Fuller v. . Scribner

76 N.Y. 190 | NY | 1879

The appellant was a bidder at a sale on a foreclosure of a mortgage. He declines to fulfill the terms of sale, because judgment creditors of the owner of the equity of redemption were not made parties to the action. But it appears that the creditors did not record the judgment, until after the plaintiff in the foreclosure suit had filed a notice of lis pendens, in due accord with section 132 of the Old Code, and had made due personal service of the summons upon two of the defendants in the suit. The judgment was docketed, however, before the summons had been served upon the defendants, the owners.

The appellant rests his refusal to fulfill upon the ground that the judgment was docketed before service of summons was made upon the owner — defendants. But section 132 gives the benefit of a notice of lis pendens, when there has been due service of the summons, according to its terms, upon any defendant in the suit.

The appellant rests his refusal to fulfill upon another ground: that a judgment got, as was the one in question, is not an incumbrance, within the purview of section 132, and that such a judgment creditor is not an incumbrancer obnoxious to its provisions.

It needs no argument, or citation of authorities, to show that a judgment, which is a lien upon lands, and might be enforced to the taking of the title to them from the judgment debtor, or any subsequent purchaser from him, is a charge and burden upon those lands, and hence, an incumbrance upon them. Every right to or interest in land, to the diminution of its value, but consistent with the passing of the fee by a conveyance, is an incumbrance upon it. (Prescott v. Trueman, 4 Mass., 627-630.) Plainly the judgment was after the notice of lis pendens, and the judgment, as an incumbrance, was subsequent thereto.

The appellant's claim rests upon language of GROVER, J., inRodgers v. Bonner, 45 N.Y., 379-387. The meaning of that language has not been caught by the appellant, because of inattention to the fact that the learned judge was there *193 speaking of a kind of, that is, bona fide incumbrances, and was deciding only whether the one judgment then before his mind was of that kind. He states what was insisted in that case, i.e., that inasmuch as the judgment there was docketed before the filing of lis pendens, it was bona fide, within the one hundred and thirty-second section. And his answer is, that though that is true, yet it is subject to all prior liens, either legal or equitable, irrespective of knowledge of the existence of them. And, therefore, is his conclusion, though unexpressed; it did not need that there should have been the filing of lis pendens, to give constructive notice of the prior lien created in that case by the levy of an attachment. When he also says, in the sentence on which the appellant's error is built, "but a judgment lien is not an incumbrance, within the meaning of the section," he must be read as speaking to the matter then before the court, which was the effect of an attachment actually levied upon real estate, in behalf of one creditor, before the docketing of a judgment by another creditor against the owner thereof, which docketing was prior in date to the filing of notice of lis pendens by the attachment creditor. The contention of the judgment-creditor was that he was not an incumbrancer subsequent to the filing of that notice. You are not, concedes the learned judge, you are not an incumbrancer, within the meaning of that section which speaks only of subsequent incumbrancers; yet you are a general and not a specific lienor, and so you are inferior in right to all prior liens, whether legal or equitable, irrespective of knowledge of them.

The plaintiffs in this suit filed the complaint and notice oflis pendens in it, on the 17th September, 1877, in the proper office, and on the same day made personal service of the summons on two of the defendants in the suit. It was on the twenty-fourth September of that year that the judgment was docketed against the owner of the equity of redemption. It thus appears that the plaintiffs were regular, and entitled to the advantages given by the one hundred and thirty-second section. *194

The title offered to the appellant is not bad, in the matters claimed by him. He ought to carry out the purchase.

The order of the General Term should be affirmed.

All concur.

Order affirmed.

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