182 A.D. 699 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1918
On March 13,1917, Zúrlo and his wife executed and delivered to the Home Mortgage Investment Company of New York a bond and building loan mortgage to secure the payment of 133,000 and interest, covering a plot of land and a building to be erected on it. The bond and mortgage, and a building loan agreement, which was duly filed in the county clerk’s office, provided that the mortgagee should make advances from time to time until completion of said building, and thereupon said principal sum should become due on September 1, 1922, with a provision for amortization. The mortgage contained this provision:- “ Upon the completion of the advances hereunder, the parties of the first part, if the party of the second part so request, shall execute, acknowledge and deliver to the party of the second part new bonds and a new mortgage in lieu and stead of these presents, to secure the indebtedness hereby secured, at the same rate of interest and upon the same terms.”
The mortgage was duly recorded in the Kings county register’s office on March 26, 1917, and the mortgage tax of $165 was paid. The building was completed, and the $33,000 was advanced. Thereupon the mortgagee requested the mortgagor to execute a new mortgage and 33 new bonds for $1,000 each to take the place of the old mortgage and bond. This was done on July 2, 1917, and the new mortgage was offered for record on July 3, 1917, accompanied by an affidavit of the secretary of the mortgagee that the new mortgage did not create or secure a new or further indebtedness or obligation other than the principal indebtedness or obligation secured by or which under any contingency may be secured by the recorded primary mortgage, as provided by section 255 of the Tax Law. The new mortgage contained this provision: “ This mortgage is executed and delivered pursuant to a certain provision and covenant contained in a mortgage between the parties hereto bearing date the 13th day of March, nineteen hundred and seventeen, and
The tax is upon the debt. (Kirtland v. Hotchkiss, 100 U. S. 491; People ex rel. Park Row Realty Co. v. Saxe, 180 App. Div. 103.) The mortgage is security for the debt. As between the mortgager and mortgagee, the bond is the principal thing and the mortgage the incident —“ collateral security for the personal obligation.” (Matter of Wilbur v. Warren, 104 N. Y. 197.) The new mortgage did not affect the debt; it was but the substitution of an instrument that afforded the same collateral security. The mere change of 33 bonds for $1,000 each for 1 bond of $33,000 was but a change in the form of the debt and did not extinguish or affect the lien. (Mowry v. Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co., 76 Fed. Rep. 38, 43, citing Stevens v. Mid-Hants Railway Co., L. R. 8 Ch. App. 1064. See, too, Mobile & Ohio R. R. Co. v. Nicholas, 98 Ala. 92, 120.) Hence, to exact a second tax is to lay a second impost upon the self-same debt because of a variation in the form of the obligation and the security for the debt,
I think that the new mortgage is within the purview of section 255 of the Tax Law. It is a supplemental instrument or mortgage recorded pursuant to “ some provision or covenant therein.” Provision means a distinct clause in an instrument or statute. (Century Dictionary.) And the new mortgage does not create or secure a new or further indebtedness other than the principal obligation secured by, or which under any contingency may be secured by, the recorded primary mortgage, for the reasons heretofore given.
Even considering the word “ covenant ” (but the alternative to “ provision ” in the statute), I am not prepared to say that the clause in the mortgage is not a covenant. Thereby the mortgagors undertook, when the advances were completed, to deliver a new mortgage and new bonds in lieu and stead of the existing bond and mortgage, upon the same rate of interest and the same terms. It is true that the mortgagee could retain the original mortgage and the original bqnd, or require the new instruments. There was a covenant none the less, although the word “ request ” indicates that the mortgagee had the election. (Platt Covenants, 10.) In Doe v. Phillips (2 Bing. 13) A. W. agreed to let and T. R. agreed to take certain land for 21 years at a yearly rental, and it was further agreed that in ease A. W. or his heirs should want any part of said land to build or otherwise, then the said T. R. shall and will give up that part as shall be requested by the said A. W. The court held that this stipulation was a covenant. There may be covenant that contemplates the exercise of an option. (Albert Brick, Lime and Cement Co. v. Nelson, 27 N. B. 276, and cases cited; Irvin v. Simonds, 11 id. 190; Laffan v. Naglee, 9 Cal. 662.) In Clark v. Devoe (124 N. Y. 124) it is said: “A covenant is simply a contract of a special nature, and the primary rule for the interpretation thereof is to gather the intention of the parties from their words, by reading not simply a singlé clause of the agreement, but the entire context and, where the meaning is doubtful, by considering such surrounding
I advise that the order be affirmed, but without costs.
Thomas, Mills, Rich and Putnam, JJ., concurred.
Order affirmed, without costs.