27 N.J. Eq. 219 | New York Court of Chancery | 1876
On the 30th of June, 1873, Patrick Cahill, of the city of Orange, in this state, being the owner in fee of two lots of land on Eorest street in that place, executed and delivered to Daniel Guerin a deed of conveyance in fee, with the usual full covenants, including warranty general, for one of the lots. The consideration expressed in the deed was $2500, but was merely nominal, the object of the conveyance being to convey the property to Ellen Cahill, the wife of the grantor. By deed of the same date, with like covenants, Guerin, for the •same nominal consideration, conveyed the property to Mrs. Cahill. At the date of those conveyances, the two lots were .subject to a mortgage given by Cahill and his wife to John H. Matthews, on the 1st of June, 1871, to secure the payment 'of Cahill’s bond, for $1200 and interest. On the 3d of November, 1874, Mrs. Cahill died, having never had issue. The lot so conveyed to her descended to the defendants, her iheirs-at-law. On the 1st of June, 1875, the complainants, (the mortgage having been duly assigned to Mrs. Harrison on the 1st of July, 1873,) at 'the request of Patrick Cahill, the mortgagor, released the other lot, then and still owned by him, from the lien and encumbrance of the mortgage. Six days afterwards, the bill in this cause was filed for foreclosure and sale of the lot owned by the defendants. The defendants answered the bill, setting up their equity in the premises against the complainants. On the hearing, the complainants’ counsel objected to the answer, on the ground that it did not positively allege that the release was executed. The answer, however, sets up the release, and claims any equity arising from it.
As between a purchaser for value, holding under a deed such as that given to Daniel Guerin, and the prior mortgagee, the right of the former to require the latter to have recourse,
In this case, however, there is evidence in the testimony of Cahill, that the conveyance to his wife was made subject to the mortgage in suit, and that he supposed that the lot conveyed to her was the only property covered by the mortgage; and further, that the covenants in the deed from Cahill to Guerin were inserted by the lawyer who drew the deed, without directions from anybody, and that the deed was executed without any knowledge on the part of Cahill that they were in the deed. It appears from the evidence that Cahill intended to convey to his wife one-half of his real estate. There was probably no intention on his part to charge the residue of his real estate with the payment of the encumbrances on the land so conveyed to her. He testifies that she understood that the land conveyed to her was subject to the mortgage. This evidence may be received to rebut the equity
Mrs. Harrison’s mortgage will be held to be discharged as against the defendants’ land, to the extent of the due proportion of the mortgage debt which the released land would have been liable to pay but for the release, and the defendants’ land will be liable for the balance.