142 N.E. 355 | NY | 1923
The action is brought for the specific performance of an oral agreement to execute a mortgage upon land as security for a loan.
Ernest P. Sampson was the owner of a farm in the county of Onondaga. He died December 5, 1921, intestate, leaving his mother, the defendant Cornelia A. Sampson, and two nephews, the defendants Shepard, his sole heirs at law. Letters of administration were granted to the mother.
Sampson, according to the testimony, asked the plaintiff on November 15, 1921, for a loan of $100. Plaintiff responded that he had already loaned enough without security. The existing indebtedness was figured at about $1,200. Sampson offered to give security in the shape of a mortgage on the farm if plaintiff would make the loan. Some money was then handed to the borrower, *72 though exactly how much the witness who overheard the conversation was unable to state. Thereupon, Sampson produced the deed under which the farm had been conveyed to him in 1904, and an abstract of title, saying at the same time: "You look these over, and see what you can do, and we will go down to the lawyer's in a few days and draw this up." Nothing more was said or done. Upon Sampson's death a few weeks later, this action was brought against those succeeding to his title.
An estate or interest in real property (other than a lease for a term not exceeding one year) cannot be created, granted or assigned "unless by act or operation of law, or by a deed or conveyance in writing" (Real Prop. Law [Cons. Laws, ch. 50], § 242). A contract "for the sale of any real property, or an interest therein," is void unless the contract, or some note or memorandum thereof, expressing the consideration, is in writing, subscribed by the grantor (Real Property Law, § 259). A mortgage is a conveyance of an interest in real property within the meaning of section 242 (Bogert v. Bliss,
The question remains whether there have been acts of part performance sufficient to relieve from the production of a writing. To be thus effective, they must be of such a nature as to be "unintelligible or at least extraordinary" unless related to a contract to convey an interest in land (Burns v.McCormick,
The deficiency in the acts of part performance is supplied, it is said, by the delivery of title deeds and abstract. Equitable mortgages by the deposit of title *74
deeds have long been recognized in England, though the security is frowned upon as contravening the policy of the statute (Stoddard v. Hart,
The judgment should be affirmed with costs.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., HOGAN, POUND, McLAUGHLIN, CRANE and ANDREWS, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed. *75