The learned court at Special Term adjudged that the plaintiffs were entitled to be subrogated to the rights of the Mutual Life Insurance Company in and to a bond and mortgage for $8,000, and this judgment is based upon the finding that, “In paying the said bond and discharging the said premises from the lien of the said mortgage, the plaintiff executors were not volunteers; but they acted in pursuance of their duty as executors and trustees to protect the estate in their charge. None of the defendants were injured by the said payment, but, on the contrary, were benefited thereby, inasmuch as the said payment rendered it impossible for the said Mutual Life Insurance Company to foreclose the said mortgage and to cut off and destroy their several liens.” If the evidence sustains this finding, then, clearly, under the principle of equitable subrogation, the judgment is right.
There is practically no dispute as to the facts. The plaintiffs are executors of Joseph Lilianthal, whose will was admitted to probate
This court, in its opinion (35 App. Div. 596) reversing the Met-calf judgment, stated that there was no evidence that Lilianthal had any notice of the fraudulent intent of the grantors, and that, as a purchaser for a valuable consideration, he was entitled to be protected, in' the absence of proof that he participated in the fraud. This adjudication upon the facts, that Lilianthal. was without fault, had
In making the payment, therefore, the executors in no way injured or prejudiced the judgment creditors, nor is there anything to show that they acted in bad faith. The fraud which may have tainted the original conveyance of the land so far as Lilianthal is concerned, did not extend to or affect the subsequent acts of these plaintiffs in paying the mortgage to preserve the property for the benefit of the estate. The conveyance of the property and the payment of the mortgage were two separate transactions. At the time the payment was made the highest tribunal which had passed upon the rights of the parties had held that the conveyance was valid as to Lilianthal, and when the mortgage became due these executors' were obliged to meet the situation as then defined by the controlling judicial decision.
The appeal which had been permitted in the Metcalf action to the Court of Appeals did not affect the then legal status of the
It is not necessary for us to determine whether, if Lilianthal had lived, he could have been subrogated.
It would be a harsh rule to apply to these plaintiffs, who in good faith had made the payment as executors to protect the interest of the estate in the land, if the courts should hold that they were not entitled to be subrogated. They might have more certainly protected themselves had they secured an assignment of the mortgage instead of paying it, but that is no reason for refusing to subrogate them. In making the payment they discharged a duty and an obligation that rested upon them and in discharging it they did nothing which in the slightest way impaired the rights or affected the interests of the judgment creditors, who at most were entitled to the land subject to the mortgage which was its condition when it was conveyed to Lilianthal. ,
Thinking, as we do, that the evidence fully supports the finding upon which the judgment is' based, it follows that the judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., O’Brien, Ingraham, Hatch and Laughlin, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.