19 N.Y.S. 103 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1892
Evidence given before the circuit and before the special term satisfactorily establishes the fact that the plaintiff had no knowledge of the making of the alleged alteration prior to the commencement of this action; and that such alteration and addition were made without his personal request or procurement, and without any fraudulent intent on his part. The evidence and findings are entirely satisfactory that the plaintiff did not and does not rely upon the disputed words to cover the indebtedness for which the mortgage is sought to be enforced. Under such circumstances, if it be assumed that the alteration or additional clause was inserted by Doheny without an original authority from the defendant or a reacknowledgment of the execution of the instrument by her after the words were inserted, ought the mortgage, as first drawn, to be destroyed, or held for naught? Clearly the plaintiff never intended any fraud, nor consciously consented to any destruction of the instrument which gave him a lien on the defendant’s property as it was first drawn and executed. Notwithstanding the additional words or alterations, the instrument as first drawn was still legible, and its meaning and purport ascertainable, and the added words should be treated “the same as if the alteration had been made by a mere stranger without the privity or consent of the party interested.” Henfree v. Bromley, 6 East, 309. The case last cited was referred to approvingly in Rees v. Overbaugh, 6 Cow. 746. In the latter case the instrument from which the seals were torn had been left with Jackson for safe-keeping, and it was said by the court in the course of the opinion that “hehad no power to cancel the contract, or to interfere in any other way with the plaintiff’s right to recover the remaining balance of $500. In tearing the seals from the agreement, therefore, he did not act as the authorized agent of the plaintiff, but as a stranger.” The latter case was quoted approvingly by Andrews, J., in Casoni v. Jerome, 58 N. Y. 321, in which case it was held that the insertion in a bond by a clerk in the surrogate’s court of words unauthorized did not “relieve the obligors from liability under it as originally executed.” In Martin v. Insurance Co., 101 N. Y.
Our attention is called to Waring v. Smyth, 2 Barb. Ch. 119. In that case it appeared that Waring, the mortgagee, “ was guilty of the improper acts of altering a bond and mortgage,” and therefore he could not foreclose the mortgage, nor could his assignee have any relief to which the assignor would not have been entitled. In that case, however, it was asserted that “an alteration by a stranger without the privity or consent of the party interested will not render the deed void where the contents of the same as it originally existed can be ascertained.” Appellant calls our attention to Marcy v. Dunlap, 5 Lans. 365. When the mortgage in that case was delivered, it did not describe the defendant’s property. Subsequently the description was changed, and in an action to reform the mortgage by changing the description from “lot 26” to “lot H,” and for a foreclosure thereof, it was held that the mortgage was vitiated, and was incapable of being enforced by the plaintiffs. The case differs widely from the one before us. In the course of the opinion, however, it seems to be stated that the modern cases hold that, if the alteration is the act of amere stranger, while the deed or mortgage is out of the possession of the grantee or mortgagee, and without his knowledge or consent, it does not work a destruction of it. When the mortgage was acknowledged by the defendant it contained a clause to the effect “that the said party of the first part, in consideration of the sum of $30,000, has sold, and by these presents does grant and convey, to the said party of the second part,” etc.; and the further clause that “this grant is intended as a security for the payment
2. It was insisted upon the trial at the circuit and at the special term and in the argument before us “that the disputed clause was inserted in the mortgage with the knowledge and consent of the defendant;” and the special term found “ that said clause was written in said mortgage with the knowledge and consent of the defendant, Fannie M. Hamilton, and after the same was writ
3. numerous exceptions were taken during the progress of the trial before the jury, and apparently were renewed at the special term, and numerous exceptions were taken to the findings of fact and law as made by the trial court, and to the refusals to find, and they have been largely discussed by the appellant before us. We have looked at them. This is an equity action, and section 1003 applies; and in that section it is provided; “An error in the admission or exclusion of evidence, or in any other ruling or direction of the judge, upon the trial, may, in the discretion of the court which reviews it, be disregarded, if that court is of the.opinion that substantial justice does not require that a new trial should be granted.” The views already expressed, if adopted, seem to warrant the conclusion “that substantial justice does not require that a new trial should be granted.” We forbear an extended examination of the exceptions, and we are of the opinion that the orders and conclusions reached at the special term should be sustained. Order affirmed.
Judgment affirmed, with costs. All concur.