Epstein v. Kroopf

218 A.D. 519, 218 N.Y.S. 644, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5971
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 3, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 218 A.D. 519 (Epstein v. Kroopf) 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
Epstein v. Kroopf, 218 A.D. 519, 218 N.Y.S. 644, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5971 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Young, J.

The action was originally brought by the plaintiff to recover from the defendants the amount paid on account of the purchase price of certain real property in Queens county, and the expense of the examination of title, to establish a lien therefor upon said premises, and to foreclose it. The defendant Laruffa was the owner of the property and in July, 1925, contracted with the defendant Kroopf to sell it to her, and she paid a deposit on account of the purchase price. By tins contract, Laruffa agreed to give a deed conveying a good title in fee simple to the premises with full covenants and warranty and free from all incumbrances, except certain restrictions and zoning regulations. On July 26, 1925, the defendant Kroopf contracted with the defendants Sherwood and Friedman to sell the premises to them for $6,000 which was paid by them at the time of the execution of the contract and they agreed to pay the additional sum of $2,400 in cash upon the [521]*521delivery of the deed. The defendant Kroopf, by this contract, agreed to give a good title, etc. On July 31, 1925, defendants Sherwood and Friedman, for value, assigned the contract to the defendant Hollander, and on July 31,1925, the defendant Hollander, for value, assigned it to the defendant Walfish. On August 8, 1925, the defendant Walfish, for value, assigned the contract to one Joshua S. Shapiro, as attorney, and Shapiro, as attorney, paid defendant Walfish $6,500. By this assignment the defendant Walfish agreed with Shapiro that, if the title was unmarketable, he would return to Shapiro the $6,500 paid, and in addition the fees for title examination. This assignment was taken by Shapiro, as attorney, for the benefit and on behalf of the plaintiff. Plaintiff had the title examined by the Title Guarantee and Trust Company at an expense of $101. By the agreement between defendant Kroopf and the defendants Sherwood and Friedman the deed was to be delivered on August 28, 1925, but, by stipulation in writing, the closing of title was adjourned to September fourth.

The complaint then alleges the readiness of plaintiff to perform the contract on her part and the failure of the defendant Kroopf to deliver the deed provided for in the contract, her attorney stating that he could not procure a deed from the record owner of the premises and that he was ready and willing to return the money paid to the defendant Kroopf upon the contract; that plaintiff has an equitable hen on the premises for the $6,500 paid on the purchase price and $101, the expense of examination of title, and the complaint demands judgment for these amounts and to foreclose the hen therefor.

It appears by the affidavit of the attorney for the defendant Laruffa that the defendant Laruffa moved to dismiss the complaint as to him for insufficiency, and on December 2, 1925, Mr. Justice Faber granted the motion and canceled the lis pendens upon the ground that, since there was no privity of. contract between plaintiff and defendant Laruffa, plaintiff could not have a conveyance from him and that the complaint stated no cause against him. The order of discontinuance and cancellation of the lis pendens was entered ex parte upon a stipulation between plaintiff’s attorney and the attorney for the defendant Laruffa.

The plaintiff then served an amended complaint. As claimed by his attorney, by inadvertence the name of Laruffa appeared in that amended complaint, as a defendant, but the relief demanded is only the recovery of the amount paid by plaintiff on the contract and the expense of examination of title. The allegations of the amended complaint are substantially the same as those contained in the original complaint except that no lien is claimed on the [522]*522premises and, in addition, it is alleged that the title is not marketable because the wife of Laruffa, who had an inchoate right of dower in the property, refused to release such right and that Laruffa was, therefore, unable to convey a marketable title in accordance with the contract.

The defendant Walfish interposed an answer to this amended complaint which contained certain denials and several separate defenses. The second and third defenses set up defendant’s discharge from liability by reason of the adjournment without his consent, and fraud by the attorney Shapiro in inserting in the assignment the covenant to return the money paid.

The fifth defense alleges the facts set forth in the amended complaint and further alleges that the defendant Laruffa failed and neglected to deliver a good and sufficient deed of the premises in question to the defendant Kroopf or to plaintiff, as provided in the contract between him and the defendant Kroopf, and that whatever rights, title, interest or property the defendant Kroopf had or possessed in the contract between her and Laruffa, and in the premises in question, reverted to the defendant Walfish and to the plaintiff and that they were subrogated and succeeded to the rights of the defendant Kroopf in said contract; that if, by reason of the default of Laruffa and the defendant Kroopf, the defendant Walfish is liable for plaintiff’s damage, the latter will be damaged in a like amount and that Laruffa and Kroopf are liable to the. defendant Walfish. It is further alleged that in the agreement between Laruffa and Kroopf it was provided, among other things, that all moneys paid on account for the purchase of said premises and for the reasonable expenses for examination of title were made liens thereon and that, by reason of the advancements and payments of money, the plaintiff and this defendant and the defendant Kroopf have a lien upon the said lands for such moneys.

The sixth defense alleges in substance that the defendant Kroopf has commenced an action against the defendant Laruffa to recover damages by reason of the breach of said contract by Laruffa and that said action is still pending and undetermined, and that this breach of said contract is the same for which the plaintiff in the present action seeks to recover damages and that the cause of action in the amended complaint herein and in the complaint in the action of Kroopf against Laruffa arise out of and relate to the same transaction and affect the same premises, and that the two actions should be tried at once and at the same time and consolidated so that the rights of all parties can be finally and fully determined in one action.

[523]*523This answer demands judgment that the amended complaint be dismissed or that, if it be found that plaintiff is entitled to recover, it be decreed that the moneys advanced by plaintiff and this defendant and the defendant Kroopf be declared a lien upon the premises in question and that such lien be foreclosed, etc.

The defendant, upon learning of the discontinuance of the action • as against Laruffa and the cancellation of the lis pendens, moved for an order vacating the order of discontinuance, etc., or, in the alternative, for an order that the said Laruffa be made a party defendant to this action, etc. This motion resulted in the order appealed from.

This appeal presents an extremely novel and interesting question.. That question is whether the assignee of a purchaser under a contract for the sale of lands, whose vendor is the purchaser of the same lands under a contract from the holder of the legal title, may have a vendee’s lien upon the premises for the payment made on account of the purchase price. To present the situation in its-, simplest form, the facts alleged are that Laruffa made a contract, with Kroopf to sell the premises in question.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
218 A.D. 519, 218 N.Y.S. 644, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5971, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/epstein-v-kroopf-nyappdiv-1926.