1 Paige Ch. 544 | New York Court of Chancery | 1829
The Chancellor :—The objection that the complainant has not brought into court the amount admitted to be due
The only question m this cause, therefore, is, whether the defendant is entitled to hold this mortgage for its whole nominal amount. It is alleged in the bill that this land, which was in a measure forced upon the complainant at nearly four and a *half dollars per acre, was not in fact worth one at the time of the sale. • The answer to this is, that the defendant knows nothing of its value, except what is contained in his father’s letter, &c., and he fixed it at a price not exceeding $3 per acre. If the defendant knew, or had reason to believe, he was getting more for bis land than any one would be willing to give him for it unconnected with a loan of money, he was in fact selling it for a price above its actual worth, whatever he might have considered its nominal value. From the answer in this case, no one can doubt that the necessities of the complainant induced him, for the sake of obtaining the loan, to give for this land a sum much beyond what it was actually worth to him. And the defendant, by this device, did
The motion to dissolve the injunction must be denied with costs, unless the defendant consents to receive the money loaned, and legal interest, together with a re-conveyance of the land; and to pay the costs already accrued in this suit. If he consents to those terms, the complainant must pay the amount due and execute the conveyance within sixty days after notice of such acceptance, or the injunction must be dissolved.