51 N.J. Eq. 387 | New York Court of Chancery | 1893
This is a foreclosure suit. The question in dispute is one of priority. Two of the defendants claim that they hold liens on-the mortgaged premises which stand prior in point of time and right to that of the complainants.
The transactions out of which this dispute has arisen may be stated in sufficient detail for present purposes as follows: The-Union Brick and Tile Manufacturing Company, a corporation of the State of New York, executed a mortgage on lands and other property in this state, on the 18th day of December, 1885,. to Albert S. Gallup, trustee, to secure the payment of one hundred and eighty coupon bonds — eighty for $500 each, and one hundred for $100 each. All the bonds bore even date with the-mortgage. Their principal was payable January 1st, 1891, and carried interest from January 1st, 1886, at the rate of six percent., payable semi-annually on the first days of July and January. They were payable to bearer, and were all sold or otherwise disposed of by the mortgagor. Part of the property put in pledge by the mortgage was a leasehold interest in about twenty-five acres of land, for a term of twenty years, commencing May 1st, 1882, with a privilege on the part of the lessee, the Union Brick and Tile Manufacturing Company, to purchase the land’ in fee for $7,000. Both the term and the privilege to buy were mortgaged. The lessee, in March, 1887, exercised its privilege-
Some time prior to September 21st, 1888, Chauncey Stillman and John "W. Ivery made an offer to the receiver appointed in .the case just mentioned, to purchase all the property in his hands for $9,000, on condition that the trustee and the persons holding the bonds secured by his mortgage would agree to relinquish certain of their rights. To effect the sale thus proposed, a contract ■in writing was made on the date last named, which was signed by Mr. Gallup, and purported to have also been signed by “ the owners and holders of all the bonds ” secured by the Gallup mortgage, by which it was, in substance, agreed, that if Stillman and Ivery would purchase the property of the corporation in the hands of the receiver and pay therefor the sum of .$9,000, and ■then organize a corporation with a capital of $200,000, divided into two thousand shares of $100 each, and convey all the property acquired by them from the receiver to such corporation, then and in that case the time of payment of the bonds secured by the Gallup mortgage should be extended on one-half for ten years and on the other half for fifteen years, and that the rate of interest on all the bonds should, after January 1st, 1889, be four per cent, instead of six; and also that the lien of the Gallup mortgage should be postponed and made secondary to a mort
Stillman and Ivery performed their part of this contract.They purchased and paid for the property which, by the terms-of the contract, they were to purchase and pay for; they organized the Keyport Brick and Tile Manufacturing Company, and,, on the 29th day of March, 1889, conveyed to that corporation the property they had acquired from the receiver of the Union Brick and Tile Manufacturing Company. The Keyport Brick and Tile Manufacturing Company, a short time after the conveyance to it by Stillman and Ivery, was, by the order of this-court, substituted as the complainant in the action for specific-performance, and afterwards, and while that action was pending, procured a loan of $16,000 from William Elliott and secured its payment by a mortgage executed on the 1st day of August,. 1889, on all its property. Seven thousand dollars of the money raised on this mortgage was, in compliance with the contract of September 21st, 1888, deposited with the Atlantic Trust Company, and remained on deposit there until the final determination of the litigation respecting the land which this sum was, by that contract, to be used to pay for, and was then, on the 9th day of July, 1891, on the conveyance of the land, pursuant to-the decree of this court, to the Keyport Brick and Tile Manu
It thus appears that the fact is that, for the fee of the twenty-five-acre tract, the person who made the Gallup mortgage never paid a penny, never held its title, nor had an unconditional right to its title. It moreover appears, that the money which was used to pay ibr the land, and the payment of which imposed upon the person having the power to convey, the duty to convey, was the money of Mr. Elliott. His money paid for the land, and it was not until his money was in the hands of the person having power to convey, as a payment for the land, that it. was possible for any'lien to attach to the land superior to the lieu for unpaid purchase-money. All that the Gallup mortgage attempted to convey in respect to the twenty-five acres, in addition to the mortgagor’s term therein, was the privilege of buying the land for $7,000 — it was not the land that was pledged, but the mere privilege of buying it — so that, until the mortgagor had, by paying for the land, acquired a right to a conveyance, his mortgagee could not, by force of his mortgage, have any lien whatever thereon. In a case of this kind, where the thing mortgaged is a bare right to buy for a specified price, and neither the mortgagor, nor