193 N.Y. 37 | NY | 1908
In November, 1903, Frederick G. Potter, the owner of certain real estate in the city of New York which *39 was subject to a mortgage for the sum of $160,000, entered into a contract with one Forgotston for the sale of said realty for the sum of $265,000, to be paid by the assumption of the existing mortgage of $160,000, and by giving a purchase-money mortgage for the remaining $105,000. The contract further provided that the purchaser should erect upon the premises a building of a specified description, and that Potter would obtain for Forgotston a building loan of $370,000, out of which the $160,000 mortgage should be paid; the remainder to be advanced in installments as the building progressed, and that the $105,000 mortgage should be subordinated to the lien of the building loan mortgage. It also provided that the expense of procuring the building loan should be $11,100, to be paid by the purchaser in five equal installments. The contract was consummated and the premises were conveyed to Forgotston, on whose behalf Potter applied to the appellant for a building loan. On August 29th, 1904, Forgotston and the appellant entered into a written agreement whereby the appellant agreed to loan Forgotston the sum of $370,000, $170,000 thereof to be paid "when excavation is completed, sewer into building line and the second tier of iron completed." The remainder of the loan was to be paid in fourteen installments during the construction of the building, the final payment on its completion. The details of these payments are immaterial. For this loan Forgotston was to give his bond secured by a mortgage on the premises, which should be a lien on the premises for all sums advanced, "subject to no incumbrance, except such as may be waived by the lender." Forgotston entered upon the construction of the building. When the first payment on the building loan became due it was made by the appellant in the following manner: $164,785.87 was paid in satisfaction of the first mortgage then on the premises, with interest thereon; a check for $2,220 was given to Forgotston and indorsed by him to Potter and returned by Potter to the appellant, the first installment of the expense of the loan. For the balance a check was given to Forgotston for his own use. Three *40 additional installments of the loan were paid to Forgotston, a similar deduction of $2,220 being made from each. After the receipt of the last payment Forgotston abandoned the work. In November, 1904, the assignee of the $105,000 mortgage commenced an action to foreclose the same and filed a lis pendens. On November 7th, the same year, the plaintiff, who had furnished iron and steel work for the building under a contract with Forgotston, filed a mechanic's lien for the sum of $40,686.95 against the interests of Forgotston, Potter, the assignee of the $105,000 mortgage, and the appellant. The plaintiff was not a party to the foreclosure, for its lien was not filed till after the commencement of that action, nor did it subsequently become a party thereto either on its own application or on that of the other parties. The premises were sold under the foreclosure suit and purchased on behalf of the holder of the mortgage foreclosed. Thereafter the plaintiff brought this action for the foreclosure of its mechanic's lien against all the parties named therein and sought to subject their interests in the property to its lien. It was defeated except as to the defendants Forgotston and the appellant. As to the latter judgment was rendered declaring the appellant's mortgage to be subject to the mechanic's lien of the plaintiff, and directing a sale of the mortgage for the satisfaction of the lien. That judgment has been unanimously affirmed by the Appellate Division, and the appellant now appeals to this court.
The case presents several grave questions upon which we do not pass, as the appellant seeks the determination of a single one only, that is whether on the facts found its mortgage was, under the provisions of the Mechanics' Lien Law, subject to the plaintiff's lien. Section 21 of that law, as amended in 1900 (Ch. 78), reads: "Building Loan Contract. — A contract for a building loan, either with or without the sale of land, and any modification thereof, must be in writing and duly acknowledged, and within ten days after its execution be filed in the office of the clerk of the county in which any part of the land is situated, and the same shall *41
not be filed in the register's office of any county. If not so filed, the interest of each party to such contract in the real property affected thereby, is subject to the lien and claim of a person who shall thereafter file a notice of lien under this chapter. A modification of such contract shall not affect or impair the right or interest of a person, who, previous to the filing of such modification had furnished or contracted to furnish materials, or had performed or contracted to perform labor for the improvement of real property, but such right or interest shall be determined by the original contract." The ground on which the appellant's mortgage has been subjected to plaintiff's lien is that the true agreement between the appellant and Forgotston for a building loan was never filed, and this conclusion is based on the following finding of fact, which having been unanimously affirmed by the Appellate Division, is conclusive upon this court: "In the course of negotiations with the Title Guarantee and Trust Company to procure the said building loan to the said Forgotston, the defendant, Eugene Clifford Potter, had agreed orally with the defendant, Title Guarantee and Trust Company, that the said defendant Forgotston should out of the first payment to be made on the said building loan discharge the $160,000 mortgage upon the said property, and had agreed further that at the time of the first five payments to be made on the said building loan the said Forgotston should pay the sum of $11,100 in equal installments of $2,220 out of each of the said first five payments. Said building loan agreement did provide that a mortgage which was to be given to secure the said building loan should be a first lien, but did not provide that any part of the said building loan should be used to pay off the prior mortgage upon the said property." The appellant insists that assuming the existence of that agreement, it was a nullity because the section of the statute cited provides that such agreements must be in writing and further that it was superseded by the written agreement under the familiar rule of law that all oral negotiations are merged in the written contract. We will *42
