32 Barb. 284 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1860
The plaintiff properly brought this action. Although he has parted with the fee of the mortgaged premises, it is only in trust for the payment of his debts in a prescribed order and by the agency of the trustees. He is interested in having the assigned property appropriated for the purposes to which he has devoted it—'the payment of debts for which he is personally liable. To this extent he is interested in the mortgaged premises as a part of the assigned property, and it is a pecuniary interest which the courts will protect. And from his right to any surplus that may remain after the payment of debts, it is not a matter of indifference whether the property is sold under the trust or at a final sale at auction, upon the foreclosure of the mortgage. He is entitled to have the premises sold to the best advantage under the trust, that it may go the farthest in the discharge of his debts ; unless the defendants have the legal right to withdraw the property from the trust by selling the same upon the mortgage. And this right depends upon the validity of the mortgage, and the plaintiff alone can object to the foreclosure of the mortgage and the sale of the premises. He alone can set up usury, as against the mortgagee. Such a defense can only be set up by a party to the usurious contract, or one who represents him as a privy in blood or estate. (Green v. Morse, 4 Barb. 332.)
The assignees, who had taken merely the equity of redemption, could not have sustained this action. (Pratt v. Adams, 7 Paige, 615. Post v. Dart, 8 id. 639. 7 Hill, 391. Shufelt v. Shufelt, 9 Paige, 137.) It would have been a sufficient answer that they had taken a conveyance of the premises subject to the mortgage and as a fund for the payment of the mortgage debt. An action by them to set aside the security would have been inconsistent with the trust while they had assumed to pay the debt secured by it. The plaintiff, therefore, as the original borrower, and a party to the mortgage and personally bound for the payment of the debt, and with a subsisting interest in the mortgaged premises to protect
A direction to Adams and Strickland to appropriate certain property to the payment of the mortgage debt, with other debts, does not estop the mortgagor from alleging. usury, when the bond is sought to be enforced against him personally, or the mortgage against the property. There was no error in the judgment at circuit. But as the judgment declares the mortgage void as a lien and charge upon the premises, to avoid all question for the future it may be modified by pro
Allen, Mason and Morgan, Justices.]