Dickey v. Goertner

146 N.Y.S. 264
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 146 N.Y.S. 264 (Dickey v. Goertner) 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
Dickey v. Goertner, 146 N.Y.S. 264 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1914).

Opinion

BENEDICT, J.

This, is a motion to vacate and set aside a sale in foreclosure held on November 9, 1909, under a judgment of this court. As I have reached the conclusion that the motion should be granted, and as the circumstances of the case are unusual and extraordinary, I have felt it incumbent upon the court to examine the record for the purpose of deciding the claim of the plaintiff that he had been unjustly deprived of his property under the forms of legal proceedings. This investigation makes it proper to state at some length the history of this case, which has heretofore very frequently engaged the attention of this court, both at Special Term and in the Appellate Division.

. The facts, in so dar as I have been able to ascertain them from the record which is submitted on this motion, are substantially as follows;

[266]*266[ 1 ] Paul Dickey, the plaintiff, by a deed made in the year 1901 and recorded on October 18th of that year, conveyed to the defendant for a nominal consideration two lots of land on Seventy-Second-street, near Twenty-First avenue, in the borough of Brooklyn, subject to two mortgages ; the first for $2,500, and the second for $250. At the same time, the parties to the conveyance entered into an agreement in writing bearing date on the 28th day of September, 1901, to which the deed is made subject. By the terms of this agreement it was recited that Dickey was about' to convey to Goertner the above-mentioned lots in fee, but that the true object of the conveyance and the intent of the parties was to vest the title in Goertner “in order to secure the party of the second part for certain advances of money heretofore made to the party of the first part, and for such other advances as may hereafter be made to said party of the first part.” And it was agreed, first, that Goertner should have the power to rent the premises and collect the rents therefrom, applying any rents which he might collect toward the payment of the monthly installments due upon the second mortgage. Secondly, it was provided:

“Whenever the party of the first part shall repay to the party of the second part the full amount of money advanced by said party of the second part, including any advances that may be made subsequently to the execution of this agreement, with interest at the rate of six per centum per annum, then upon such payment the party of the second part shall reconvey to the party of the first part the fee title to all said above described property, free from all claims of the party of the second part, and the said party of the second part hereby covenants and agrees to reconvey said property and to execute a full covenant warranty deed thereof in the usual form immediately after and upon such repayment by said party of the first part to said party of the second part.” Thirdly, “the party of the second part shall not have any right or power to sell or assign the said property or to in any way incumber the same except with the consent of the party of the first part until five years from the date hereof.”

I think it is clear that the effect of this deed and agreement was simply to create the relation of mortgagor and mortgagee between the parties; the mortgagee having the right to go into possession of the mortgaged premises and to retain such possession until the satisfaction of the indebtedness provided for in the agreement." I think it is also clear that the relation so created was not one involving any special trust or confidence on the part of the grantee in the conveyance in favor of the grantor. Lewis v. Duane, 141 N. Y. 302, 36 N. E. 322.

After the lapse of several years, during the course of which the plaintiff had lost his eyesight, the plaintiff, in or about the month of January, 1906, began an action in this court setting forth the deed and agreement and stating that he had demanded an accounting from the defendant of the rents collected and the amounts disbursed and had offered to repay any amount due to the defendant and had demanded a reconveyance, and'praying that an accounting be had, and that if it should be found that any amount was due to the plaintiff that the defendant be required-to reconvey the property to him, and that if it should be found that any amount was due to the defendant that upon payment of such amount by the plaintiff the property be reconveyed. The defendant interposed an answer admitting the deed and [267]*267the agreement, but he alleged, as a separate cause of action and counterclaim, that he had advanced and expended various sums of money for the purpose of preserving and caring for the property, and in paying taxes and charges and in repairs to the building; that he had collected the rents from the tenants, and the rents were insufficient to liquidate the indebtedness of the plaintiff; that the aggregate amount of such payments was $2,523.13; that he had received $830 in rentals; and that there was due to him the sum of $1,693.13. And he further alleged, as a separate cause of action and counterclaim, that he had rendered and performed labor and services consisting in caring and attending to the property and paying the debts of the plaintiff, preventing the liens on said property from being foreclosed, keeping the same in tenantable condition, superintending the work necessary to be done in this respect, renting and endeavoring to rent the same, collecting the rent, all of which services were of the reasonable value of $1,125, and he demanded judgment for the said two sums of money, and for any other sums which he should further advance to the plaintiff during the pendency of this action and the costs and disbursements of the action. The plaintiff served a reply, putting in issue the payments so claimed to have been made, and denying the allegation respecting the alleged services. Some two years later, during which nothing appears to have been done, the defendant, upon motion, was permitted to serve a supplemental answer alleging further disbursements claimed to have been made by him on behalf of the plaintiff; the excess of which over the amount of rent collected during the last-mentioned period being $314.75, for which he asked judgment.

With the issues in this condition, the case came on for trial before the Special Term of this court in December, 1908, and the court found and decided that the conveyance was, in fact, a mortgage, and that the amounts found due in the findings of fact, together with any amount found due by the referee appointed by the interlocutory judgment to compute the same, should constitute the amount due to the defendant from the plaintiff at the date of the trial. It also found that the plaintiff was entitled to redeem the premises from the mortgage upon payment of the amount so found due, with interest thereon, on or before 30 days from the service of notice of the entry of an order confirming the report of said referee; that the defendant was entitled to interlocutory judgment decreeing that, in the event of the plaintiff failing to redeem the premises within thirty days after service of notice of entry of an order confirming the referee’s report, the defendant should have final judgment of foreclosure and sale on said mortgage.

Subsequently, the referee, to whom the matter was referred by the interlocutory judgment bearing date the 10th day of April, 1910, reported that there was due to the plaintiff from the defendant upon the 21st day of December, 1908, the sum of $2,641.18. This report was confirmed, and a final judgment of foreclosure and sale was made upon the 4th day of October,_ 1909.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 N.Y.S. 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickey-v-goertner-nysupct-1914.