Barden v. Sworts

112 Misc. 384
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 112 Misc. 384 (Barden v. Sworts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barden v. Sworts, 112 Misc. 384 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1920).

Opinion

Kelly, J.

This foreclosure action was commenced on November 18,1919. The complaint alleges that on February 26,1913, the defendants Francis J. Olmstead and his wife executed their bond to plaintiffs conditioned for the payment of $2,000 on February 26,1918, with interest at the rate of five per cent per annum, payable annually, and that to secure such payment they executed a mortgage to the plaintiffs covering premises in the village of Penn Tan. It appears that the mortgage was a second mortgage subordinate to a first mortgage to secure $3,000, dated February 7, [386]*3861903, still unpaid, and now held by the Dundee State Bank under assignment dated January 18, 1917. The premises so encumbered were conveyed by defendants Olmstead to Stark-Nellis Realty Company in October, 1913, by the Stark-Nellis Company to Peer in November, 1913, and by Peer to the defendant Sworts in January, 1917, subject to the two mortgages mentioned, but the several grantees, including defendant 'Sworts, did not assume payment of the mortgages. The mortgage described in the complaint was due according to its terms on February 26, 1918, and the complaint alleges that on April 9, 1917, the defendant Sworts, who then owned the property, entered into an agreement with the plaintiffs by which the term of the mortgage was extended to February 26, 1919, and that in consideration of such extension Mr. Sworts agreed to and did covenant to pay the debt. It is alleged that the mortgage became due -and payable on February 26, 1919, and that there is now due and owing plaintiffs the principal sum of $2,000, with interest from February 26, 1918. Judgment of foreclosure and sale is demanded and that in case of deficiency the defendants Sworts and Olmstead and wife shall be adjudged liable therefor.

The defendants Olmstead answered denying that they were liable in case of deficiency, because of the extension agreement between the plaintiffs and Sworts, which they allege was made without their knowledge and consent, and thus discharged them from personal liability upon the bond. Calvo v. Davies, 73 N. Y. 211; Paine v. Jones, 76 id. 274. The plaintiffs withdrew their claim for judgment in case of deficiency against defendants Olmstead. Defendant Sworts, the present owner of the premises, objects, alleging that the extension agreement does not discharge them from personal liability.

[387]*387Defendant Sworts 'answers admitting the execution and delivery .of the bond and mortgage, that he is the owner of the premises, and that there is due and owing on the bond and mortgage the amount set forth in the complaint; he admits that the bond and mortgage became due and payable on February 26, 1919, but denies that he is liable in case of deficiency and alleges that the extension agreemént of April 9, 1917, set forth in the complaint, was without consideration and void.

Defendant Sworts, who is the cashier of the Dundee State Bank, testified that in January, 1917, Avhen he Avas about to take title to the premises, he telephoned to the plaintiffs, whom he had never met, asking for an extension of the time of payment of the $2,000 second mortgage for íavo years from January 1, 1917. He says the defendants agreed over the telephone to extend the time of payment as requested. On February 26, 1917, the annual interest payment Avas due and defendant Sworts, who was then the OAvner of the property, made out a check on his oavu bank for $100 to the order of the plaintiffs and mailed it to them. He wrote on the face of the check the Avoids:1 ‘ Int on Mtg one year and Mtg payment extended two years from Jan. 1, 1917.” This check was indorsed by the plaintiffs, collected and the check returned to the defendant Sworts, who offered it in evidence.

On April 9, 1917, the plaintiffs went to the Dundee State Bank in Dundee and met defendant 'Sworts for the first time. They had with them an agreement extending the time of payment of the mortgage to February 26, 1919, upon a regular printed form, the details inserted in typewriting. It appears that the plaintiffs, through mistaken economy, had the extension agreement prepared by a typewriter operator in [388]*388their store or place of business. One of the plaintiffs, examined as a witness on the trial, says he handed the agreement to Mr. Sworts for signature, that he asked them to come into his office, where he read the agreement and signed it. Defendant Sworts testifies that plaintiffs called at his bank in Dundee, introduced themselves as the Bardens of Penn Yan and said they had brought an instrument for his signature, handing him the extension agreement. He says he told them he had already procured an extension which was entirely satisfactory. They told him that in case of death of either plaintiffs or Sworts or in case of change of title a writing was necessary. Defendant testifies that he asked them if there was anything in the instrument which would make him, defendant, liable and tffiey answered ‘ ‘ no. ’ ’ He says he told them he would not sign any paper that would make him personally liable and that the plaintiff George Barden said there was no such intention on their part. The plaintiffs deny that any such conversation took place. Defendant says he read the agreement and that he has been in the banking business since 1894. He signed the extension agreement as did the plaintiffs, in duplicate. Execution was acknowledged before a notary public, plaintiffs took one copy away with them, he kept the other.

The extension agreement was received in evidence. The date of the agreement “ 9th Aprl.” the blank space for the county in which the mortgage was recorded, “ Yates,” and the amount of the mortgage “ Two thousand ” dollars are apparently in Mr. Sworts’ handwriting. The other details are typewritten on the printed blank. The agreement is between “ R. Bonner Sworts of Dundee N. Y.” of the first part, “ George L. Barden of Penn Yan N. Y. and Harold H. Barden of Gage N. Y.” of the second part, It recites that the parties of the second part “ holds ” [389]*389the bond of the Olmsteads conditioned for the payment of $2,000 on February 26, 1918, secured by the mortgage “ made and executed by the said,” (here follows a blank space) “containing the same conditions and bearing even date ” with the bond, recites the place of record of the mortgage and that ‘ ‘ There is now due and unpaid upon said bond and mortgage at the date hereof Two Thousand Dollars of principal with interest from the 26th day of February 1917. ’ ’ It recites that B. Bonner Sworts has requested that the time of payment of the principal sum shall be extended for “ one ” (typewritten) years from the “ 26th ” day of “ February ” one thousand nine hundred and “ eighteen ” and the parties of the second part in consideration of the premises and of the sum of one dollar to them paid by the party of the first part agree to extend the time of payment of the principal to the twenty-sixth day of February which will be in the year one thousand nine hundred and nineteen, provided the interest is punctually paid annually on the twenty-sixth day of February in each and every year during the extended term. Then follows this clause in the printed form, the words which I have placed in quotation marks being inserted in typewriting:

“And provided further, that nothing herein contained shall in anywise impair the security now held for the said debt.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Yager v. Rubymar Corp.
34 Misc. 2d 704 (New York Supreme Court, 1961)
Syracuse Trust Co. v. First Trust & Deposit Co.
141 Misc. 603 (New York Supreme Court, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 Misc. 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barden-v-sworts-nysupct-1920.