Burnett v. . Wright

32 N.E. 253, 135 N.Y. 543, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 541, 90 Sickels 543, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1648
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 18, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 32 N.E. 253 (Burnett v. . Wright) 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
Burnett v. . Wright, 32 N.E. 253, 135 N.Y. 543, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 541, 90 Sickels 543, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1648 (N.Y. 1892).

Opinion

Mayhabd, J.

The plaintiff was defeated at the Special and the G-eneral Term on the ground that the instrument which she sought to foreclose was defective as a mortgage and was void for uncertainty and that the objectionable defects could not be supplied by parol proof. The writing which was executed by the testator of the executor defendant to the assignor of the plaintiff on January 31,1868, is set out in full in the complaint and is in the usual form of a real-estate mortgage. It recites a money consideration of six hundred dollars, is signed, sealed, and duly acknowledged, and was recorded as a mortgage in the proper county. It contains a provision for the defeasance of the grant if payment of the sum which it was intended to secure, should be made within one year from its date with semi-annual interest, and the ordinary *546 power of sale if default should be made in the payment of the principal sum thereby intended to be secured, or of the interest thereof, or any part of such principal and interest, with the authority to retain out of the proceeds the amount then due for principal and interest with the costs and charges of the sale and to pay the overplus, if any, to the mortgagor his heirs or assigns. The amount of the mortgage debt is not stated in the defeasance clause, but is left in blank, and the sentence in which it occurs is as follows: “ This grant is intended as a security for the payment of the sum of-in one year from the date of this instrument, with interest payable semi-annually, and this conveyance shall be void if such payment is made as herein specified.”

The complaint contains all the necessary allegations to support an action for the foreclosure of a mortgage and also alleges that the omission to fill up this blank was unintentional, and the' first part of the prayer for relief is the usual demand for a judgment of foreclosure, and it conóludes with a request that the mortgage may be adjudged to be reformed to comply with the intention of the parties. The action was commenced November 9, 1887, and the defendants interposed the plea of the Statute of Limitations, averring that both ten and twenty years had elapsed since the cause of action had accrued.

The trial court lias found the due execution, delivery and recording of the mortgage as alleged; that the mortgagor was then indebted to the mortgagee in the sum of six hundred dollars; that the mortgage was given to secure the payment of such' indebtedness, and that no part thereof has been paid and that the mortgage had been duly assigned to the plaintiff. There was a further finding, classed as a finding of fact, that the mortgage was defective; that the defect consisted in the omission to insert in writing in the blank the amount of the debt that was to be secured by it, and that the instrument should be reformed by inserting such amount, and that the action to foreclose the mortgage could not be maintained until it was reformed. As conclusions of law it was found that the *547 mortgage was void for uncertainty; that the defect in it was a patent ambiguity, and consequently the amount intended to be secured could not be shown by parol evidence, and that the action to reform the mortgage was barred by the Statute of Limitations, and that the complaint should be dismissed, and directed judgment accordingly. Judgment was thereupon entered dismissing the complaint and adjudging the mortgage void for uncertainty, and directing the cleric to make the following entry upon the record thereof. “ This mortgage adjudged void for uncertainty and the remedy to reform, enforce and foreclose the same barred by the Statute of Limitations.”

We think that this judgment was the result of a misapprehension of the legal .force and effect of the instrument which is the foundation of the plaintiff’s action. Upon the findings it must be held that this conveyance at the time of its delivery possessed all the attributes of a valid mortgage and became a good and enforceable security for the mortgage debt without the necessity of correction or reformation.

Perhaps the most concise and satisfactory definition of a mortgage is that given by Washburn in his work on Eeal Property (Yol. 2, p. 43), where it is stated to be: “Any conveyance of land intended by the parties at the time of making it to be a security for the payment of money or. the doing of some prescribed act.” It has also been said that to constitute a mortgage only two things are necessary, a conveyance of property and a cotemporaneous agreement that such conveyance shall be a security. (Thomas on Mortgages, § 13, p. 10.)

The defeasance need not be in writing at all, but may be established by parol testimony, and as was stated by Judge Allen in Horn v. Keteltas (46 N. Y. 605), it is now too late to controvert the proposition that a conveyance which is even absolute upon its face may in equity be shown by parol, or other extrinsic evidence, to have been intended as a mortgage; and fraud or mistake in the preparation, or as to the form of the instrument, is not an essential element in an action for relief, and to give effect to the intention of the parties. He declares *548 that the courts of this state are fully committed to this doctrine and that it has become a rule of property which cannot safely he departed from.

In the earlier case in the Supreme Court, of Tibbs v. Morris (44 Barb 138), Judge G-boveb held that where loans are made and securities for repayment taken, such cases are in equity an exception to the general rule that the rights of the parties to a written contract must he determined by the terms of the instrument without resort to parol proof, and that it might he shown by extrinsic evidence that the transaction was in fact a loan, and that the conveyance was intended as a security for its repayment; and effect will be given to it accordingly. The plaintiff was, therefore, entitled to the benefit of whatever parol proof might he available to impress the character of a mortgage upon the instrument executed by the defendant’s testator. Such evidence is not necessarily proffered for the purpose of establishing a right to a reformation of the deed ; but in order to show that it was in fact a mortgage at the túne of its execution; and that it has all the qualities and incidents of a defeasible grant. If the defeasible clause of the instrument is void for uncertainty, it cannot reasonably be claimed that the grantee is in a worse condition than if it had been wholly omitted, for being void it is as if it had not been inserted, and.as it relates to a matter which need not be reduced to writing, the parties may by parol proof, make certain and definite that which through inadvertence, or otherwise, they have failed to intelligently express in the conveyance itself.

But, without a resort to extrinsic facts, we think there is sufficient appearing upon the face of the instrument in question to clearly establish its legal status as a valid mortgage.

The rule of construction is correctly laid down in Jones on Mortgages (Yol. I, p 49, § 69): “ If it appears from the whole instrument that it was intended as a security, although there be no express provision that upon the fulfillment of the condition the deed shall he void, it is a mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
32 N.E. 253, 135 N.Y. 543, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 541, 90 Sickels 543, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burnett-v-wright-ny-1892.