Caccioppoli v. Lemmo

152 A.D. 650, 137 N.Y.S. 643, 1912 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8602
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedOctober 4, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 152 A.D. 650 (Caccioppoli v. Lemmo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Caccioppoli v. Lemmo, 152 A.D. 650, 137 N.Y.S. 643, 1912 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8602 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Woodward, J.:

The plaintiff sues to set aside as a forgery an instrument or deed, dated September 3, 1908, purporting to have been executed by himself and wife, and to convey a house and lot at [651]*651469 Carroll street, Brooklyn, to one Lorenzo Lemma,” whose last name is Lemho; and to set aside also three mortgages given by Lembo upon the property..

The learned trial judge, holding the deed valid, that one of the mortgages had been discharged of record, and that the other two were valid subsisting liens on the property, dismissed the complaint on the merits.

He expressed in his opinion, however, much doubt whether plaintiff did not in fact sign and acknowledge the deed in question, supposing it perhaps to be only a contract. That being so,” he continues, “ the probative force of the certificate of acknowledgment is not overcome.”

This is a question of fact involving an examination of the evidence.

The certificate of acknowledgment, or the proof of a conveyance, is not conclusive; and it may he rebutted and the effect thereof may be contested by a party affected thereby. If it appears that the proof was taken upon the oath of an interested or incompetent witness, the conveyance, or the record or transcript thereof, shall not be received in evidence until its execution is established by other competent proof. (Code' Civ. Proc. § 936.)

This whole trouble is directly due, as appears by the evidence, to the misconduct of R. Michael Agolia, a real estate agent and notary public, who certified the acknowledgment to the disputed deed, procured the execution of all the other papers in question, and disappeared at the first intimation of trouble about them; and, though diligently searched for, has not been found.

Having acted as agent in the purchase of the property by plaintiff in 1904, Agolia, in the early part of 1908, procured the plaintiff, who cannot read or write except his own name, and plaintiff’s wife, to execute before Agolia a pretended contract to sell the property.

This paper is not in evidence, and all we know of its contents is their testimony of Agolia’s statements that it was a contract to sell the property to Lemmo ” for $4,250, $100 cash, $1,900 at the closing of the title, and the remainder to he left in a mortgage; together with the testimony of the wife, who [652]*652can read our language, that she looked at the paper and read two or three lines of it; that it provided for a sale of the property for a little over $4,000, contained something about a mortgage, the word “ Contract ” in large black letters on the back of it when folded up, and that'they signed under the name of. some person already on the paper, but neither of them could tell whose name.

The fact is, as appears by their testimony throughout, they believed and relied' upon the statements of Agolia that he was selling the property to “Lemmo,” or Lembo. He paid the $100, and, retaining one copy of the contract, left the other with plaintiff.

Seven or eight months thereafter Agolia gave plaintiff $500 on account, saying the man did not have the money, he could not do any better, and “we will settle that afterwards.” Plaintiff, having kept his copy of the so-called contract about a year, tore it up and returned the $600 to Agolia by check to his order and which he used.

Following that transaction Agolia procured these papers in relation to this property:

1. A mortgage, dated March 19, 1908, purporting to have been executed by the plaintiff and wife to secure the Title Guarantee and Trust Company in the payment of $1,000 July nineteenth of that year.

2. The deed in dispute, dated September 3, 1908, purporting to convey the property to “Lemmo” for a consideration of $100.

3. Two mortgages, dated September '4, 1908, purporting to have been executed by “Lemmo” and wife, one of them to secure the title company in the payment of $2,000 September 4, 1911; the other to secure Salvatore Scarpati in $1,500.

4. A mortgage, dated November 27, 1908, purporting to have been executed by “Lemmo ” and wife before. Agolia, to secure Emma C. Eornder in the payment of $1,250, with interest, December 1, 1910.

The title company retained sufficient of the proceeds of the $2,000 mortgage to satisfy the previous one for $1,000, and discharged it. But the evidence as to its execution has a bearing upon the case.

I

[653]*653Application for the mortgage was made upon a card, bearing plaintiff’s name, which he says he did not sign.

The truth of this testimony is evident at a glance by a comparison of his name on the card with his genuine signature. Whatever the uncertainties in comparing handwriting there is no room for any here.

The money was advanced upon the mortgage by two checks of the company, and indorsed with plaintiff’s name, one for $200 and the other $800. Plaintiff and wife both denied the execution of the mortgage, or that they were ever at the company’s office in connection with such transaction; the company admitted, on the trial, that only Agolia was there, and the court found that neither the plaintiff nor his wife was present at the delivery of the mortgage and checks.

The plaintiff testified that he never indorsed or received these checks, or any money, or paid any interest, on account of the mortgage. He is corroborated in this by the facts that the $200 check was cashed right in the office of the company at the time of the mortgage, while the other bears the stamp of an Italian banker, who denied, it seems, that it is his stamp; so it does not appear where the money went, certainly not to the plaintiff.

Both plaintiff and his wife deny the execution of the disputed deed, that they ever knew or saw “ Lemmo ” or Lembo or ever had any business transaction with him, or that they ever heard of the existence of this or any of the papers in suit, until in November, 1910, as explained below.

, Moreover, “ Lemmo,” a barber and the supposed purchaser of the property from plaintiff, testified in effect that his name is not “ Lemmo,” but Lembo, and that he was never known by the former name; that he never attended school and cannot read or write, except his own name, which somebody taught him to write ten or twelve years ago; that he never saw the plaintiff until the time of the trial, never had any transaction with him in relation to real estate, never saw or received the disputed deed or a paper of any kind, or any money, from the plaintiff, or paid him anything; that he never lived in or was at the house in question, or visited the place; never collected any rents or paid taxes on it, or .knew anybody who lived there.' [654]*654His further testimony is to the effect that Agolia, who was a customer of his, asked him as a favor to come down town and sign a couple of papers, saying he was buying a piece of prop-. erty for himself to sell over again,» and wanted to buy it in the name of somebody else, so he could get the commissions. Lembo, on seeing that the name was different, told Agolia his name was not “Lemmo,” but Agolia said the papers were made out that way, it would be too much trouble to change them, told him how to write “Lemmo/’ and he signed the papers without knowing what they were or in what office he signed them. Agolia “did-not tell me what this was,” said the witness; “he simply asked me to sign the paper, and I signed it.

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Bluebook (online)
152 A.D. 650, 137 N.Y.S. 643, 1912 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caccioppoli-v-lemmo-nyappdiv-1912.