64 N.Y. 220 | NY | 1876
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *222 This is a controversy between Deal and Warnick, appellant and respondent, as to the surplus money arising from a foreclosure of plaintiff's mortgages.
On the 16th day of May, 1872, Henry Deal and Mary C. Greene, being the owners, subject to the plaintiff's mortgage, of the lands sold at the foreclosure sale, conveyed the same to Amos S. Brown, and received from him two purchase-money mortgages, one to each, for the same amount. It was understood by the mortgagees that the mortgages were to be equal liens, that neither was to have priority over the other, and that both were to be recorded at the same time. On the eighteenth day of May the mortgages were taken to the clerk's office, by the husband of Mrs. Greene, and delivered to the county clerk at the same time; but without the knowledge or consent of Deal, he recorded the Greene mortgage at three o'clock P.M., and the Deal mortgage fifteen minutes later, and so certified on the back of the mortgages. In September, 1873, Mrs. Greene assigned her mortgage to Elijah P. Greene, and that assignment was recorded September fifteenth, and he assigned it to Warnick the respondent, in May, 1874; and the last assignment was not recorded. The referee found and reported that Elijah P. Greene and Warnick were bona fide purchasers of the mortgage without notice of the circumstances which could prevent either mortgage from taking preference over the other in the hands of the original mortgagee, and that the Greene mortgage owned by Warnick, by virtue of its priority on the record, had priority over the Deal mortgage, and that the entire surplus should be applied thereon.
It is not questioned that if Deal and Mrs. Greene still held the mortgages, neither mortgage could have any preference over the other, and they would be entitled to share equally in the surplus money. Independently of the recording act, Mrs. Greene's assignee would simply take her place, and the mortgage would continue subject to all the equities, both latent and patent, which attached to it before the assignment. This must now be regarded as the settled law in this State, whatever doubts may formerly have been entertained. *224
It has been claimed by some judges and decided in some cases, that the only application that can be made of the rule that an assignee of a chose in action takes it subject to all the equities existing against it in the hands of the assignor, is that the original debtor can make the same defence against the assignee that he could have made against the assignor. This was the view of Judge HARRIS, in Corning v. Murray (3 Barb., 652), and it was upon that principle that he disposed of that case. But in Bush v. Lathrop (
We think, therefore, unless the Green mortgage has obtained some advantage in the hands of Warnick by the record, it was not entitled to any priority over the Deal mortgage, and whether it obtained such advantage will now be considered. It is provided (1 R.S., 756, § 1) that "every conveyance of real estate, within this State hereafter made, shall be recorded in the office of the clerk of the county where such real estate shall be situated; and every such conveyance not so recorded shall be void as against any subsequent purchaser in good faith, and for a valuable consideration of the same real estate or any portion thereof whose conveyance shall be first recorded." By subsequent provisions (§§ 36, 37, 38, 41) it is clear that an assignment of a mortgage is a conveyance which may be recorded under the law. An unrecorded conveyance is declared void only as against asubsequent conveyance first recorded. The Greene mortgage, although first recorded, was not a subsequent conveyance, and therefore these two mortgages, executed at the same time, are not within the statute. If Warnick may, by virtue of his assignment, be regarded as a subsequent purchaser of some interest in the real estate, then he can have no advantage from the statute, because Deal's mortgage was recorded before the assignment, and although Warnick held a subsequent conveyance it was not first recorded. When Deal's mortgage was placed upon record, containing a clause, as did the Greene mortgage, that it was given for the purchase-money, it showed that it was given at the same time with the Greene mortgage, and that neither mortgage could have any preference over the other.
But the only effect of recording an assignment of a mortgage *227
is to protect the assignee against a subsequent sale of the same mortgage. If the assignment be not recorded, the assignor can assign to another person, a purchaser in good faith, and for value, who may record his assignment first, and will then hold the mortgage against the first assignee. An assignment is a conveyance of the mortgage which, within the recording act, is a chattel real, and such conveyance, not recorded, is void against any subsequent purchaser "of the same real estate," to wit, the same mortgage. In Campbell v. Vedder (3 Keyes, 174), Judge PECKHAM said: "The only alteration made by the recording act of 1830, is that an assignment must now be recorded as against a subsequent bona fide purchaser of the mortgage assigned. A `subsequent purchaser in good faith' in the recording act as to this case, means a purchaser of the mortgage assigned, not a purchaser of the premises." In Gillig v. Maass
(
The order of the General Term must be reversed, and that of Special Term modified, so as to divide the surplus as above indicated, the costs of the appellant upon the appeals to the General Term and to this court to be first paid out of the fund, and the respondent to recover no costs.
All concur.
Order reversed and ordered accordingly.