31 N.J. Eq. 229 | New York Court of Chancery | 1879
The Vice-Chancellor.
The only point disputed in this case is, wbicb of two mortgages is entitled to be first paid. They were both made
Both mortgages having been executed at the same time, and both being the property of the same person at the time the one now held by the defendant was recorded, the fact that one was recorded on one day and the other on the next, did not change them from concurrent to successive liens. Priority of record will not give a right of preference in payment to one of two concurrent mortgages, if both are held by the same person. Though recorded at different times, they still remain concurrent liens. Gausen v. Tomlinson, 8 C. E. Gr. 406. Such mortgages are not within either the letter or policy of the registry acts; they provide simply for successive liens, not concurrent. They are statutes of notice, their principal design being to give each successive mortgagee notice of what burdens precede his; but where two mortgages are taken at the same time, by the same person, on the same lands, recording them will inform him of nothing he does not already know. To protect himself against liens subsequently acquired, he must make them matters of record; hut it is not possible for him, by recording one before the other, to raise against himself a sufficient right or equity to be the fit subject of the protection of the law. If, on a sale of the mortgaged premises, a sum sufficient to pay both is not raised, his loss must be the same, whether he leaves them as they are, concurrent liens, or attempts to treat them as successive liens. Hp to the time the mortgagee assigned the one now held by the complainant, both mortgages unquestionably held equal rank, and were entitled to he paid concurrently.
Their position has, however, since been changed. The mortgagee testified that, at the time he negotiated the sale
When the equity resides in the debtor, it may be easily discovered by the exercise of ordinary caution; but when it resides in a stranger to the transaction which gave birth to the mortgage, and does not appear in the papers, nor on the records, its discovery, if possible at all, is a pure matter of chance. Unless it has been shown that the defendant was, at the time of his purchase, chargeable with notice of the arrangement by which his mortgage was made subordinate to that of the complainant, it is clear, I think, that he holds his mortgage free from any equity created by that arrangement.
Did the defendant have such notice? The mortgaged premises consist of two city lots, lying adjacent, one with a dwelling on it and the other vacant. The defendant says that, at the time he purchased his mortgage, the mortgagee told him that the mortgage now held by the complainant was the first lien on the dwelling-house lot, and that the other mortgage was the first lien on the vacant lot. This constituted, at least, partial notice of the arrangement. Both mortgages were then matters of public record; the defendant must be charged with notice of every fact properly constituting part of the record, and he must, also, be assumed to have known what the law was. When, therefore, he was informed that the mortgage now held by the complainant was the first lien on the dwelling-house lot, and that the other was the first lien on the vacant lot, he was bound to understand that an arrangement had been made between the parties, subsequent to the execution of the papers, different from that which existed between them by force of the papers. Without such information, he had a
The complainant’s mortgage must be adjudged the first lien on the whole of the mortgaged premises.