Plaintiff and defendant entered into a contract by which plaintiff agreed to buy from defendant and defendant agreed to sell to plaintiff certain property in Brooklyn at a price therein stated, subject to a first mortgage of $3,750 and to a second mortgage of $2,250, the latter payable in quarterly installments of $75 or more until the principal sum is paid. It thus appears that the final payment on the second mortgage would not have to be paid until the lapse of over seven years. At the time of closing of title a deed was delivered by the defendant to рlaintiff which, after the habendum clause, recites: “ subject to mortgages aggregating the sum of $6,000 and interest.” It was afterwards disclosed to plaintiff that the mortgage which had been recorded was not payable, as set forth in the contract, but that the balance was due a little over three years from the date of the contract. Because of the difference in the dates of the expirations of the two mortgages, plaintiff sues for a breach of thé contract. The question involved is whether or not the contract was merged in the deed. Before attempting to formulate a rule that may be applicable, it would be well to consider the authorities which have a bearing on this subject.
In Houghtaling v. Lewis,
In Witbeck v. Waine,
The court refers to Bogart v. Burkhalter,
In the Witbeck case the court also states: “It is true, a bond and mortgage was to be given by the plaintiff for the unpaid purchase money when he should receive his deed. If these securities had been executed at the time the deed was delivered, and they had not contained a provision, respecting deficiency, like that in the contract, a different question would have arisen from the one now presented. No bond or mortgage being, in fact, given, the articles remained unperformed so far as the payment of the residue of the consideration was concerned. I am of opinion that they continued in force аs to that residue. The provision for
The court does not refer to the effect of the fact that a few days after the deed was delivered the balance of the purchase money was paid. It seems to me, upon the basis of the court’s opinion, that such payment would have done what the court intimates the giving of the bond and mortgage would have done, if they had been given, to wit, to have ended the transaction between the parties.
In the Witbeck case reference is made to Houghtaling v. Lewis, supra, and the court refers to a part of the decision of Thompson, J., as significantly applicable to the Witbeck case: “ ‘Parties may no doubt enter into covenants collateral to the deed, or cases may be supposed where the deed would be deemed only a part execution of the contract, if the provisions of the two instruments clearly manifested such to have been the intention of the parties.’ ”
In Morris v. Whitcher,
This general rule is stated: “ In all cases then, where there are stipulations in a preliminary contract for the sale of land, of which the conveyance itself is not a performance, the true question must be whether the parties have intentionally surrendered those stipulations. The evidence of that intention may exist in or out of the deed. If plainly expressed in the very terms of the deed, the
Of course all that the court meant by this was that where there are collateral undertakings which are not satisfied by a deed those undertakings survive the acceptance of the deed. But is not the right of possession a part and an incident of the conveyance?
In Murdock v. Gilchrist,
It will be observеd in the cases cited thus far there were facts which indicated that it was not the intention of the parties that the deed should be a complete performance of the terms of the contract.
In the case under consideration the court (at p. 246) say: “ The general rule is well settled, and it is a reasonable and salutary one, that when a preliminary contract for the sale of land has been executed by a conveyance, any inconsistencies between the contract and the deed are to be explained and governed solely by the latter, which is presumed to contain the final agrеement of the parties.”
In the deed, after the description of the land by metes and bounds, the number of acres is given as 98.20 more or less, and the court say: “ The claim in this action that there were in fact but eighty-nine acres is not a contradiction of the deed, but is consistent with it.” Then the court really decides the case, I think, on this basis: “ * * * and although the execution and acceptance of a deed may be evidence prima facie of the completion of the whole contract, the presumption is, in this case, rebutted by proof of the express agreement of the parties.” Here, again, is a case where it appeared that it was not the intention of the parties to conclude their respective obligations by the deed.
In Remington v. Palmer,
In Wilson v. Randall,
In Whittemore v. Farrington,
In Smith v. Holbrook,
In Disbrow v. Harris,
In Schoonmaker v. Hoyt,
In that case by the contract the vendor agreed that the premises shall be free from all incumbrances save the mortgage, and that he would deliver a warranty deed. The deed that was delivered contained no covenant except grantor’s acts and was accepted by the vendee without objection. It appears that before the delivery of the deed a tax was imposed upon the premises and the vendee had to pay it, and it was held he could not recover. The rule stated, that collateral covenants, not connected with title, possession or quantity of land, is not in accord with Morris, v. Whitcher, supra, where a covenant that the vendor should remain in possession after the conveyance was held to survive delivery of the deed.
In Gerhardt v. Sparling,
In Brunswick Construction Co. v. Burden, 116 App. .Div. 468, the general rule is stated as follows: “ The rule is that the contract for the conveyance of real estate is only merged in the deed, which relates back to the date of the contract (Simmons v. Cloonan,
In Rosenberg v. Wilson,
In Johnson v. State of New York,
From these cases‘the following rule may be deduced: A contract for the sale of real estate is merged in the deed when the latter is intended to be accepted in full performance of the former. This intention may be derived from the instruments alone or from them and the surrounding circumstances. Collateral undertakings, not a part of the main purpose of the transaction, that is, the conveyance of real estate, by their very nature show an intent that they should not be merged into the deed and, therefore, are not extinguished by the acceptance of the deed.
In the' case at bar the deed was accepted without reservation or limitation. There was no covenant or stipulation of the contract which remained unfulfilled. As matter of fact, there was • no covenant that the second mortgage was to be for the term specified in the contract but the property was to be taken subject to mortgages for the stuns and terms stated. When plaintiff accepted the deed without any description of the mortgage, she must be deemed tо have taken it in full acceptance of the terms of the contract. There is nothing indicating a contrary intent. If the deed did not correctly or fully embody the terms of the contract plaintiff should not have received it. Long v. N. Y. C. R. R., 50
Judgment unanimously reversed on the law, with thirty dollars costs to the appellant, and judgment directed for defendant dismissing the complaint on the merits, with appropriate costs in the court below.
Cropsey and Faber, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed.
