Bork v. . Martin

30 N.E. 584, 132 N.Y. 280, 43 N.Y. St. Rep. 938, 87 Sickels 280, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1188
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 25, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 30 N.E. 584 (Bork v. . Martin) 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
Bork v. . Martin, 30 N.E. 584, 132 N.Y. 280, 43 N.Y. St. Rep. 938, 87 Sickels 280, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1188 (N.Y. 1892).

Opinion

Landon, J.

Joseph Bork, originally having an equity in the premises, and being indebted to Box for about $4,000, requested Box to take the legal title as security for the debt. *284 and also to protect Joseph’s equity. Box consented, and although the deed to himself was absolute, he treated it is a mortgage from Joseph, and in equity it was a mortgage. (Carr v. Carr, 52 N. Y. 251.) Afterwards, Joseph and his brother, the plaintiff, agreed that the plaintiff should pay Box the mortgage debt, and for that and other considerations, plaintiff should have Joseph’s equity in the land. Box consented. To accomplish this, Box conveyed the land upon /Joseph’s and the plaintiff’s request to the defendant, who, paying no consideration, orally agreed to hold the title for plaintiff’s convenience and benefit. The plaintiff paid Box the mortgage debt. The premises consisted of twenty-five building lots. Defendant agreed to convey the same, upon plain- \ tiff’s request, to such purchasers as the plaintiff should procure, j and to pay the purchase-money as received to the plaintiff.

The agreement was fully performed by the defendant, except that after conveying, pursuant to plaintiff’s request, twenty of the lots and paying him the purchase-money received, or allowing him to receive it himself, and finally conveying the last five lots pursuant to the like request and receiving the purchase-money, the defendant then refused to pay it to plaintiff.

Thus the present controversy is not in respect of the land, for that has been properly disposed of, but in respect of the purchase-money received by the defendant for the last five lots sold.

Assuming that the land was conveyed to the defendant upon an oral trust, invalid under the Statutes of Frauds and of Uses and Trusts (2 R. S. 134, § 6; 1 id. 728, § 51), yet it was lawful for him to perform it, and he has fully performed it so far ■as it required him to dispose of the land. The land is all sold and he has the price of the last five lots in his pocket. The language of the cases is to the effect that he cannot, in good conscience, retain it, and that it belongs to the plaintiff. (Robbins v. Robbins, 89 N. Y. 258; Dunn v. Hornbeck, 12 id. 80; Foote v. Bryant, 47 id. 544.)

Though the statutes might have justified the defendant’s refusal to dispose of the land as he had orally agreed, yet, having disposed of it, he has voluntarily emerged from the *285 field of their protection, and exposed himself to the law which deals with him as a trustee of personal property realized for plaintiff’s benefit, by virtue of an agency for the plaintiff which he has so far performed pursuant to the plaintiff’s instructions and his own agreement, as to obtain the moneys his agency was constituted to produce. Equity approves his performance, so far as he has performed, and as the statutes referred to no longer apply, there is no law which he can invoke to shield him from the full performance of his duty.

The court will not allow the Statute of Frauds to be used as an instrument of fraud, if it can prevent it. (Cases, supra; Ryan v. Dox, 34 N. Y. 307; Levy v. Brest, 45 id. 596; Siemon v. Schenk, 99 id. 598.)

Here the defendant co-operated with the plaintiff for years in the execution of the agreement entered into for plaintiff’s benefit, plaintiff the while performing the active labor of negotiating the sale of the lots in full. reliance upon defendant’s fidelity. In the end when the fruits of the enterprise have come to defendant’s hands ready for delivery to the plaintiff, the defendant halts in his fidelity and seeks to appropriate to himself what he agreed to deliver to the plaintiff. He thus seeks to perpetrate a fraud. It is the duty of the court to prevent it.

When the defendant says that it is not fraudulent to refuse to perform a contract which the statute declares to be void, the answer is that he is not charged with a refusal to perform that part of the contract; he has voluntarily performed it. A trust in the money may be established by parol. (Day v. Roth, 18 N. Y. 448; Robbins v. Robbins, supra.) So, too, when the defendant says this money is the proceeds of the sale of his own land, the reply is, that the money is the proceeds of the land which plaintiff entrusted to the defendant to sell for his benefit; that the defendant cannot, with the avails of his agency in his pocket, dispute his agency, or his principal’s power to appoint him (Supervisors of Rensselaer Co. v. Bates, 17 N. Y. 242); that the statutes relate to land, not to money; that since the defendant has waived his statutory *286 protection and converted the land into money, the court will accept both his waiver and performance so far as he has accomplished them, and take up his agency at the point where he has repudiated it; and since it would be unjust to treat the money as land, and thus allow the defendant to recede from his honest performance, the court will not permit it.

Tlie same equitable considerations defeat the application of the statute which declares that where the grant is to one person and the consideration paid by another, no trust results in favor of the latter. The plaintiff seeks to establish no resulting trust in" the land. The voluntary performance of the defendant has carried the case beyond that stage, and the trust is in the money which the facts show the defendant received for plaintiff’s benefit. It is simply a question whether the defendant can, ex cequo et iono, refuse to pay it to plaintiff. The defendant’s argument is that if the plaintiff had no equity or estate in the land, he can have none in its proceeds. The common law gave a resulting trust in the land, which, but for the statute, would have vested in the plaintiff. Upon grounds of public policy, none of which is violated by this case, the statute forbade such a concealment of title. The plaintiff, let Us assume, paid the consideration for this grant, which vested in the defendant both the interest of Box as mortgagee and the equity of Joseph Bork as mortgagor. Under the circumstances, it was inequitable for the defendant to refuse to recognize the oral trust which he assumed. So long as he held the title to the land, he might have invoked the protection of the statute. But pursuant to his oral trust, he converted the land into money. The law, perceiving that to hold otherwise would promote injustice, says to the defendant, you had the statutory protection so long as you kept the property entrusted to you Within its terms, but you have voluntarily and justly converted it into money and thus withdrawn it from the shield of the statute. The plaintiff converted his money into land and allowed you to hold the land exempt from the legal trust and bound only by the moral one. He thus voluntarily placed his property beyond 1ns legal reach. You have now voluntarily *287 reconverted it into money and thus replaced it within his legal reach.

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Bluebook (online)
30 N.E. 584, 132 N.Y. 280, 43 N.Y. St. Rep. 938, 87 Sickels 280, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bork-v-martin-ny-1892.