Farbro Corp. v. A. F. A. Realty Corp.

184 N.E. 481, 261 N.Y. 24, 1933 N.Y. LEXIS 1252
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 10, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 184 N.E. 481 (Farbro Corp. v. A. F. A. Realty Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farbro Corp. v. A. F. A. Realty Corp., 184 N.E. 481, 261 N.Y. 24, 1933 N.Y. LEXIS 1252 (N.Y. 1933).

Opinion

Lehman, J.

In 1926 Nathan Cohen, a defendant in this action, brought an action against the defendant A. F. A. Realty Corporation for specific performance *27 of its contract for the purchase of a parcel of real property in the county of Nassau. The defendant interposed an answer, in which it set up a counterclaim for the return of $8,000 which it had paid on account of the purchase price, and asked that it be adjudged to have a lien upon the premises for the said sum of $8,000, with interest, and that said lien be foreclosed and the premises sold to satisfy the hen. The defendant then filed a notice of pendency of action, as permitted by section 125 of the Civil Practice Act.

After a trial at Special Term, judgment was rendered in favor of the defendant A. F. A. Realty Corporation dismissing the complaint and granting the rehef prayed for in the counterclaim. Upon appeal that judgment was reversed by the Appellate Division, and judgment of specific performance was directed in favor of the plaintiff in that action.

The defendant in that action appealed to this court. Before the appeal was argued the owner of the real property sold it to a stranger, and title had passed to the Farbro Corporation. The owner, by voluntary conveyance to a stranger, had made specific performance impossible of the original contract of sale. For that reason this court reversed the judgment of the Appellate Division (Cohen v. A. F. A. Realty Corp., 250 N. Y. 262), and ordered judgment in favor of the defendant against the plaintiff for the amount of the deposit. The judgment entered upon the remittitur from this court was a money judgment for the amount of the deposit with interest and costs. It did not adjudge that the defendant had a lien upon the real property for the amount of that deposit. Upon the defendant’s motion the remittitur was amended by adding: “It is hereby adjudged that the A. F. A. Realty Corp. have a hen on the premises described in the complaint for the amount of said judgment and judgment of foreclosure and sale on said hen as provided in the judgment of the Supreme Court to be entered hereon, without prejudice, however, *28 to the right of any purchaser for value and in good faith to litigate the claim that the lien as to such purchaser is invalid.” (250 N. Y. 588.)

The subsequent purchaser from the plaintiff, in the action for specific performance, was not a party to that action. The judgment enforcing the hen was none the less binding upon the purchaser, if the notice of pendency of action filed by the defendant, who set up in its answer a counterclaim for a hen on the property, remained effective, as constructive notice to any purchaser from the owner of the property, pending an appeal from a judgment in favor of the owner. (Civ. Pr. Act, §§ 121, 125.) Whether the judgment would be binding upon one who was not a party to the action could not be determined in the action itself, but so long as the question remained open, the judgment constituted at least a cloud on the purchaser’s title.

The Farbro Corporation derives title from the purchaser. It has brought this action to remove that cloud and to enjoin the A. F. A. Realty Corporation from attempting to enforce the judgment against the premises or against the plaintiff. A notice of pendency may be filed by the plaintiff in any action brought to recover a judgment affecting the title to real property (Civ. Pr. Act, § 120), and a defendant who sets up in his answer a counterclaim demanding a similar judgment has the same right, and for such purpose the defendant fifing such a notice is regarded as a plaintiff and the plaintiff is regarded as a defendant ” (Civ. Pr. Act, § 125). No bond is required to make the notice of pendency of action effective, and until the action is ‘‘ settled, discontinued or abated, or final judgment is rendered therein against the party fifing the notice, and the time to appeal therefrom has expired,” the notice may be canceled only by an order of the court made upon proof which satisfies the court that adequate relief can be secured to the party fifing the same by a deposit of money or in the *29 discretion of the court by the giving of an undertaking ” (Civ. Pr. Act, §§ 123 and 124). In the present action, as we have said, a final judgment was rendered upon the decision of the Appellate Division against the defendant filing the notice of pendency, but before the time to appeal therefrom had expired an appeal was taken to this court. The order of reversal by the Appellate Division contained an adjudication that the defendant A. F. A. Realty Corporation has no hen or claim against the real property. The judgment of reversal entered by the County Clerk upon that order added an unauthorized provision that it is adjudged, ordered and decreed that the notice of pendency of action herein filed on the third day of April, 1926, be and the same hereby is vacated and canceled.” For some reason, not relevant now, the clerk of the county did not act upon that provision of the judgment, but the owner of the property, after the notice of appeal was served, procured ex parte an order from a justice of the Supreme Court directing the clerk of the county of Nassau to vacate and cancel the notice of pendency of action, and the clerk of the county thereupon marked upon the notice the words: “ Cancelled by order filed the 12th day of July, 1928. Thomas S. Cheshire, County Clerk.” In the affidavit upon which the order was obtained, the affiant did not apprise the court of the fact that an appeal was then pending. The order of cancellation was not served upon the party filing the notice at any time. There is no authority to make such an order, and an ex parte order made without authority is certainly void. The notice of pendency still remained on file. The invalidity of the order of cancellation of the notice appeared on the face of the order itself. The notation on the notice that it was canceled by order of the court could have no greater validity than the order referred to in that notation. A purchaser relying upon the notation of cancellation thus received notice at the same time of the invalidity *30 of the cancellation. Section 123 itself provides that “ The cancellation must be made by a no"te to that effect, on the margin of the record, referring to the order.”

It is true that the rules that we have stated above are subject to one exception. The Legislature has provided in section 586 of the Civil Practice Act that

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Bluebook (online)
184 N.E. 481, 261 N.Y. 24, 1933 N.Y. LEXIS 1252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farbro-corp-v-a-f-a-realty-corp-ny-1933.