82 N.J. Eq. 476 | New York Court of Chancery | 1913
The Somers Land Company was the owner of a judgment against one ICearns; Kearns was, at that time, 'the owner of several tracts of real estate; one tract was subsequently conveyed by Kearns to complainant by warranty deed, complainant not knowing of the existence of the judgment; Kearns subsequently conveyed another tract to one Knauer; Knauer subsequently executed a mortgage to the Somers Land Company to secure a pre-existing debt which he owed to that company. The Somers Land Company now seeks to enforce its judgment against the land conveyed by Kearns to complainant; complainant, as the first grantee of the judgment debtor, seeks to prevent the enforcement of the judgment against that land until it shall have been first enforced against the land of the judgment debtor which was, as stated, subsequently conveyed to Knauer, and bjr Knauer mortgaged to that company.
In this state the rule has always been recognized that when lands subject to an encumbrance are sold to different purchasers, in different parcels and at different times, by conveyances which are intended to be free from the lien of the encumbrance, as between the several grantees and the person holding the encumbrance, the lands are in equity chargeable with the encumbrance in the inverse order of their alienation. Shannon v. Marselis, 1 N. J. Eq. (Saxt.) 413; Wikoff v. Davis, 4 N. J. Eq.
In the present ease, the controversy arises from the circumstance that after the conveyance to complainant of a part of the land encumbered by the lien of the judgment owned by the Somers Land Company, another part of the encumbered land was conveyed to Knauer, who owed money to the Somers Land Company, and that company thereafter took a mortgage from Knauer to secure that debt. It is, therefore, urged in behalf of the Somers Land Company that the present enforcement of the equity of complainant to have the value of the Knauer tract applied on the judgment before the judgment is enforced against complainant’s tract will be operative to injure that company because it will lessen the security afforded by their mortgage on the Knauer tract.
It has been frequently stated that the equity to have assets marshaled will not be enforced when its enforcement is operative to injure a third party; but such statements have no reference to circumstances in which the third person injuriously affected has an inferior right or equity. In Reilly v. Mayer, 12 N. J. Eq. (1 Beas.) 55, a mortgage was executed to a mutual building
In Herbert v. Mechanics Building and Loan Association, 17 N. J. Eq. (2 C. E. Gr.) 497, substantially the same situation existed, except that the third parties, whose interests were to be injuriously affected by having the assets marshaled, were subsequent judgment creditors of the mortgagor with levies upon the mortgagor’s interest in the collateral stock. It was held that subsequent judgment creditors could not be regarded as purchasers for value in the contemplation of a court of equity, and that the rights in the stock thus subsequently acquired by the judgment creditors would give way to the equity of the prior second mortgagee of the real estate to have the stock appropriated before the real estate was resorted to. “The rule established by these decisions,” saj^s the reported opinion, “will, upon examination, be found to be that the right of the creditor to marshal the assets of the debtor, is absolute as to the debtor himself,' and that although it is subject to the legal and equitable claims of prior creditors, it cannot be impaired or in any respect injuriously affected by the intervention of those of later date.” The following cases are to the same general effect and conclusively establish the principle that the equity to mar-1: slial assets will not be displaced by rights or liens subsequently; acquired by others unless the subsequently acquired rights are those of innocent purchasers for value without notice of the existing equity or are inherently superior equities. Phillips-
In the present ease, the subsequently acquired rights of the Somers Land Company were not rights constituting a superior equity. Not only was the Somers Land Company chargeable with notice of complainant’s equity at the time they took their mortgage, but the mortgage was made to secure a pre-existing indebtedness of the mortgagor. Under such circumstances they cannot be regarded in equity as occupying the position of innocent purchasers for value. Mingus v. Condit, 28 N. J. Eq. (8 C. E. Gr.) 313; Wheeler and Green v. Kirtland, 24 N. J. Eq. (9 C. E. Gr.) 552; Pancoast v. Duval, 26 N. J. Eq. (11 C. E. Gr.) 445; 2 Pom. Eq. Jur. § 749.
Van Mater v. Ely, 12 N. J. Eq. (1 Beas.) 271, is relied on by the Somers Land Company. That case is an exemplification of the well-recoguized principle that equity will not compel a creditor to resort to a common fund to his own prejudice. But in the present case defendant seeks to destroy complainant’s equity by the acquisition of a lien on land convejred by the judgment debtor to a third party subsequent to the conveyance to complainant, which lien was acquired for a pre-existing debt of the third party; in such case the equity of complainant is clearly paramount. The mere circumstance that the lien was acquired by the same person who owned the prior lien cannot impart to the lien so acquired any additional virtue or privilege. Jones v. Maney, 75 Tenn. (7 Lea) 341, 348; Newton v. Nunnally, 4 Ga. 356, 358.
I will advise a decree enjoining the sale of complainant’s land under defendant’s judgment until the land of Knaner, which was purchased from the judgment debtor, is first sold under the judgment.