1 Barb. 271 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1847
It is unquestionably á rule in equity that where one creditor has a lien on two funds, and another creditor has a lien upon only one of those funds, the latter has a right to demand that the former shall have recourse first to the fund on which he alone has a claim, before resorting to the other, to which alone the latter can betake himself for satisfaction of his claim.
I will not stop to consider the question raised at the bar, whether the matter now before me is in such a shape as to allow that principle properly to be carried out in this case; because if I shall fin'd it to be applicable, and there is this difficulty in the case, I can at all events stay all proceedings on the distribution of the surplus, until the question can properly be brought before the court.
The first thing to be ascertained is, whether the principle is applicable to the case before me. The decree of the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company being prior in point of time, to Cotheal’s mortgag'e, is entitled, in equity, as well as at law, to be first paid; unless some superior equity has been created in favor of the mortgage.
The mere fact that the mortgage is a specific lien only on the premises out of which the surplus in question has flowed, while the decreé is a general lien upon other property of the debtor, as well as on these premises, is not of itself enough to establish such superior equity. Therefore, other grounds on which to build such superior equity were sought after on the argument, and I how proceed to consider them.
I will first consider that which was most strenuously urged on the argument, namely, that the first claim of the company was merged in the subsequent release, and that therefore the premises affected by those arrangements, were discharged from that claim, and were thereby subjected to the lien of the decree, and thus constituted a fund to which resort must first be had in satisfaction of the decree. This aspect of the claim is found
This being the rule in equity, it is too decisive of the main ground on which Cotheal’s claim was made to rest, to render it necessary for me to consider the cases in which, for the benefit of the creditors, the estates are kept distinct, notwithstanding the doctrine of merger, and those in which the same rule obtains in respect to strangers, though as to parties and privies there may be a merger. In regard to these, it is laid down, (3 Preston, 447,) that notwithstanding the merger of the particular estate, persons who have interests affecting the estate which is merged, will be left in the same condition, in point of benefit, as if no merger had taken place.
Upon these principles, the intention of the parties, and the interest or benefit of the party in whom the estates unite, alike forbid my holding the estate of the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company under the deed of 1836, so merged in the release of 1842, as to let in the decree of 1839 to become an incumbrance on those premises, and entitled to priority of payment out of them.
This renders it necessary for me to consider the other grounds on which it is sought to set aside the claim of the company under the trust deed of 1836.
1. As to the usury. It is well established that this is a personal defence, and cannot be set up by a stranger to the original transaction. (Reading v. Weston, 7 Conn. 413. De Wolf v. Johnson, 10 Wheat. 367.) The chancellor, in Cole v. Savage, (10 Paige, 583,) attempted to overturn this rule, upon the strength of the revised statutes, (1 R. S. 772,) and the statute of 1837, (Sess. L. of 1837, p. 487, § 4,) and to extend the defence beyond the “ borrower” and his sureties, heirs, devisees,
2. As to the alleged illegality of the transaction, under the acts incorporating and relating to the company.
Under the second section of the act of 1822, relating to this company, it was authorized to take and receive, by deed or devise, any effects and property, both real and personal, which might be left or conveyed to it in trust, and to assume, perform, and execute any trust which might be created or declared by any deed or devise as aforesaid. This is the general power of the corporation; and the trust created is, in form, at least, a strict compliance with the terms of the statute. The original application was for the company to receive the lands in trust. And the final arrangement was consummated by deeds which declared that they were so received, in trust to sell and pay certain money, or to reconvey. However strong, then, may be the suspicion that this whole arrangement was a mere devise to cover a loan secured by mortgage, or a transaction in violation of some of the restrictions attempted to be thrown around this company, I am not at liberty, upon the evidence before me, to pronounce it to be otherwise than a strict trust conformable to the power specially conferred on it by the legislature. There is indeed, no evidence before me that the transaction was any thing else than one of its authorized trusts; and I see nothing in the case to authorize me to set it aside.
The conclusion, then, at which I have arrived is, that there was no other fund on which the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company had a lien, or in which it had an interest, in respect
The master’s report must be confirmed, and the exceptions be overruled with costs. y \ -