131 N.Y.S. 946 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1911
The making and delivery of the mortgage sought to be foreclosed is admitted, but the answering defendants claim that the mortgage is paid. The determination of this question depends upon the interpretation to be placed upon the transaction when the one-half interest was assigned in blank by Arthur J. Waldron and Fanny G. Lynch, in which assignment plaintiff’s assignor subsequently inserted his own name. Was that transaction the payment of the mortgage, or the purchase of it?
At that time the Briarwood Land Company was the owner of the premises described in the complaint and other lands. The plaintiff’s assignor, Cornelius D. Curnen, was the secretary and treasurer of the said Briarwood Land Company, in full control thereof. The defendant David A. Sullivan was largely interested in said land compay, and induced said Curnen to accept his position with the company and promised to finance it. Sullivan opened an account in the Mechanics’ & Traders’ Bank in Curnen’s name and deposited $25,000 therein. At the same time Curnen signed and delivered to Sullivan checks payable to cash, covering the full amount of said account.
The mortgage in suit is dated January 2, 1907, payable one year from date. The mortgagor was the defendant Clark, and the mortgagees Alexander Forman, Jr., Henrietta Plamblin, Fanny G. Lynch, and Arthur J. Waldron. Each owned a one-quarter interest. Forman assigned his interest to Hamblin by assignment dated May 10, 1907. The premises were then subject to a mortgage made by the Briarwood Land Company to Adeline G. O’Brien for $75,000, dated November 18,1907; also to a mortgage for $141,000 made by the Briarwood Land Company to Thomas F. Martin, dated September 6, 1907.
This was the situation when the mortgage became due on the 2d day of January, 1908. Waldron insisted that the one-half interest held by him and Fanny G. Lynch be paid. The Briarwood Land Company had no funds with which to pay it. Curnen applied to Sullivan, and Sullivan gave back one of the checks drawn to cash, which was destroyed. Curnen then drew a check to his own order for $5,000 upon the account created by the deposit of Sullivan’s funds, as above recited, in the Mechanics’ & Traders’ Bank. This check Curnen deposited in the account of the Briarwood Land Company. Upon that account he then drew checks as follows: One to Arthur J. Waldron for $2,361.55; one to Smith & Gerard for $2,361.55, for interest of Fanny G. Lynch; one to H. Hamblin for $141.69, for interest upon her one-half interest; also check to order of Smith & Gerard for $70.85, for interest due Fanny G. Lynch upon her one-quarter interest; also check to order of Arthur J. Waldron for $70.85, for interest due on his one-quarter interest. These checks were delivered to Arthur J. Waldron on the
Curnen testified that Sullivan told him to takje an assignment of this mortgage in his own name. A satisfaction of the interests of Waldron and Lynch was first prepared, but at Curnen’s request an assignment was prepared in place of it, with the name of ¡Cornelius D. Curnen in it. At the time of the delivery of this assignment, Waldron testified, the name of Curnen was erased at Curnen’s request, and the assignment delivered with the name of the assignee in blank. Curnen and Sullivan both testified that at the time of this transaction they were both aware of the mortgages above recited, which were subsequent to the mortgage in suit, and that they knew the effect of the cancellation of such mortgage and the effect of assigning it; and from jthis the plaintiff apparently desires the court to hold that such assignment was made for the purpose of protecting the estate or interest of some person in the property, but I am unable to see what interest it can be claimed was protected by this assignment. j
“The interest of the person in whom the legal and equitable titles are united, which enables him to keep them distinct, is)an interest for the protection of his legal title against charges existing when he took it, and subsequent, or subject, to the equitable title obtained by ¡him. And the intervening incumbrances, on account of which he may save the lesser from merger in the superior title or estate, are those existing before fie acquired the legal title, and do not include any thereafter created by him.” Sherow v. Livingston, 22 App. Div. 530, at page 535, 48 N. Y. Supp. 269, ait page 273.
The mortgage having been paid at that time, there would then remain the question as to the power of the Briarwood Land Company, or its successor in title, to reissue it, either by direct reissuance of it by estoppel agreements, by which it is estopped from claiming it is not a valid lien in the hands of the present holder. After the transaction on the 2d of January above recited, the affairs of the Briarwood Land Company apparently did not improve, and later there was a reorganization on the 13th of April, 1908. Prior to this reorganization, and at a meeting held on the 8th of April, an agreement between Mrs. O’Brien and Curnen was entered into, and here for the first time we have a transaction in relation to this mortgage after the 3d of January above referred to. In this agreement it is recited:
“It is understood that the party of the second part has a participation interest in a certain mortgage for nine thousand four hundred forty-six and /ioo dollars (¡¡>9,446.40), now a lien on certain property of the Briarwood Land Company of Jamaica, said participation interest amounting to the sum of four thousand seven hundred twenty-three and 2o/100 dollars ($4,723.20), which is a two-fourths interest, and that said participating interest was acquired by the party of the second part with his own funds, and not out of the funds of the Briarwood Land Company of Jamaica.”
It will be seen that Curnen now, for the first time, claims to own the one-half interest in this mortgage, and that he declares that the same was acquired with his own funds.
On the 13th of April the reorganization is completed, and the Briar-wood Land Company on that date accepts from Curnen an extension agreement, extending the time of payment of this one-half interest in the mortgage, and by such extension agreement the Briarwood Land Company covenants and agrees to pay the same. This extension is in pursuance of the agreement of the 8th of April. The old officers of the Briarwood Land Company at this time resigned, and others were elected in their places, and Cornelius D. Curnen disposed of his interest in said Briarwood Land Company to Adeline G. O’Brien. In pursuance of the agreement of April 8th Curnen acquired an interest in the $75,000 mortgage, and on this date the premises were turned over to the Consolidated Briarwood Estates. The Consolidated Briarwood Estates made its mortgage for $150,000 to secure a portion of the purchase money to the Briarwood Land Company, which mortgage has subsequently been assigned to the Mechanics’ & Traders’ Bank, which subsequently changed its name to the Union Bank of Brooklyn. The $75,000 mortgage, to which I have heretofore referred, is now also held by the defendant the Union Bank of Brooklyn.
The defendants argue that, if the mortgage in question was once paid, it cannot be issued again, and cite numerous cases to support that theory; but I think that a careful reading of them shows that they do not go as far as that. They merely hold that the lien cannot be restored to the prejudice of third parties, and that is the position I take in this case. The defendants the Briarwood Land Company and the Consolidated Briarwood Estates could not issue this mortgage anew, so as to bind subsequent lienors who took their liens subsequent to the date of such reissuance in ignorance of the fact that such mortgage had been reissued. All lienors holding liens subsequent to the mortgage in question, taken prior to the date of such reissuance, would be unaffected thereby. It therefore becomes material to determine the date of the reissuance of this mortgage or the execution of estoppel agreements which were tantamount to such reissuance. This date, in my opinion, was the 19th of August, 1908.
The defendant argues that the plaintiff’s assignor could not obtain title, by inserting his'own name in the assignment, claiming that such an act would be a fraud, and no title would be vested in plaintiff’s assignor thereby. I do not think it is necessary to determine that question here. I think by their own acts and dealings in relation to this
The defendants the Union Bank of Brooklyn, Thomas F. Martin, Thomas F. Martin Realty Company, William E. Wyckoff, as trustee, and Adeline G. O’Brien, are entitled to judgment dismissing the complaint as to them. The plaintiff is entitled to a decree of foreclosure and sale as to the others. Such decree should find and decide that the mortgage in suit is subordinate to the liens held by the defendants above named, as to whom the complaint is dismissed.