the mortgagee, pays the purchase-money, but the same is paid by a subsequent mortgagee, on a conveyance, pursuant to judicial decree, to his mortgagor, who is another and different person from the first mortgagor, I know of no principle of law or rule of equity jurisprudence which will support a decree, adjudging that, as to the land thus acquired and paid for, the mortgage first in date stands first in order of priority. On the contrary, I think that as, in such case, the first mortgage covers a mere privilege to buy, subject to a condition that a specified sum shall be paid as purchase-money, and, as the mortgagor fails to perform that condition, it follows, both as a matter of correct logic and sound law, that when the land is, by force of a judicial decree, conveyed to and paid for by some other person than the mortgagor, the privilege mortgaged becomes extinct. Nothing, it seems to me, can be more certain than that until, in such a case, the privilege to acquire a title is transformed, by the
But this is quite' aside from the complainants’ main ground. They are the owners of the Elliott mortgage and also of a mortgage for a little over $1,100, made by the Keyport Brick, and Tile Manufacturing Company on the conveyance to it of the twenty-five-acre tract, to its grantor, to secure a part of the purchase-money of that tract. The defendants admit that the mortgage last mentioned is the first lien on the twenty-five-acre tract. The real dispute in the case is as to the relative rank of the Elliott and Gallup mortgages as liens on a twelve-acre tract. This tract is covered by both mortgages. The complainants claim that the Elliott mortgage stands first in rank. This claim is based, of course, on the contract of September 21st, 1888. One of the main purposes of that contract was, as is plainly declared on its face, to induce some person, having money to invest, to lend $16,000 on what was made to appear to be an unquestionably good security, to a corporation to be formed thereafter, in order that such corporation might become the successor in property and business of the mortgagor corporation, which was then in course of liquidation as an insolvent corporation; and it is manifest that the hope was that, by this expedient, the land and works covered by the Gallup mortgage might be maintained as a living and active manufacturing property. At the time the contract was made, the situation was this: The property of the mortgagor corporation had been in the custody of a receiver, unsold and idle, for nearly a yeai\ During all that time a suit had been pending to compel the specific performance of a contract to convey land to the corporation, but the receiver was without means to pay for the land in case a conveyance should be decreed. So that success in that suit, in the then condition of affairs, was more likely to increase than diminish the difficulties of the situation. It was manifest, to permit the property to continue to remain idle, and further delay its sale, must
But the two contesting defendants say that they did not sign the contract, nor assent to it, either in person or by an agent, and they consequently insist that they are not bound by it. This defence, so far as it is made by Mr. Bigelow, appears to be true. He acquired his bonds by purchase, as he swears, in the fall of ■1887, nearly a year before the contract was made.- He took •possession of them when he bought them, and they have remained in his possession ever since. He did not sign the contract, and, so far as appears, never saw or heard of it while it was in course of execution. A person by the name of John T. •Collins claimed, when he signed the contract as the owner of other bonds, to be the owner of those which it now appears were the property of Mr. Bigelow and in his possession. He signed, •representing that he owned bonds to the amount of $9,500 ; he, however, produced only $7,500; the other $2,000, he stated, were temporarily in the possession of another person. The •course pursued in executing the contract was this: When a bondholder came forward to sign, he was required to produce his bonds, and on their production, all the coupons, except those maturing on and after July 1st, 1889, were cut off; his bonds were then stamped across their face with these words, in red ink: “ The payment of the principal of this bond is extended to Jan
The defence of Mrs. Colvin rests on an entirely different state of facts. It is true, as she alleges, that she did not, in person, sign the contract of September 21st, 1888, nor authorize any person to sign it for her; but it is also true, that, when that contract was executed, her fourteen bonds were produced, stamped and signed for. Her right to the bonds arose in this way: In March, 1887, it became necessary for the Union Brick and Tile Manufacturing Company to raise $7,000, in order to, effectually exercise its right to buy the twenty-five-acre tract. It had no-money and the time limited for it to exercise this right had nearly expired. The land had already been conveyed to another purchaser. At this juncture, three persons connected with the-corporation consented to pledge bonds they held for a loan of $7,000 to the corporation. They were J. Warren Lawton, who-furnished $2,000; John T. Collins, who furnished $3,000, and Henry W. Colvin, who furnished $2,000. The bonds were put-in the hands of Henry W. Colvin to raise the money on them. He was a son of Mrs. Colvin and an officer of the corporation. Mrs. Colvin advanced $7,000 on the bonds, at the instance of her son, under a written contract, by which the corporation agreed, that the $7,000 should be used to pay for the land, and that immediately on its conveyance, the corporation should convey it to Mrs. Colvin, and she in turn agreed to lease it to the-corporation for a term of years, at an annual rent of $920, payable quarterly, and also to convey it to the corporation at any
