163 Misc. 833 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1937
This action was brought to rescind the purchase of a guaranteed first mortgage certificate from the defendant, on the ground that the latter falsely represented to plaintiff that the certificate represented an undivided share in a bond
On July 23, 1931, plaintiff’s husband, acting as her agent, applied1 to defendant for a certificate in the face amount of $1,000 “ in a mortgage that would not run for more than three years.” The defendant, on receipt of $1,000, forwarded a certificate, dated July 24, 1931, which recited the receipt by it of $1,000 from plaintiff and assigned to the latter “ an undivided share equal to that amount, with interest thereon at the rate of 5½% per annum, in the bond of Hart Properties, Inc., Dated January 19, 1926, for $85,000., due* June 1, 1934, and in the first mortgage securing the same.” The asterisk in the above quotation referred to a footnote reading as follows: “ While the bond secured by the mortgage mentioned in this certificate is payable by its terms on its due date, the policy of the Bond and Mortgage Guarantee Company, entitles it at its option to a period of eighteen months thereafter in which to collect the principal. Regular payment of interest meanwhile is guaranteed.”
Plaintiff’s husband examined the certificate, and, finding that it corresponded with his request in that the mortgage was due not more than, three years later, placed the certificate in his safe. In May, 1936, plaintiff’s husband learned that on July 22, 1931, two days prior to the date of the certificate purchased by plaintiff, the defendant had entered into an agreement with Hart Properties, Inc., extending the mortgage to July 1, 1936, with the following provision for amortization payments: $500 on January 1, 1932; $1,250 on June 1, 1932; $1,250 on June 1, 1933; $1,000 on June 1, 1984; $1,000 on June 1, 1935; and the balance of $80,000 on June 1, 1936. On May 28, 1936, a short time after this discovery, plaintiff notified the defendant that she rescinded the purchase of the certificate and tendered it back to the defendant, demanding the return of the purchase price. On the defendant’s refusal to accept the tender, the present action was brought.
The defendant offered testimony to establish that it had issued certificates, aggregating $5,000, which were intended to be payable out of the amortization payments provided for in the extension agreement. However, instead of inserting a provision in the certificates to the effect that they were payable out of the amortization payments and making the due date of each certificate correspond to the due date of the amortization payment out of which it was to be paid, the defendant issued certificates in which the maturity of the bond and mortgage was dated to correspond with the due dates of the amortization payments out of which the respective certificates were intended to be payable.
Plaintiff contends that since her certificate contained no statement that it was to be payable out of an amortization payment due on June 1, 1934, but merely misstated the due date of the bond and mortgage as being June 1, 1934, plaintiff would not have been entitled to the entire amortization payment of $1,000 due on that date had the mortgagor made such payment. Expressed somewhat differently, plaintiff argues that all the holders of certificates in the bond and mortgage would have been entitled to share pro rata in the amortization payment due June 1, 1934, had such payment been made, and that the mere misdescription of the due date of the entire bond and mortgage did not have the effect of making plaintiff’s certificate due on June 1, 1934, or of giving plaintiff the sole and exclusive right to receive the amortization payment due on that date.
