Ballin v. . Dillaye

37 N.Y. 35, 35 How. Pr. 216, 4 Trans. App. 69
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 5, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 37 N.Y. 35 (Ballin v. . Dillaye) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ballin v. . Dillaye, 37 N.Y. 35, 35 How. Pr. 216, 4 Trans. App. 69 (N.Y. 1867).

Opinion

PaiekeR, J.

The action in this case was brought to foreclose a mortgage executed hy the Defendant, then and now a married woman, and her husband. By stipulation of the parties judgment of foreclosure and sale was entered, leaving the question of the liability of the Defendant upon her bond for the deficiency, if any there should be, to be determined after it was ascertained that such deficiency existed, and the amount of it.

A sale of the mortgaged premises was had, and a deficiency reported of $6,643.73, and interest from February 2, 1864.

The Defendant acquired her title to the premises hy purchase upon a previous mortgage-sale in favor of the Merchants’ Bank, on the 14th clay of November, 18,60. At the time of such sale the Plaintiffs held a mortgage, junior to tire one on which the premises were sold, upon the same premises, for about $8,000; and on that day the parties entered into the following agreement, viz.:

“ I, Charlotte B. Dillaye, by and with the assent of Stephen D. Dillaye, my husband, testified to by his writing herein, do agree with E. S. Ballin and others, executors of Martin Cone, as follows:
1. I recognize the bond and mortgage held by them as valid.
“ 2. I agree to pay or secure the same.
3. As the executors would bid on the property to the extent *70 of said, mortgage, and it is my wish they should not do so, I agree to secure said mortgage by a new mortgage, to be executed and delivered simultaneously with the filing of the affidavits of sale under the mortgages held by the Merchants’ Bank of Syracuse.
“There are certain thirty-two lots not to be embraced in the new mortgage. The property is the Bust farm, and is described in the mortgage to the executors. The property is mortgaged also to the further amount of some $7,000, advanced this day by the executors to extricate the title from embarrassment.”

In pursuance of this agreement the bond and mortgage in question in this action were, on the 14th of November, 1860, executed by the Defendant and her husband.

After the report of sale in this action, showing the deficiency, the question of the liability of Mrs. Dillaye for the deficiency came up for trial at Special Term, upon which trial the Plaintiffs put in evidence the judgment-roll in foreclosure; also the said agreement, the bond accompanying the mortgage foreclosed, the report of the sale and deficiency, and the proceedings in foreclosure of the Merchants’ Bank mortgages, and offered to prove that the Defendant, Charlotte B. Dillaye, at the time of giving said bond and mortgage, was possessed of a separate estate from her husband of $10,000; to which the counsel for said Defendant objected, and the Court sustained the objection; to which ruling and decision the Plaintiffs’ counsel excepted.

■ The Plaintiffs then offered to show that Mrs. Dillaye sold several lots, which she purchased under the Merchants’ Bank foreclosure, and which she had previously contracted away to other parties, the same being left out of the mortgage in question, under the stipulation. To this the Defendant’s counsel objected. The objection was sustained, and the Plaintiffs’ counsel excepted.

The Court found and decided as follows :

“ This action coming on for trial upon the question reserved as to the personal liability of the above-named Charlotte B. Dillaye to pay the deficiency after the sale of the mortgaged premises; and after hearing the proofs and allegations of the respective parties, and *71 after hearing counsel, I have come to the conclusion that no judgment can legally be entered up against her for such deficiency. This conclusion is based upon the stipulation of the parties, and the judgment-roll in foreclosure, as to the facts. As a matter of law I hold that a married woman is not personally bound by her agreement to pay the purchase-price of real estate which she purchases for her separate property, although she has a separate estate.”

Upon this decision judgment was entered for the Defendant, which, upon appeal to the General Term, was affirmed, and from the judgment of affirmance the Plaintiffs appeal to this Court.

Although the terms of the conclusion of law stated by the Court seem to look only to the personal liability of the Defendant, and not to that of her separate estate, they must be considered as excluding her estate from the liability also; for the case calls for a decision of that question, and that was regarded as the question by the General Term. Besides, if the case shows her estate liable, the decision, in either view, is equally erroneous. The acts of 1848 and 1849, for the more effectual protection of the property of married women, did not remove the general disability of married women to bind themselves by their contracts; but the power conferred by those statutes to hold to their separate use, and to convey and devise, all their real and personal estate, as if unmarried, carried with it the power to charge such estate sub-' stantially in the manner and to the extent previously authorized by the rules of equity in respect to separate estates (Yale v. Dederer, 18 N. Y. R. 265; S. C. 22 N. Y. R. 450).

The rule, as recognized and established by the Courts of Equity in this State, is stated by the Chancellor, in Gardner v. Gardner (7 Paige, 112), as follows: “ The wife may have a separate estate of her own, which estate is chargeable in equity for any debt she may contract on the credit of, or for the use of such estate.” Again, in. the North American Coal Company v. Dyett (7 Paige, 9), the same learned Chancellor says : “The feme covert is, as to her separate estate, considered as a feme sole, md may in person, or by her legally authorized agent, bind such *72 separate estate with, the payment of debts contracted for the 'benefit of that estate, or for her own benefit upon its credit.” In Curtis v. Engel (2 Sandf. Ch. R. 287), the complainants filed their bill as creditors of Mrs. Engel, the Defendant, to charge the indebtedness upon her separate estate. . The learned Assistant Vice-Chancellor Sandford said: “ In order to maintain their suit they must show that the debt was contracted either for the benefit of her separate estate, or for her own benefit, upon the credit of the separate estate. "Whatever may have been the expressions of Judges on the subject, this is the utmost extent to which the doctrine has been carried by the decisions in this State.”

This rule is fully recognized and asserted in Yale v. Dederer (supra), and in White v. McNett (33 N. Y. R. 371).

That the Defendant, in the case at bar, had a separate estate, we may assume, although not in terms found by the Court, both because the stipulation and judgment-roll' referred to in the Judge’s decision show it, and because of the exclusion of the Plaintiffs’ distinct offer to prove it.

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Bluebook (online)
37 N.Y. 35, 35 How. Pr. 216, 4 Trans. App. 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ballin-v-dillaye-ny-1867.