pass over these objections, however, and go to the principal proposition in the case, which is that, though the written agreement provided in terms that the mortgage which the appellant was to receive as security for its loan should be a first mortgage, not subject to incumbrance, the oral agreement that existing incumbrances should be paid out of the loan so as to make the appellant's mortgage a first mortgage was a material modification or variation of the written contract. If this proposition is not true the foundation of the plaintiff's case is swept away. In our opinion it is not true. It is conceded by the learned counsel for the respondent that "a building loan agreement need not provide for the disposition of the proceedsof the loan," but he contends if there is an agreement as to such disposition its terms must be incorporated in the written agreement which is filed in the county clerk's office. It is urged that laborers, contractors and materialmen are entitled to rely (to a certain extent at least) on the loan as a source from which they may obtain payment for their work or material. It has been held by the Supreme Court that no privity exists between a lienor and a person who has agreed to make the owner a building loan, and that such agreement could not be enforced at the instance and for the benefit of the lienor, and that ruling has been approved by this court. (Alyea v. Citizens' SavingsBank,
The plaintiff made its contract with Forgotston and entered upon its performance prior to the building loan agreement of the appellant. We assume, however, that its rights are the same as if its contract had been made subsequent to such agreement. Whether any officer or agent of the plaintiff was before the time when, upon the default of Forgotston in making payments, it abandoned the further prosecution of the work, aware either of the building loan agreement or of the title of Forgotston does not appear. Of course the plaintiff was chargeable with notice of all these matters. If it is to be presumed that it knew that a building loan of $370,000 was to be made to Forgotston, it must be equally presumed that it knew that the property was subject to two mortgages, one for $160,000 and the other for $105,000, representing the whole purchase price of the property, the former of which mortgages had necessarily to be disposed of in some way as a condition of the appellant's making the loan. In this state of the record it is difficult to see how the plaintiff or any other persons dealing with Forgotston could have believed that the whole sum of $370,000 was a fund available in the hands of Forgotston for the cost of constructing the building. But *45 whatever their conjectures may have been, the parties had no right to rely on such conjecture, for the agreement provided that the appellant's mortgage should be free from prior incumbrance and unless the premises were so cleared of incumbrance no obligation rested upon the appellant to advance a dollar. The obligation of the appellant was thus conditional, and to make it absolute it was necessary that the first mortgage should be satisfied. Until the plaintiff ascertained that the mortgage had been paid it could have no assurance that there would be any fund whatever for the construction of the building. Doubtless it was possible, however improbable, that Forgotston might pay it out of his own funds, but if he did not so discharge it, the only remaining source from which it could be satisfied was the loan made by the appellant. Of that possibility, not to say probability, the plaintiff was bound to take notice. It is the ordinary and usual course where a party agrees to make a loan on real estate that existing incumbrances, whether mortgages or taxes and assessments, and also the expenses attendant on the loan, such as the examination of the title, brokerage and the like, are paid out of the new loan so far as practicable. Of this custom, which is the common course of practice by conveyancers, the court may take notice. In the present case the sum agreed to be paid for procuring and making the loan seems very large. There may, however, be some explanation thereof, and it is sufficient to say that the trial court has not found that it was so exorbitant as to be a diversion of the fund produced by the loan.
It is further to be observed that in contracts for the sale of real estate a specific performance may in a proper case be decreed in favor of the vendor, even though his title is subject to incumbrance, allowance being made to the vendee for the incumbrance. (Guynet v. Mantel, 4 Duer, 86; Frain v.Klein,
We thus conclude that the oral agreement found by the trial court was in no proper sense a modification of the written agreement between the parties, which was filed as required by law; that it related to a mere detail of the execution of the contract, a detail the failure to observe which by either party would not constitute a breach of the contract itself; that despite the oral contract, had Forgotston paid off the first mortgage he could have compelled the appellant to pay over to himself the whole of the loan; that under the written contract had Forgotston not paid off the incumbrances he could direct the appellant to discharge them out of the loan.
The judgment should be reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
HAIGHT, VANN, WERNER, WILLARD BARTLETT, HISCOCK and CHASE, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, etc.