The facts of this case are different from those present in Matter of People ex rel. Van Schaick v. Goldstone (N. Y. L. J. Additional Special Term, July 13, 1934; affd., 242 App. Div. 755), and Matter of People ex rel. Van Schaick v. Oste (Id., Additional Special Term, July 13, 1934; affd., 242 App. Div. 755). Both these cases were decided by me in the Additional Special Term for Rehabilitation. In the Goldstone case (supra) the certificate of the respondent guaranteed payment “ as and when collected out of the installment of said bond and mortgage becoming due on the date of the maturity of this certificate,” and also stated that the bond and mortgage was payable “ in semi-annual installments of Six Thousand Five Hundred Dollars ($6,500), on the first day of May and November in each year.” In the Oste case (supra) the certificate expressly provided that it was “ payable out of installment of said bond and mortgage which becomes due October 1, 1932,” and guaranteed payment of the principal sum “ as and when collected out of the installment becoming due on the date above noted.” In view of these express provisions I overuled the contentions of the Superintendent of Insurance, in each case, that all the certificate holders had the right to share pro rata in each installment payment and that “ the certificate does not vest in respondent ownership of the installment of the bond and mortgage ” maturing on the date specified in the certificate. In the instant case, however, plain
It does not follow, however, as the defendant maintains, that plaintiff received substantially what she bargained for. The agreement of purchase called for a certificate in a bond and mortgage maturing in not more than three years from July 23, 1931, and the certificate issued to plaintiff contained a representation that it evidenced a participating interest in such a bond and mortgage. The fact is, however, that plaintiff received a certificate maturing in less than three years while the bond and mortgage themselves did not mature until almost five years later. There is obviously a substantial difference between a bond and mortgage maturing in less than three years and a certificate, maturing within that period, in a bond and mortgage becoming due long thereafter. If, at the maturity of plaintiff’s certificate, the mortgagor failed to make the amortization payment due on that date, and the guarantor likewise failed to perform its guaranty, plaintiff, holding a $1,000 certificate, would be in the position of being the holder of the only certificate in default and would be obliged to take action by herself without the aid of other certificate holders.
Just what the plaintiff’s, rights and remedies would be in such a situation is extremely uncertain. It is at least doubtful that a single certificate holder may revoke the exclusive agency conferred upon the guarantee company to foreclose, etc., under the provisions of the usual guarantee policy, and herself partially foreclose the mortgage. (Compare Kline v. 275 Madison Ave. Corp., 149 Misc. 747, at p. 749.) Even if the plaintiff could foreclose, the expense involved would be almost prohibitive in view of the fact that she possessed a certificate for only $1,000. If, on the other hand, the bond and mortgage themselves matured within three years, plaintiff could expect, in the event of a default,
There is a material difference between what plaintiff bargained for and what she received, and we, therefore, conclude that she was entitled to rescind the purchase of the certificate and obtain restitution of what she had paid. It is well settled that in an action based upon rescission for misrepresentations a plaintiff is not bound to show that pecuniary loss resulted from the misrepresentations. It is sufficient that plaintiff received something different from what she contracted for and that she might not have accepted the same had the facts not been misrepresented to her. Thus, in Commercial Credit Corp. v. Third & Lafayette Sts. Garage, Inc. (226 App. Div. 235) the Appellate Division said (at p. 239): “At the risk of being wearisome, attention must again be called to the fact that this is not an action to recover damages for deceit, but is brought upon a rescission of the contract to recover the consideration paid. The plaintiff asks to be put in the same position it was in before the contract was made. Under these circumstances, appellant was not bound to show that it had suffered pecuniary loss by reason of defendant’s fraud. (Harlow v. LaBrum, 151 N. Y. 278; Maybee v. Sullivan, 171 App. Div. 111; Lambert v. Elmendorf, 124 id. 758; John v. Reynolds, 115 id. 647; Stewart v. Lester, 49 Hun, 58; MacLaren v. Cochran, 44 Minn. 255; Engeman v. Taylor, 46 W. Va. 669; Wilson v. Carpenter’s Admr., 91 Va. 183.) ”
In Kaufman v. Jaffee (224 App. Div. 344) the Appellate Division in this Department, in an opinion by Mr. Justice O’Malley, expressed the same principle in the following language: “Upon plaintiff’s theory, particularly with respect to the corporate defendant, he was not required to prove actual damage in the sense of financial loss, but only legal injury. (Harlow v. LaBrum, 151 N. Y. 278; Downey v. Mallison, 232 App. Div. 703; Commercial Credit Corp. v. Third & Lafayette Sts. Garage, Inc., 226 id. 235; Mack v. Latta, 83 id. 242; 1 Page Cont. § 368; 3 Williston Cont. 1500; Restatement of Law of Contracts, vol. 2, chap. 15, § 476.) ”
Judgment affirmed, with twenty-five dollars costs.
All concur. Present ■— Lydon, Levy and Frankenthaler, JJ.