148 N.E. 729 | NY | 1925
1. The complaint sufficiently states a separate cause of action on a promissory note.
(a) The allegation that "the plaintiff is now the holder and owner of said note" is sufficient, without alleging the manner in which plaintiff acquired title. So long as the fact of ownership is unequivocally stated, no particular form is necessary.
(b) The fact that a promissory note represents a portion of the purchase price of lands sold on an executory agreement to convey in the future does not render the complaint defective unless it appears on the face thereof that the vendor has deferred action until the maturity of the last installment upon the payment of which a conveyance is due. (Ewing v. Wightman,
2. The complaint does not sufficiently state a separate cause of action to recover possession of real property. It appears from the contract of sale which is made a part of the complaint, that the legal title to the premises is in a third party, and it does not appear that plaintiff is entitled to a deed thereof. The vendee in possession is, therefore, not estopped to dispute the plaintiff's title. Ejectment will not lie when based on a purely equitable title.
3. The complaint does not sufficiently state a cause of action for the purpose of enforcing plaintiff's equitable rights by foreclosure. No offer to convey is made in the complaint. (Freeson v. Bissell,
4. The judgment of the Special Term was not in proper form. Plaintiff's equitable rights would be enforced by a sale of defendants' equitable interest in the lands and property, not by a sale of the contract of sale. But the complaint should not have been dismissed for insufficiency.
The judgment should be modified by granting a new trial and as so modified affirmed, with costs to abide the event.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., CARDOZO, POUND, McLAUGHLIN, CRANE, ANDREWS and LEHMAN, JJ., concur.
Judgment accordingly.