These facts make it perfectly plain, as I think, that whether the contract of'September 21st, 1888, was executed, in respect to the bonds of Mrs. Colvin, by her authority or not, she must be held to be bound by it, so far as the complainants are concerned. This result is inevitable, for the reason, that where one of two-innocent persons must lose in consequence of the unauthorized act or fraud of a third, he must bear the loss who caused the credit to be .given which produced the loss. Though the forms in which this principle has been expressed are somewhat variant, they all stand, in their substance, in almost perfect accord. Chief-Justice Holt, in Hern v. Nichols, 1 Salk. 289, said: “ For seeing that somebody must be the loser by this deceit, it is more reason that he who employed and put trust and confidence in the deceiver should be the loser than a stranger.” In Fitzherbert v. Mather, 1 T. R. 12, 16, Justice Buller said: “It is a common question every day at Guild Hall, when one of two innocent persons must suffer by the fraud or negligence of a third,.
In Heyder v. Building Loan Association, the principal facts were: that a mortgagee had permitted his mortgagor to get possession of his mortgage and retain it for a considerable period. While the mortgage remained in his possession, the mortgagor criminally endorsed a receipt on it, showing that it had been paid, and then procured it to be canceled of record. Subsequently, the land which the mortgage had embraced was conveyed to a bona fide purchaser for value. The purchaser took title and paid his money, reposing full faith in the validity of -the cancellation. On a bill filed to establish and enforce the mortgage, notwithstanding its cancellation, the court of errors and appeals held, that, in consequence of the mortgagee’s negligence in allowing the mortgagor to acquire such dominion over the mortgage as enabled him to use it, with apparent authority, as a means of fraud, no relief could be given to him. Mr. Justice Knapp, who delivered the opinion of the court, stated the principle on which its judgment rested, in these words: Where one gives another the power to practice a fraud upon innocent parties, the court will not interfere in his protection at •the expense of those who have been deceived and misled by such
The difference between the instruments which were used as the means of fraud in the two eases just summarized, and those-which were used for a like purpose in the case under consideration, is plain and radical. A mortgage possesses none of the distinctive qualities of negotiable paper. Its possession by any other person than the mortgagee or his assignee furnishes no evidence of title. On the contrary, the paper itself shows on its face that its possessor is not its owner. The title to a mortgage can only be transferred by assignment or by operation of law. But the bonds of Mrs. Colvin possessed all the attributes-of commercial paper. They were payable to bearer and were,.
The evidence of ownership, arising from the possession of the bonds, remained precisely the same after Mrs. Colvin acquired an interest in them, as it did before. There was no change in possession. The bonds were never in her possession; she never •clothed herself with the ordinary evidence of title to this class
In consequence of the legal qualities of the, bonds, it seems to me to be quite undeniable, that Mrs. Colvin, by leaving them in the possession of her son, under the circumstances stated, invested him by law, as to all persons who dealt with him in ignorance of her rights, with an apparently perfectly legal title to the bonds, and that she is in consequence bound, according to a highly-salutary principle of law, to bear the consequences of her son’s fraud. Whether her son signed the contract of September 21st, 1888, for all her bonds, or he for a part, and Mr. Lawton and Mr. Collins for the other parts, is, in my judgment, a fact of no importance whatever. The bonds were in the possession of her son. He produced them as their owner and he cut off the coupons and stamped them. These were the essential and decisive acts of the transaction. They furnished such convincing evidence of ownership as to drive away all thought of
There is some evidence tending to show that Mrs. Colvin, by her acts, subsequent to the execution of the contract of September 21st, 1888, recognized and ratified that contract, but as the complainants’ right to priority, on the ground already fully stated, seems to me to be entirely clear, it has not been necessary to consider and determine the effect of that evidence.