109 N.Y. 448 | NY | 1888
This is a case in which dates are of importance. On September 8, 1884, one John Coar was the owner of the premises now in controversy. On that day he made and executed to one Frederick C. Walker a bond and mortgage to secure $7,000 and interest. Two days later, and on September tenth, Coar conveyed the property to Marshah and the latter to Mrs. Coar, the present defendant. In the absence of any proof to the contrary, it must be presumed that these deeds were delivered at their date. (2 Greenl. on Ev. § 297; Van Rensselaer v. Vickery, 3 Lans. 59; Elsey v.Metcalf, 1 Denio, 323; Harris v. Norton, 16 Barb. 264.) On September twelfth the mortgage to Walker was recorded. On *451 September fourteenth, as appears by its date, Coar signed a certificate that the Walker mortgage was a good and valid security and that there was no defense to it. He had then ceased to be the owner of the property and had no authority from his wife, who was owner, to make such representation. On September twenty-third the deed to Mrs. Coar was put on record, and thereafter and while the record title was in her, and on the fourteenth of October, the Walker mortgage was assigned to the present plaintiffs, who bought it in reliance upon Coar's certificate. That assignment was recorded October fifteenth. For default of payment this action was commenced to foreclose the mortgage. Mrs. Coar defended, alleging that no consideration passed from Walker; that she signed the mortgage supposing that the consideration named had been paid; that the plaintiffs gave no consideration for the assignment; and that the mortgage was void for want of consideration. Upon the trial she sought to prove this defense in various ways, but all her efforts were baffled by the ruling of the court that she was estopped by her husband's certificate made when he had ceased to have any interest in the land, and when she alone had become the owner. She called her husband as a witness and asked him to state "all the facts concerning the inception and continuance of the mortgage." The question was objected to as incompetent and immaterial and because the witness was estopped by his certificate from attacking the mortgage. But he made no such attack. He put in no answer and was not defending the action. Granting that he was estopped as a party, his evidence was admissible in behalf of his wife unless she also was estopped by the certificate. She asked what consideration he received from Walker; and whether his wife knew of the sale of the mortgage to plaintiffs. All these inquiries were excluded. She attempted also to assail the consideration sworn to by plaintiffs as the basis of their purchase. She asked how the cabinet-work of which he spoke was paid for; and whether Coar's notes, which the plaintiffs surrendered, were at that time due. These questions were not allowed to be answered. By these rulings the whole *452 defense pleaded was made unavailable, judgment went for the plaintiffs, which was affirmed by the General Term upon the ground that the certificate of the husband estopped the wife. That learned court seem guided by a conviction that the certificate was made before the conveyance to Mrs. Coar, and the result is arrived at by presuming that the certificate was delivered at its date, although all the facts rebut that presumption, but that the deed to Mrs. Coar was not delivered at its date, although all the facts favor that presumption. And this error is intensified by the suggestion that there is no proof when that deed was delivered. The defendant offered to show that when her husband made the arrangement with the plaintiffs for a sale of the mortgage it was after the deed had been delivered to her by Marshall. This was excluded. Now the certificate had no force or validity until it operated as an estoppel, and that could not occur to Walker, for he took the mortgage two days before the certificate was made, and it could not occur as to plaintiffs until they purchased on the faith of it; and so the defendant did not prove that she got her deed before the certificate became operative, simply because she was not allowed to; and, besides, if we depend on the record for the date of the delivery of her deed, that still antedates the certificate as an operative instrument, for the assignment to plaintiffs was some time after, and, until they bought, the certificate was no better than blank paper, unless for the possible purpose of, at some time, contradicting the writer. So that the question returns whether a grantor who has conveyed can thereafter estop the grantee by a certificate declaring a previously executed mortgage to be a valid incumbrance upon the grantee's property. We think not. He may estop himself, but has lost the power to affect by his declarations the title of his grantee.
But beyond the argument of the General Term we are met by suggestions of the learned counsel for the plaintiffs, which do not depend upon the effect of the certificate, and which demand serious consideration. He contends that Mrs. Coar, the defendant, was merely the purchaser of an equity of *453
redemption, and took subject to the mortgage, and so cannot contest it. (Bennett v. Bates,
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
All concur.
Judgment reversed. *454