantor, or other reasons, be wholly worthless. The plaintiffs have nothing to sell on their mortgage, and if they can hold Mrs. Leavitt for the deficiency, they will be able to shift the burden of a practically unsecured claim, upon a party with whom they have had no dealing whatever.
The case of Thorp v. The Keokuk Coal Co. (
The principle that a mortgagee who seeks to avail himself of an assumption clause in a subsequent deed of the mortgaged premises, takes under and through the grantor, and is subject to defenses arising out of the contract or transaction between the original parties to the deed is supported by Flagg v. Munger (
I am of opinion that the defense of Mrs. Leavitt was made out. She was not the assignee of the $1,800 mortgage. That mortgage passed, if to any one, to the plaintiffs, upon the execution of the mortgage.
For the reasons herein stated, the order of the General Term should be reversed, and the judgment of the Special Term affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
The judge at Special Term held that, at the time of the conveyance by Fuller to Mrs. Leavitt, there was a paramount outstanding title in the heirs of Howell in the mortgaged premises, and that no title or estate passed to Mrs. Leavitt by the conveyance, and that she was evicted and yielded possession to such paramount title; that there was a failure of the consideration for the covenant of Mrs. Leavitt assuming to pay the mortgage in suit, and that she was not liable thereon to the plaintiffs, and that the plaintiffs were not entitled to any judgment for a deficiency against her; and he ordered judgment of foreclosure and sale of the mortgaged premises, and a judgment for deficiency against Mr. and Mrs. Fisher and Fuller. The plaintiffs appealed to the General Term from so much of the judgment as was favorable to Mrs. Leavitt, and there the judgment, so far as it was appealed from, was reversed, and a new trial was ordered upon the issues made by her answer, and then she appealed to this court.
It is undoubtedly true that the foreclosure of the mortgage of $1,800 was, in respect to the title to the real estate covered by the mortgage, a nullity. The title was in the heirs of Howell, and they were not made parties to the action. But Roberts, the purchaser under that foreclosure, obtained possession of the land, and held possession for more than four months, when he conveyed and delivered possession to Mrs. Coe. She held possession under the conveyance to her nearly nine years, when she conveyed and delivered possession to Mrs. Fisher. After *Page 38 Mrs. Fisher had been in possession nearly three years, she and her husband executed the mortgage in suit, and then, after she had been in possession of the premises four years, she and her husband conveyed and delivered possession of the premises to Fuller. He remained in possession more than four years, when he conveyed and delivered possession to Mrs. Leavitt; and she remained in possession about four years, until she was evicted.
I cannot perceive how it can be well claimed that there was a failure of the consideration of the agreement of Mrs. Leavitt to pay the mortgage in suit. She took a conveyance of the premises, and thereby obtained and held possession of the premises for a number of years. That of itself furnished sufficient consideration to uphold her agreement. In Thorp v. The KeokukCoal Co. (
Then why may not the plaintiffs enforce the agreement? It was an agreement founded upon sufficient consideration to pay their mortgage, and upon the principles laid down in Lawrence *Page 39
v. Fox (
But it is said that if Fuller, the grantor of Mrs. Leavitt, had paid plaintiffs' mortgage, or had taken and held it, and then sued her upon her promise to pay it, she could have defended against him, and hence that she must have the same defense against the plaintiffs. It is undoubtedly true that if Fuller in such case had sued her, she could have defended, not on the ground of a failure of consideration, because there was no such failure, as we have above shown, but upon the ground that she had a counter-claim, alleging it, for a breach of the covenants contained in his deed, for at least the full amount of the mortgage. Here she has not set up such a counter-claim, or any counter-claim. She simply alleged in her answer that Fuller had no title when he conveyed to her and that Mr. and Mrs. Fisher conveyed to Fuller by deed with full covenants, and that she has been evicted by paramount title. These facts do not, as I have before made apparent, show a failure of consideration, or constitute any defense to the action. If she had alleged her counter-claim for the breach of the covenants, the plaintiffs might have been able to show that such covenants had been in some way discharged or satisfied, or that there was some other answer to a claim for a breach thereof. She failed *Page 41 not only to allege her counter-claim for the breach of the covenants which she held, but the sole ground upon which judgment was given for her at the Special Term was a failure of the consideration for her promise to pay the mortgage.
But I am of opinion that Mrs. Leavitt did not have the same defense against the plaintiffs which she would have had if the action had been by Fuller. They do not take their cause of action by assignment from Fuller, so that it would be affected with any equities existing between her and Fuller. Their only relation to Fuller was that of creditors, and that relation brings them into privity with Mrs. Leavitt, so that they can adopt her promise made for their benefit. As said in some of the decided cases, they are in the same position as they would have been if Fuller had assumed to act as their agent in obtaining this promise, and they had then adopted his acts. The person making the promise, in such a case, thereby becomes the principal debtor, and his grantor remains a mere surety for him. And it was never heard that the principal debtor, when sued by his creditor upon his promise, can bring into the litigation, for the purpose of defeating or diminishing the claim of his creditor, equities or counter-claims which he holds against his surety for the same promise. But the contract of assumption must be a valid one, binding as between the promisor and promisee, and the promisor may undoubtedly make any defense based upon the invalidity of the contract, when sued by the third party, which he could interpose to an action based on the contract brought by the promisee. He may show that the contract was obtained by fraud or mistake, or that for any other reason it never bound him. But he can go no further. Where a valid contract to pay the third party is made, the debt becomes his, and he must pay it as the primary debtor. His promise to pay is not collateral to the obligation of the promisee, but is an original promise, and need not even be in writing; and according to many authorities in this State, the promisee could not release him from his promise, after the promise has once become binding. So thoroughly does the grantee, who has assumed a mortgage, become the principal *Page 42
debtor, that if he should take an assignment of the mortgage, it would at once become merged in his legal estate; and if the mortgagee should grant an extension of time of payment to the grantee, it would release the mortgagor as surety. (Thomas v.Dickinson,
It is further contended, that in this action to foreclose this mortgage there can be no judgment for any deficiency against Mrs. Leavitt, because here there can be no sale under the foreclosure which will convey any title against the heirs of Howell. This contention is not well founded. If it were, it would follow that there could be no judgment for a deficiency in the case of any foreclosure where there was an outstanding paramount title which could not be affected by the foreclosure; and in all cases, a party against whom a deficiency judgment was claimed could defeat such a judgment by showing, if he could, such a paramount title. There is no authority for such a contention. Here all the persons who could properly be, were made parties defendant. The heirs of Howell, holding a paramount title older than and superior to the mortgage, could not *Page 43 properly be made parties, and their title is wholly unaffected by the mortgage and could not be cut off by its foreclosure. The action in such cases must proceed to judgment, and there must be a sale, and the purchaser will get such a title as a quit-claim deed signed by the parties would give him. The action cannot be defeated by proof that no title would in fact be conveyed; and if but a nominal amount should be realized, there must be judgment for the deficiency against parties liable therefor.
I am, therefore, of opinion that the order of the General Term was right, and that it should be affirmed, and judgment absolute ordered against the appellant, with costs.
All concur with ANDREWS, J., except FOLGER, Ch. J., and EARL, J., dissenting, and DANFORTH, J., not voting.