22 A.D. 57 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
There was evidence sufficient to justify the finding that the plaintiff was a purchaser of the mortgage for value, without notice of any defect in the title, or of the defense of payment advanced by the defendant Schulze at the trial. It is insisted, however, that there is none to support the conclusion of law “ that the said Zimmerman became a holder for full value of said bond and mortgage.” This criticism would be well founded if Zimmerman were a credible witness, because, upon the subject of payment to the trustees at the time he acquired the assignment, he testified that, although he was present, the money advanced therefor was not his, but Mrs. Juch’s. It was within the province of the trial judge to conclude that the certificate and the sworn statement of Zimmerman given at the time were true, and that his subsequent testimony while on the stand was untrustworthy and untrue. So regarded, there was justification for the conclusion now so vehemently assailed as entirely without foundation. If, however, we examine the subject from the appellant’s standpoint, that the evidence preponderates in.favor of the conclusion that the money was Mrs. Juch’s and not Zimmerman’s, we think the plaintiff’s title is equally unassailable. At the time of the purchase, the mortgage was unsatisfied of record, and the assignment to Zimmerman recorded, and it is evident, from the manner in which the transaction was carried out, that it was the intention of the parties, at the time of such assignment to Zimmerman, to keep the mortgage alive.
It is undoubtedly true that, if a mortgage be paid, it cannot be reinstated to the injury of creditors, for vitality cannot be breathed into an incumbrance which is once paid or dead. Considering, however,- the intention of the parties to assign the mortgage to Zimmerman, and not to satisfy it or permit it to merge, there is no legal objection against such an intention being effectuated and keeping the mortgage alive, in the way it was here done, by an assignment to a third party. In Pruyne v. Adams Furniture & Manufacturing Co. (92 Hnn, 214) the defendant corporation issued bonds secured by a mortgage. Subsequently the bonds were surrendered
In Moore v. Metropolitan Nat. Bank (55 N. Y. 41) the court say: “ Why should the owner of a horse or of bank shares, who has given to another an absolute written transfer of all his rights thereto, for some purpose other than that of passing the title, be precluded, as against a bona fide purchaser from such person, from asserting his title, while under the same state of facts he may reclaim from such purchaser a bond and mortgage, or a certificate of indebtedness like the one in question ? As to the former he is estopped, while as to the latter, the same state of facts, it is insisted, will work no such result.” And in Curtis v. Moore (152 N. Y. 159) the court held that there is no merger of the mortgage unless there is an intention on the part of those concerned in the transaction that it should operate as a merger. So, also, in Sturges v. Hart (84 Hun, 409), where the mortgagor paid the mortgage and took an assignment to himself, instead of a satisfaction piece, which was prepared and which he at one time contemplated taking, it was held that his intention not to extinguish the mortgage was manifest, and that the mortgage was enforcible in the hands of a bona fide holder.
As was said in Pruyne v. Adams Furniture Co. (supra), we do
There are cases, and without them there would be reason and equity, in favor of an attack by a creditor, if directly made against a mortgagor, or the person to whom a mortgage had been assigned, such assignment having been procured with the money of the mortgagor ; but that would be upon the theory, not that the person taking the assignment obtained an invalid title, but that the title which,
It would be destructive of all certainty in dealing with mortgages, if a purchaser for value without notice of any defect, from one who has a complete record title, is liable to have his title assailed by a creditor of the mortgagor, upon the principle of some latent equity in favor of the creditor. A purchaser of a mortgage can do no more than examine the records and make inquiry of the mortgagor, and take his or her certificate, and that of the holder of the record title, as to the validity of the mortgage. If the person from whom he takes has a good title, even though it may be open to equities in favor of a creditor, such purchaser has an equity which we deem superior to that of the creditor.
Our conclusion, therefore, is that the judgment below was right, and should be affirmed, with costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., Williams, Patterson and Ingraham, JJ., ■ concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.