Champlin v. Laytin

6 Paige Ch. 189, 1836 N.Y. LEXIS 229, 1836 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 53
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 4, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 6 Paige Ch. 189 (Champlin v. Laytin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Champlin v. Laytin, 6 Paige Ch. 189, 1836 N.Y. LEXIS 229, 1836 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 53 (N.Y. 1836).

Opinion

W. T. M’Coun, V. C.

The bill in the first cause is for a foreclosure and sale under a mortgage and for a decree over against Laytin the mortgagor, for any deficiency. The second suit is upon a cross bill by the mortgagor to have the mortgage delivered up and cancelled, and for a return of the money paid by him on account of the purchase of the mortgaged premises, at the time he gave the mortgage for the balance. To the cross bill the defendants therein interposed a plea in the first instance, which was overruled. They then answered, and both causes have been heard together upon pleadings and proofs.

The following facts present the questions to be considered. On the 24th of January, 1828, the complainants in the first suit and defendants in the second, as executors and trustees of the estate of Elizabeth De Peyster, deceased, offered for sale at auction under a power contained in her will, six lots of ground belonging to her estate, three of the lots represented on a map exhibited at the time of the sale as fronting to Broadway between Fourth and Sixth-streets, and the other three adjoining the rear and fronting to Mercer-street. William Laytin became the purchaser of two of the lots, one fronting to Broadway, at the price of $3000, and the other immediately in the rear for the sum of $1300, and paid one half of the purchase money down, and to secure the residue, gave his two bonds and the mortgages in question upon the two lots respectively.

The deeds executed by the executors to Laytin, the purchaser, for the respective lots, state, by way of recital, that Mrs. De Peyster, in her life time and at the time of her death, was seized in fee of the lots, and they purport to grant and convey the same in fee, and all the estate, right, title and interest, which Mrs. De Peyster had at the time of her death, and which the executors as grantors then had by virtue of the will or otherwise. Each deed- contains a covenant that they, the executors, “ had not done, committed, or suffered any act, matter or thing whatsoever, whereby to charge or incumber the premises thereby granted, or any part thereof, in title, estate or otherwise however.” The two lots thus sold and conveyed are situated within [191]*191the present bounds of Fifth street, from Broadway to Mercer street. This street was not laid down on the general map of the city, made and published by the commissioners under the act of the legislature of 1807, nor was such street delineated on the map exhibited at the auction when the lots in question were sold. It appears, however, that in 1817, the corporation caused a map to be made, which was kept in the street commissioner’s office, on which Fifth street was laid down as a contemplated street | and that in 1821, the executors and trustees of Mrs. Be Peyster’s estate, with a view to a sale of some portion of that estate, procured a map to be made of the same, laying it out into lots and numbering them, and on which map Fifth street was also delineated as an intended street, in the same manner as on the map of 1817, in the street commissioner’s office. By the map thus procured to be made and with express reference to it, they sold lots in January, 1823, and among others three lots to Mr, Whittemore, one of which extending through from Broadway to Mercer street, was described in their deed of conveyance to him as bounded northeasterly by Fifth street. In the summer of 1829, the corporation of the city of Mew-York caused a proceeding to be instituted for the purpose of opening that part of Fifth street which comprised the lots in question. The executors and trustees remonstrated against opening the street. Commissioners of estimate and assessment were nevertheless appointed. The circumstance of the map with the street laid out upon it, and the fact that the executors had sold lots by such map, and in the coveyance to Whittemore had bounded him by Fifth street, was urged before the commissioners by the persons interested in the opening as evidence of a perpetual right of way over the land required for the street; and although opposed by the executors and by Laytin, yet the commissioners considered that such a right of way had been granted or created by such previous acts, and that Laytin’s title was subject to the easement of a way, which rendered the lots of nominal value only, and the commissioners accordingly awarded to Laytin five dollars for the loss or damage which he would sustain in consequence of relin[192]*192quishing his tittle and interest in the two lots. Their report was subsequently confirmed by the judges of the supreme court after a hearing before them upon objections duly , i taken.

The confirmation, as well as the report of the commissioners, proceeded upon the ground that the executors, by their previous sale and conveyance to Whittemore, had impliedly granted a right of way over the land within the bounds of .the contemplated street, previously to the sale to Laytin, and although the fee of that portion of the land was vested in him by his purchase, yet it was of nominal value only; and by that decision, which stands unrevoked, the whole title and ownership in Laytin, as grantee of the complainants in the first suit, and as their mortgagor for half of the purchase money, became extinguished. All this was known to them when they filed their bill, and the propriety of resorting to this court for a decree of foreclosure and sale under such circumstances may be questioned, since nothing remains to be sold towards satisfying the mortgage, and an action at law upon the bonds would have been attended by as beneficial a result in every respect as a decree over against the mortgagor. It is a matter, however, of equitable jurisdiction, and the court is bound to take cognizance of the case, and is authorized to malee a decree in personam, unless the defence set up, or the equities presented by the cross-bill, require me to form a different conclusion. The grounds of defence to the original bill and of relief upon the cross bill, are virtually the same, and depend Upon the consideration whether there is any thing amounting to fraud in the conduct of the executors in selling or conveying the lots in question, or whether there is such a mistake or surprize as entitle the purchaser to have the contract rescinded, or a breach of the covenant against the grantors’ own acts as contained in the deeds, which this court can lay hold of as a means of relief. On the former occasion, when considering the plea of an eviction, interposed to the cross-bill, I was led to remark that there appeared to be no sufficient reasons for imputing aptual or intentional fraud to the executors, and after examining the case more at large up[193]*193on the testimony now before me, I am still of the samé opinion.

Representations were made and expectations held out to induce buyers to complete their purchases; which have proved delusive ; but I have no doubt they were made in good faith, and from what Mr. Herring, the acting executor making the sales, deemed at the time to be well founded. Nor does he appear to have wilfully suppressed or concealed any fact which was material to be known in relation to the condition or value of the property as the law, from the decision of the Mercer street case, 4 Cowen, 542, was then understood, which was at that time the only decision bearing upon the subject. The decisions which varied and at length overruled it, are all subsequent to January, 1828. Fraud is, therefore, in my opinion, entirely out of the question, as respects the manner of selling the property or the consummation of the sales by executing conveyances and taking the mortgages.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Paige Ch. 189, 1836 N.Y. LEXIS 229, 1836 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/champlin-v-laytin-nychanct-1836.