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

246 A.D. 720

This text of 246 A.D. 720 (Farbro Corp. v. A. F. A. Realty Corp.) 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
Farbro Corp. v. A. F. A. Realty Corp., 246 A.D. 720 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

The following is the opinion of the Special Term:

Conway, J.

On or before August 5, 1925, one Nathan Cohen, as the seller, entered into a contract with defendant A. F. A. Realty Corporation, as the purchaser, for the sale of certain real estate, under the terms of which the deed was to be delivered on September 28, 1925. Prior to the latter date defendant paid Cohen the sum of $8,000 on account of the purchase price. At the time the above agreement was executed title to the property in question was held, not by Cohen, but by a certain Loumo Realty & Mortgage Co., Inc. On or about August 15, 1925, the latter corporation contracted to sell the premises to Cohen. Under the provisions of that contract Cohen agreed that $35,000 of the purchase price should be paid by the execution and delivery by him of a purchase-money bond and mortgage to the Loumo Realty & Mortgage Company. On or about November 13, 1925, Cohen assigned his interest in the contract to the Broadway Magnolia Realty Corporation, which company apparently was Cohen’s dummy; and upon that date the owner of the premises conveyed title to Cohen’s assignee, which in turn gave back two purchase-money bonds and mortgages, each in the sum of $18,750. On November 4,1926, the two mortgages were consolidated into one, and the principal sum due upon the mortgage, as thus consolidated, was reduced to the sum of $35,000. On December 1, 1925, the Loumo Company assigned the bond and mortgage to the Marsol Mortgage Corporation.

On or about December 2,1925, Cohen commenced an action against the A. F. A. Realty Corporation to compel it to specifically perform its contract for the purchase of the premises. In defense thereto the A. F. A. Realty Corporation alleged, among [721]*721other things, that Cohen was not and never had been the owner in fee of the property and that he was never able to give a good and marketable title. In addition thereto the A. F. A. Realty Corporation counterclaimed for a return of the down payment of $8,000, which it had advanced to Cohen on account of its contract of purchase, and prayed that a vendee’s lien for that amount, together with interest and costs, be impressed upon the premises.

The Broadway Magnolia Realty Corporation, the then owner of the premises, was made a party to the action upon the assumption that it was Cohen’s dummy. In connection with its counterclaim the A. F. A. Realty Corporation caused to be filed a lis pendens on or about April 3, 1926.

Upon the trial of the foregoing action the trial court rendered judgment on February 14, 1927, in favor of the defendant A. F. A. Realty Corporation dismissing Cohen’s complaint and sustaining the counterclaim. Upon appeal that judgment was reversed by the Appellate Division, and judgment of specific performance was directed in Cohen’s favor. The Appellate Division also directed that the lis pendens which had been filed by the A. F. A. Realty Corporation be vacated and canceled. On May 7,1928, the latter company filed a notice of appeal to the Court of Appeals. During the pendency of such appeal one Harry Farber and one Louis Farber purchased the property in question from the Broadway Magnolia Realty Corporation. Under its contract the Farbers agreed to pay a purchase price of $55,000, of which $30,000 was to be paid by taking the property subject to the consolidated mortgage which has been mentioned heretofore. The evidence adduced herein satisfactorily discloses that on the date of the closing of title, to wit, September 28,1928, the Farbers fully satisfied the mortgage by the payment of $30,000 by means of a certified cheek. It further appears herein that they paid the mortgage in total ignorance of the rights of the A. F. A. Realty Corporation, and in so doing relied upon the report of a title company which failed to disclose the existence of the lis pendens filed by the A. F. A. Realty Corporation.

Subsequent to the purchase of the property by the Farbers, the Court of Appeals on February 14,1929, reversed the judgment of the Appellate Division in the action of Cohen against the A. F. A. Realty Corporation, and sustained the latter’s counterclaim in so far as it demanded a money judgment. (See 250 N. Y. 262.) Upon defendant’s motion an amended remittitur provided that: “It is hereby adjudged that the A. F. A. Realty Corp. have a lien on the premises described in the complaint for the amount of said judgment * * * without prejudice, however, 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.” (See 250 N. Y. 588.)

Subsequent to the foregoing determination, plaintiff herein, which derives its title from the Farbers, brought an action against the A. F. A. Realty Corporation upon the assumption that the lien on the property in favor of the latter constituted a cloud on the plaintiff’s title. The question in that case was whether the Farbers had constructive notice at the time of their purchase of the property of the pend-ency of the A. F. A. Realty Corporation’s counterclaim against Cohen and the Broadway Magnolia Realty Corporation. Such question depended further upon the proposition whether the notice of pendency, filed by the A. F. A. Realty Corporation, was effectually vacated pursuant to the judgment of the Appellate Division in the action of Cohen against the A. F. A. Realty Corporation. For reasons [722]*722immaterial to the present consideration, the Court of Appeals in the previous action brought by the present plaintiff decided that the notice of pendency had not been effectually vacated at the time that the Farbers purchased the property and that in consequence they took the property with constructive notice of the vendee’s lien, to which the A. F. A. Realty Corporation was entitled.

In accordance with such determination the court originally directed a dismissal of plaintiff’s complaint in its action to remove the cloud of the lien. (See 261 N. Y. 24.) Subsequently, however, it substituted in the remittitur a provision that a new trial be granted (See 261 N. Y. 621), and it is the trial thereof which has come on to be heard before the present court.

It is to be observed that upon the first trial plaintiff sought to challenge, in so far as its rights were concerned, the very existence and validity of the A. F. A. Realty Corporation’s lien upon the property in question. The above decision of the Court of Appeals conclusively determined that the A. F. A. Realty Corporation was and is in fact possessed of a valid lien upon the property. Under an amendment to its complaint, however, plaintiff, accepting the validity of the lien, now seeks an adjudication respecting the priority thereof. It is plaintiff’s theory under the principles of subrogation, that the consolidated mortgage paid off by its grantors, the Farbers, when the latter purchased the property, should be reinstated in favor of the plaintiff and be adjudged paramount and superior to the lien held by the A. F. A. Realty Corporation.

It is a well-known principle that whenever a person has advanced money to pay off an incumbrance which is thereupon discharged of record, equity will cancel the satisfaction thereof and revive and enforce the lien in favor of the one advancing the money, where such procedure is necessary in order to prevent injustice or to, prevent a subsequent incumbrancer from obtaining an unjust preference. (See T. G. & T. Co. v. Haven, 196 N. Y. 487; Barnes v. Mott, 64 id. 397; Chite v. Emmerich, 26 Hun, 10; affd., 99 N. Y.

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Related

Clute v. . Emmerich
2 N.E. 6 (New York Court of Appeals, 1885)
Barnes v. . Mott
21 Am. Rep. 625 (New York Court of Appeals, 1876)
Cohen v. A. F. A. Realty Corp.
165 N.E. 285 (New York Court of Appeals, 1929)
Title Guarantee Trust Co. v. . Haven
89 N.E. 1082 (New York Court of Appeals, 1909)
Farbro Corp. v. A. F. A. Realty Corp.
184 N.E. 481 (New York Court of Appeals, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
246 A.D. 720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farbro-corp-v-a-f-a-realty-corp-nyappdiv-1935.