Randall v. . Sanders

87 N.Y. 578 | NY | 1882

The trespass complained of in this action consisted of the entry by the defendant upon a piece of land seventy-five feet square, on the south-easterly corner of One Hundred and Sixteenth street and Sixth avenue in the city of New York. The premises were, at the time, vacant; but the defendant inclosed them with a fence, shutting them off from the street and avenue. The plaintiffs' intestate, Israel Randolph, claimed title to them under a deed from William V. Brady dated December 5, acknowledged December 8, and recorded December 12, 1837, and the evidence clearly shows that he was, at the time of defendant's entry, the owner in fee unless the defendant can establish his claim that the above-mentioned deed was in legal effect merely a mortgage. The defendant also claims under Brady, and seeks to justify his entry on the ground that the deed from Brady to Randolph being, as he alleges, in effect a mortgage, the legal title remained in Brady. That Brady in 1838 conveyed his interest in the premises to Willard Leonard, who was in 1842 adjudged a bankrupt. That Leonard's title thereupon passed to Waddell, *582 the general assignee in bankruptcy, who, in 1872, conveyed to the defendant.

There is no oral evidence bearing upon the question whether Brady's deed to Randolph was intended as a mortgage, and this question must be determined from documentary evidence entirely.

At the date of the deed Randolph was the holder of a mortgage made by Brady to Saml. R. Childs, dated December 20, 1836, to secure the payment of Brady's bond to Childs for $5,500, in two years with interest at seven per cent, payable semi-annually, which mortgage had been assigned by Childs to Randolph by assignment dated February 1, 1837, and recorded February 9, 1837. This mortgage covered the easterly seven hundred feet of the block bounded by Fifth and Sixth avenues and One Hundred and Fifteenth and One Hundred and Sixteenth streets, embracing about fifty-six city lots, but did not cover the premises now in question.

The consideration named in the deed of December 5, 1837, is $5,875, which sum is found by computation to be within a few cents of the amount due at that date for principal and interest upon the mortgage, compounding the interest by adding interest on the semi-annual instalment, which fell due June 20, 1837.

This deed conveyed only two hundred and fifty feet of the easterly portion of the block, embracing twenty city lots, and eight lots on the south-easterly corner of Sixth avenue and One Hundred and Sixteenth street, containing one hundred feet on the avenue and two hundred feet on the street, which lots embrace the premises in dispute in this action. It thus appears that the deed only conveyed one-half of the number of lots which were covered by the mortgage. On the 12th of December, 1837, the deed was recorded as a conveyance and on the same day the mortgage was satisfied of record.

Thus far it would seem quite plain that the mortgagee had received in payment of his mortgage a conveyance in fee of part of the mortgaged premises and other lands containing together one-half of the quantity of land upon which his mortgage had *583 been a lien; but the difficulty in the case arises out of another instrument executed at about the same time to which reference must now be had.

This instrument is an agreement between Randolph and Brady, dated December 6, 1837 (one day after the date of the deed), and acknowledged December 12, 1837 (four days after the acknowledgment of the deed, and the same day the deed was recorded), whereby, in consideration of one dollar, Randolph agrees to give to Brady the right of pre-emption of the land therein described (which is the same land described in the deed), on the following terms, viz.: that if he shall, at any time before the expiration of three years from the first of May then next, pay to Randolph a sum of money to be ascertained as provided in the agreement, he, Randolph, will convey the said premises to Brady by deed with covenant against the grantor's acts. The items to be paid are enumerated, and correspond in amount with the sum which would be due upon the $5,500 mortgage, with interest compounded semi-annually, and payments for taxes, assessments and prior incumbrances, with interest. No reference is, however, made to the former mortgage, nor to any indebtedness on the part of Brady, nor is there any agreement on his part to make any of the payments or to purchase the property.

The greatest care seems to have been observed to disconnect this agreement with the prior indebtedness and to make it an independent agreement, conferring upon Brady the privilege, at his option, of purchasing the property within the time limited. This agreement was not recorded until October 9, 1838. It was assigned by Brady to Willard Leonard, together with all Brady's right, title and interest in the property therein mentioned, by an assignment dated September 8, 1838, and recorded on October 9, 1838.

After a careful consideration of these instruments we are of the opinion that the relations of debtor and creditor, and mortgagor and mortgagee, formerly existing between the parties, were terminated by the conveyance of December 5. That the conveyance was given and received in satisfaction of the *584 prior indebtedness, and was not intended as a security merely, but as an absolute conveyance, and that the agreement of December 6 was not intended as a defeasance, but a contract to re-sell. A mortgagor may release his equity of redemption to the mortgagee, and certainly if the mortgagee will accept a part of the mortgaged premises, or other premises, in payment of his mortgage, there is no legal objection to such a transaction. When the equity of redemption of the mortgagor has been thus extinguished, the parties are competent to contract with each other for a re-sale, and such a contract does not divest the title acquired by the conveyance or convert it into a mortgage. It can hardly be supposed in the present case, that Randolph, in relinquishing his mortgage on fifty-six lots for a conveyance of twenty-eight lots, intended that the conveyance should still be a mortgage merely, and that if Brady did not exercise his option of purchasing within the three years, he should still retain a title which could only be extinguished by a foreclosure. Such could not have been the understanding of the parties, nor are the documents capable of that construction. The intent is very apparent to vest the legal title to the twenty-eight lots conveyed in Randolph, and that he should retain it in case Brady did not, within the time specified, exercise his option to re-purchase. The transaction could hardly have had any other object. If Randolph was to continue as mortgagee, he would have retained his lien on the whole fifty-six lots. It may be said that by this arrangement he secured compound interest, but this he could not legally stipulate for in advance, if he received the conveyance merely as security, for a debt, and this consideration confirms the view that the intention was to extinguish the debt and vest the title in Randolph, and give Brady the option of re-purchasing the property. In a transaction of that character it was perfectly legal to give the option to re-purchase at an advanced price, and the risk of a decline in the value of the property fell wholly upon Randolph. (Glover v. Payne, 19 Wend. 518; Brown v.Dewey, 2 Barb. 28.) There was no evidence that the value of the premises exceeded the amount of the mortgage debt, or to show that it was in any *585 respect unreasonable or inequitable to treat the deed of December 5 as an absolute conveyance. This view renders it unnecessary to consider the effect of the subsequent dealings between Willard Leonard and Josiah Leonard. All that Willard Leonard had was an option to purchase within three years from May 1, 1838, and after the lapse of more than forty years without any attempt to exercise this option, it is of little moment to trace the transfers of it. The evidence as to the first mortgage from Brady to Childs for $5,500, which was canceled, and as to the conveyance by Brady to Willard Leonard after December, 1837, throw little light upon the subject, and have not, therefore, been referred to.

The premises having been vacant at the time of the defendant's entry, and the legal title being vested in Randolph, he had constructive possession, which entitled him to maintain trespass for such entry.

We think the case was correctly decided below, and the judgment should be affirmed, with costs.

All concur.

Judgment affirmed.