72 A.D. 585 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
The controversy comes between the mortgagees as to priority of lienage. The plaintiff claims that her purchase-money mortgage stands first; the defendant Eden that his mortgage, though subsequent in time, is a substituted security for a mortgage of similar amount given by the common mortgagor for the purchase money.
The premises covered by the liens were originally owned by the
There is a lack of affirmative evidence that the mortgage which was executed to Wenz for $4,000 in pursuance of the agreement, and which was recorded prior to the plaintiff’s mortgage, was given to raise money for improvements which would enhance the value of the premises, and so perhaps render the mortgage to the plaintiff more effective security, but, from the fact that plaintiff did assent to the prior imposition on the premises, it may be assumed that she received what was to her a satisfactory equivalent for her concession.
For some cause, not directly apparent from the evidence, the mortgagor, on the 2d of October, 1894, changed her mortgage creditor by getting $4,000 of Eden and paying Wenz, getting from him a satisfaction piece. As to the mortgagor, therefore, the change was merely- a substitution of one creditor for another upon the debt and security. Can the plaintiff for her mortgage claim a benefit from the transaction in which she did not participate, to free her security from a loan and lienage to which she had consented ?
There was no intent to subordinate the Eden security to 'the plaintiff’s lien. He evidently relied on the right of the mortgagor to give him the first mortgage. The omission to take a formal assignment from Wenz did not prevent him from coming in at the request of the mortgagor as the successor to the same obligation of that mortgagor; the debt was the same, and was the thing of substance without which either mortgage would be worthless ; each drew its life and effective force from the consent of the plaintiff to subordinate her obligation to the thing of substance, the advance of $4,000 in cash and its continuing existence until repaid by the debtor herself, when alone her. obligation and plaintiff’s agreement were extin
Pertinent authorities sustain this view. Even though there is no contract, express or implied, for substitution, one who advances money at the request of another to pay off or redeem a security, may, if it be equitable, be entitled to subrogation or substitution. (Gans v. Thieme, 93 N. Y. 225.) Payment of-a mortgage without knowledge of a judgment lien gives the right of substitution. (Barnes v. Mott, 64 N. N. 397.) The conclusion is that the Eden mortgage is superior in priority to that of plaintiff, and as to him the complaint must be dismissed, with costs.