Elmhorst v. Maziroff

176 A.D. 145, 161 N.Y.S. 1029, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8356
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 8, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 176 A.D. 145 (Elmhorst v. Maziroff) 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
Elmhorst v. Maziroff, 176 A.D. 145, 161 N.Y.S. 1029, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8356 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Thomas, J.:

Mrs. Fint, who died November 14, 1907, owned a bond and mortgage given by Maziroff upon purchasing land. He conveyed to Fidler on June 11, 1906. Roehr, Fint’s lawyer, obtained the bond and mortgage upon the pretense of paying a tax on it,, and assigned it to Remsen, forging Fint’s mark, and, as a notary public, certifying to a false acknowledgment on July 24, 1906. The assignment was recorded July 31, 1906. Remsen paid nothing, but took the bond and mortgage with other assignments to the end that he, Roehr, and Montgomery, might turn them over to the Montauk Brewing Company, of which Roehr became president and Remsen secretary. For money advanced the securities were assigned to defendant Heffron on October 17, 1906. Mrs. Fint learned in April, 1907, [147]*147that Roehr had absconded, and in May, 1907, of the record of the assignment of the mortgage to Remsen, and, of course, she then knew that the assignment was a forgery. Her daughters and executrices had similar knowledge. They put the matter in the hands of a lawyer, and upon discovery of his errancy, another lawyer was retained, but nothing was done until this action was begun, March 10, 1915. Interest was received on November 2, 1906, through Roehr. The next interest day was May 1, 1907, but no one went to look after it, save that a daughter visited Roehr’s office, where it was discovered that he had gone. But May 1,1907, was an important day. Not only was the interest then due, but $1,500 of the principal was payable, and the same was paid on April 30,1907, to Heffron by Fidler. I cannot discover an act done or effort made to bring the matter home to anybody interested until this action was begun, and Heffron, as found, did not know of the forgery before the fall of 1914. Meantime, Fidler paid the interest to Heffron, and the brewing company went out of business, leaving Heffron without recourse. The appellants’ contention is that such passivity was plaintiffs’ privilege; that neither Mrs. Fint nor her plaintiffs owed any duty to Fidler to prevent payment to Heffron, or to Heffron so that he could look to the brewing company. The evidence does not seem to show that Fint or her daughters discovered the forgery in time to avert the payments of May 1, 1907, to Heffron, but the owners had full knowledge of the forgery and could have warned Fidler against the payment of interest subsequent to that date. The first question is whether the plaintiffs’ non-action, such as it was, precludes plaintiffs as to Heffron, who lost his recourse to the brewery company. Heffron relied upon the forged assignments and not on the silence of the owners or their failure to disclaim the authority of Roehr; but had the owners declared the forgery, Heffron might have been convinced of it and pursued the then existing and responsible brewing company. If, now, a mortgagee learns of a forged assignment of her securities and takes ho steps to notify the assignee or even the owner of the equity, does she thereby affirm the forged assignment? Remsen was not a real purchaser. She owed him no duty. But he was potent to sell to an [148]*148innocent person. What duty did she owe to somebody who might so purchase from him, the brewing company as it resulted? She could not apprehend what disposition Remsen would make of the property or to whom. She knew in May, 1907, of the record of the assignment to Remsen. Did her duty prompt her to some litigation or notification or proclamation, lest somebody should buy of Remsen ? The law cast no such duty on the owner. Indeed, it was impracticable unless notice were given to Fidler. How could he have averted purchase from Remsen, unless perchance the brewing company of Heffron had come to him to make inquiry before purchasing. But that is quite too remote. I discover no judicial suggestion that the owner of a mortgage delivered by an agent, holding it for other purpose, but forging an assignment of it, should consider that a purchaser would be apt to consult the owner of the equity, and that, in duty towards all possible purchasers, the owner should advise the owner of the land. I am not now discussing whether a duty is owing to the landowner. Neither was it the duty of the plaintiffs to bring an action to cancel the record of the assignment, or to watch for succeeding records of assignments lest some one, like Heffron, should purchase, and, unapprised of the forgery, should lose opportunity to collect of his assignor .the money paid for the assignment. Heffron, neither as one of the mass of men who might buy, nor as the actual purchaser, could demand that the owner of the stolen bond and mortgage should identify him, and, having discovered, should inform him of the forgery, to the end that, if so inclined, he could collect a claim against his assignor. If that duty was owing the brewing company, if it was owing Heffron, it was owing to all others who might purchase. To what unending publication of the wrong and to what continuing warnings were the plaintiffs compelled ? What private research was imposed upon the victim of the forgery lest some person should purchase from Remsen, or should suffer from such purchase ? Fint and her daughters knew that Roehr had set the securities afloat and that they were subjects of repeated transfers. But the papers were not negotiable instruments, and no title could be traced through the forged assignment... I do'not find when the plaintiffs learned [149]*149that Heffron had purchased the securities, or the relation of that date to the dissolution of the brewing company, but whenever it was the plaintiffs were not moved to save him from loss. To create estoppel in pais there must be both duty and opportunity to speak, and one is not penalized for silence towards the world at large lest someone should come forth and purchase to his loss. The hazard is his, not that of one from whom the stolen property was taken. The decisions may be noted. It is not pretended that the- title can rest on the forged assignment of the bond and mortgages (Nash v. Moore, 165 App. Div. 67), or that the record of the forged assignment helps the purchaser. (Harden v. Dorthy, 160 N. Y. 39.) Therefore, Heffron would find an available estoppel in pais in the long time silence of the plaintiffs concerning their misfortune. But passivity by. persons in plaintiffs’ situation is not legal laches. The victim may remain speechless and at rest unless asked to affirm or to deny, when failure to speak may be equivalent to an affirmation of the transaction. In Rothschild v. Title Guarantee & Trust Co. (204 N. Y. 458, 462) a woman discovered a year later than the event that her son had forged her name to a bond and mortgage. The court decided that silence with knowledge did not estop her from impeaching the act, but that two payments of interest by her did. The court said: “Her silence instigated no action and caused no wrong. A fraudulent purpose or a fraudulent result lies at the basis of the doctrine of equitable estoppel through silence or inaction.” It may be added that negligence may be an equivalent to fraud. (Trenton Banking ' Co. v. Duncan, 86 1ST. Y. 221.) In the case at bar Heffron did not buy the mortgage induced by the owner’s silence. He purchased it before she had knowledge that it was negotiated by forgery. If she had spoken later arid he had believed her, he could attempt to recover of the brewing company. But that would be extrication from a difficulty, not an inducement to it. The plaintiffs were not required to minimize his damage. In Leather Manufacturers’ Bank v. Morgan (117 U. S. 96

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Bluebook (online)
176 A.D. 145, 161 N.Y.S. 1029, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elmhorst-v-maziroff-nyappdiv-1916.