34 N.J. Eq. 76 | New York Court of Chancery | 1881
The only litigation in this cause is that which arises out of the cross-bill filed by Risdon Hankinson to establish his claim to the security of the complainant’s mortgage to the amount of $2,500 and interest, after the complainant’s claim under the mortgage shall have been paid. The mortgage was originally for $13,700 and interest. It was given by John B. Hankinson and wife to John Fairbairn, March 25th, 1870, and was payable in four years. At Fairbairn’s death it came into the hands of Joseph Becher, his executor. There were then due upon it $11,500 of principal, besides interest. August 5th, 1876, there were paid to Becher $1,000 on account of the principal, and on the 24th of April following, $1,500 on the same account. The money for those payments was furnished by Risdon Hankinson, the complainant in the cross-bill, brother of the mortgagor, John B. Hankinson, at the request of the latter, and on an agreement between them (and they insist Becher so agreed also), that the former should have an interest in the mortgage to the amount of those advances, and interest for his security. On June 11th, 1877, Becher assigned the mortgage to Annie H. and Fannie S. Fairbairn, and they, March 25th, 1878, assigned it to the complainant. Risdon Hankinson’s claim to subrogation is contested by Abraham Vanderbeck only. He is the holder of a subsequent mortgage given to him by John B. Hankinson on' the premises. It was subsequently canceled of record, but Vanderbeck, in another suit in this court, seeks to set aside the cancellation. Both the payments made with the money advanced by Risdon Hankinson were made after Vanderbeck’s mortgage was given,
“ On the 24th of April following- (1871)—it may possibly have been the 23d, but my impression is that it was the 24th—Joseph Becher, executor of Fairbairn, John B. Hankinson and Bisdon Hankinson, met at my office; Bis-don Hankinson was then prepared to advance the further sum of §1,500 to Becher, on the Fairbairn mortgage; in the presence of all three above named I stated how Bisdon expected to be secured for the sum he was about to advance, that ho was to have an. interest in the Fairbairn mortgage to that ■extent by the promise and express agreement of John B. Hankinson and of Beelier, the executor; I asked John B. Hankinson and Becher if they both promised and agreed to that effect with Bisdon Hankinson ; they each replied they did; Mr. Becher then explained to me that he had already received §1,000, in August preceding, on the same agreement., and had given to John B. Hankinson a receipt for §1,000, on account of the mortgage, as coming from Bisdon Hankinson; the money was in shape of a check which was for a*79 larger amount than $1,500, as I remember it; Mr. Beeher wanted the money or a certified cheek; Risdon Hankinson and Beeher went to the bank, and returned to my office after a short interval; the money was paid to Mr. Beeher in my presence, and was paid by Risdon Hankinson, on the express condition which I then and there in the presence of all of them stated, to wit, that he, Risdon Hankinson, should be subrogated to and have an interest in the Fairbairn mortgage for the moneys he so advanced to be paid thereon ; and as Mr. Beeher resided out of the state, he agreed to sign a paper, to be •drawn up by myself, reciting the facts of the payments by Risdon Hankinson of the several sums of $1,000 and $1,500, on account of the mortgage, and containing an agreement that Risdon Hankinson should have an interest in the mortgage to the extent of the sums so paid by him, but which should be subject and subsequent to the interest retained by him; the interview closed •before such paper could be drawn, as Mr. Beeher was desirous of returning to Philadelphia on a train then about to start.”
Both the Hankinsons corroborate him in this statement. In •opposition, the testimony of Mr. Charles E. Hendrickson, who was Becher’s attorney, is produced. The material portions of his testimony are to the effect that, before the payment of April, 1877, was made, John B. Hankinson called on him and desired to know whether Beeher could not make an assignment of an interest in the mortgage to secure Risdon, if the latter should lend him the money to pay on the mortgage; that Mr., Hendrickson replied, saying that he had doubts whether such an assignment was feasible; that Hankinson then requested him to •draw some paper of that kind and get Becher’to sign it; that Mr. Hendrickson declined, saying he could do nothing about it until after he had consulted Beeher; that Hankinson requested him to see Beeher on the subject; that Beeher afterwards came to his office to see him about the matter and inquired whether he could make such an assignment without prejudice to himself as executor, or to the Fairbairn girls, to whom he expected to assign the mortgage, expressing his willingness to make the assignment if it would not prejudice him or his assignees; that Mr. Hendrickson advised him against making the assignment; that Hankinson called on Mr. Hendrickson again, and the latter told him what advice he had given to Beeher, and that Hankinson urged upon him the contrary view of the matter, insisting that the assignment could and ought to be made, but Mr.
It is urged, on behalf of Vanderbeck, that the rule which denies subrogation in case of merely partial payment is fatal to that claim. But that rule is not applicable to this case. Risdon Hankiuson’s claim is for conventional, not legal, subrogation. A stranger, who, by the authority and consent of the debtor, and on his agreement that he shall be subrogated to the rights of the creditor, makes payment for the debtor, will be subrogated if the payment is made with the express declaration of the subrogation in the release made by the creditor. Diwon on Subr. The debtor and creditor in this case expressly agreed with Risdon Hankinson that if he would furnish the $2,500 he should have an assignment of the mortgage pro tanto to secure the repayment of the money. It would be against equity to deny Risdon Hankinson the benefit of that agreement. The fact that Becher did not fulfill his promise to assign could not, of course, avail him. If he were still the holder of the mortgage, he could not successfully resist the claim. Ho right of the complainant claiming under assignment through him will be affected by according it. Hor will any injustice be done to Vanderbeck in allowing it if he succeeds in re-instating his mortgage, for the payments in question were made after he took his mortgage. There will be a decree directing that the property be sold to raise, in the first place, the amount due the complainant, with her costs • and, in the next place, the $2,500 and interest due Risdon Hankinson, with his costs. Vanderbeck’s mortgage is, as before stated, in litigation. He proposes to appeal from the decree in his suit, and asks that the sale of the mortgaged premises be deferred until after the determination of his appeal; that is, he seeks to stay the sale and prevent the raising of the money on the complainant’s mortgage until he