33 Barb. 378 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1861
Brown, J.
It is material to a right understanding of the questions involved in this action to notice the dates of the liens of the two banks upon the mortgaged premises, and the time of the agreement made by Timothy Bannon, the mortgagor, with the Long Island Bank, in regard to the drafts or orders designated in the pleadings and proofs as the street securities. The mortgage to the latter bears date, and was made, on the 18th of September, 1855,
The proofs furnish no evidence to show that the plaintiff has done any act to impair the rights or prejudice the claim of the City Bank to the mortgaged premises. Ho part of the securities held by the former has been relinquished, given up, or appropriated to , any purpose foreign to the agreement, without at the same time liquidating an equivalent portion . of the debt which the mortgage and the orders were designed to secure. It appeared by the testimony of George L. Samp- • son, the cashier of the Long Island Bank, that some of the original notes discounted for Bannon were made by other persons and indorsed by him. These amounted to the sum of $2937, and were not paid by the makers. To enable Bannon to pay them, the bank discounted for him one of the street securities held by the bank, to the extent of $2800, which sum, with other funds to his credit in the bank, he paid, and took up the notes referred to, amounting to $2937. This occurred in 'August or September, 1856. The notes thus paid and given up to Bannon were indeed the notes of
By force of the agreement between the plaintiff and Timothy Bannon, the former has a lien upon the real estate described in the mortgage, prior to the lien of the defendant,' the City Bank of Brooklyn, and the plaintiff has also a lien as security for the payment of the same debt from the drafts and orders referred to in the proofs, and upon which the City Bank has no lien. The latter insisted, upon the trial, and now claims, that before any sale of the real estate mortgaged be effected, the plaintiff should be required to apply the balance of the orders or drafts to the liquidation of its debt. The general principle doubtless is in favor of this claim. That when a creditor has a lien upon two funds for the same ■debt, and another creditor has a subsequent lien upon one of the funds only, equity will require the former to resort in the first instance to the fund upon which the subsequent creditor
It also appeared from the evidence, that on the 18th day of September, 1855, the defendant Timothy Bannon executed and delivered to the plaintiff, as further security for the payment of his notes and liabilities, a chattel mortgage upon certain horses, carts, and double and single wagons, which, was duly filed in the proper office and was not renewed at the" end of the year. It also appeared that on the 12th July, 1858, the defendant Bannon also made an assignment to the plaintiff of the rents of his real estate, for the purpose of securing the payment of the same debts and liabilities, which was afterwards surrendered to Bannon by the plaintiff after it had received notice, on the 19th January, 1859, of a motion by the City Bank of Brooklyn, to appoint a receiver of the mortgaged premises, and to enable Bannon to assign to such receiver. Nothing however was ever received or realized by the plaintiff from the chattel mortgage or from the rents of the real estate. I am not able to see how the plaintiffs’ right to collect its debt from a foreclosure and sale of the mortgaged premises is in any way affected by these transactions. ,, Concurring as I do with the judge at the special term in the
Lott, Emott and Brown, Justices.]
results at which he arrives upon the principal questions involved in the controversy, his calculation and estimates of the sum due to the plaintiff and for which the judgment of foreclosure was entered is entirely correct. In awarding to the judgment creditors having liens, Edwin Beers and John S. Mackay, and the City Bank of Brooklyn, the right to be subrogated to the plaintiff, in the order of the priorities of their respective liens, the court at special term did all that the defendants had a right to claim.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs to be paid by the appellant.