Eagle v. Cherney
This text of 267 A.D. 474 (Eagle v. Cherney) 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.
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In 1928 Stella Ettinger, a sister of plaintiff, was the record owner of a farm in the Lackawack Valley of Ulster County. It was incumbered by four mortgages — the first, held by the Federal Land Bank, the second, third and fourth held by the defendants Cherney and Berger. Although originally purchased in the name of plaintiff’s father and held in the name of plaintiff’s sister, plaintiff appears to have been the actual owner and she held an unrecorded deed from her sister.
In the summer of 1928 a tentative arrangement was reached between plaintiff, acting through her husband Max Eagle, and the defendants to consolidate and extend the second, third and fourth mortgages. A proposed agreement was drawn, signed by the defendants and taken by Max Eagle to be forwarded to Mrs. Ettinger for execution. It provided for a payment of principal and interest on July 15, 1929, which was not made and in September, 1929, defendants instituted an action to foreclose in which they alleged the amount due and unpaid on their second mortgage, then in default, and also the facts with [476]*476regard to the proposed extension and consolidation agreement with the claim that this agreement was never executed and therefore never became effective. They also alleged the default in the payments provided by such proposed agreement. The Eagles were personally served in this foreclosure action but did, not defend. It proceeded to judgment and sale, and the property was bid in by Cherney and Berger. Through a writ of assistance they dispossessed the Eagles, and on the same night, but before the Eagles had personally left the premises, both the house and the large barn thereon were destroyed by fire. Since then the city of New York has condemned a portion of the premises for its water supply system and a substantial claim was filed by Cherney and Berger against the city for damages.
In 1936, after the institution of such condemnation by the city, Mrs. Eagle brought this action to reform the extension agreement, vacate the judgment in the foreclosure action and grant her the right to redeem the premises and for an accounting. She claims that the extension agreement was actually executed by her sister, Mrs. Ettinger, and became effective, that it did not truly state the terms of payment as agreed upon by the parties, that the summons and complaint in the foreclosure action were never served upon her and that after such action was instituted Cherney and Berger agreed that if she would not defend the action they would bid in the property on the foreclosure sale and reconvey it to her.
Max Eagle and Mrs. Ettinger testified that the latter was present and signed the extension agreement. This was denied by the attorney who drew it, his secretary, and Cherney and Berger, and no copy signed by Mrs. Ettinger has been produced. An escrow receipt signed by the attorney and by Eagle himself indicates that only Cherney and Berger had then signed the proposed agreement and that it was still to be executed by Mrs. Ettinger in Florida. The credible evidence all indicates that Mrs. Ettinger did not sign the agreement. Eagle claims that the parties actually agreed that the first payment of principal and interest was to be made on October 10, 1929, instead of July 15,1929, as provided by the proposed agreement. The only evidence to substantiate this claim is the testimony of Eagle himself. The writing should control. When the foreclosure action was instituted the mortgagor was in default under both the second mortgage and the proposed extension, and the right to institute the foreclosure action was clearly established. In any event, the issue as to whether the extension agreement ever became effective was tendered and disposed of in the foreclosure action.
[477]*477The summons and complaint in the foreclosure action were served on the Eagles personally by the then chief of police of the village of Ellenville, who was a former State trooper and since then has become assistant superintendent of the State prison at Wallkill. He made the usual affidavit of service, kept a personal record of the same and recalled the occasion distinctly. The falsity of the Eagle testimony in this regard is clearly established by their claim that they later agreed with Cherney and Berger that they would not appear in the foreclosure action and that the latter were to bid in the property and reconvey it to Mrs. Eagle. No logical reason appears for the making of such agreement on the part of the mortgagees who were then foreclosing. There was no advantage to them in continuing their foreclosure action and immediately reconveying their property to Mrs. Eagle. This would have nullified the results of the foreclosure action. Here, again, the plaintiff has failed to produce any convincing evidence.
The Official Referee rejected all of plaintiff’s contentions. The great weight of the credible evidence sustains his findings, and the judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
267 A.D. 474, 46 N.Y.S.2d 785, 1944 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4755, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eagle-v-cherney-nyappdiv-1944.