Fern v. Osterhout

11 A.D. 319
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 11 A.D. 319 (Fern v. Osterhout) 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
Fern v. Osterhout, 11 A.D. 319 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Herrick, J.:

The theory of the peculiar and superior lien of a purchase-money mortgage is, first, that it is equitable that the premises purchased should be the primary security for the payment of its own purchase price; and, second, that the deed of conveyance and the mortgage to secure the purchase price are each regarded as part and parcel of the same transaction, and that- no interval of time elapses between the giving of the deed and the giving of the mortgage during which any other claim or right can intervene and attach to the property. Therefore, it follows that the lien of a purchase-money mortgage, as such, extends no further than to the specific property whose purchase price is secured by the mortgage.

At the time George Fern purchased from James Fern his interest in the premises in question and gave him a purchase-money mortgage to secure the purchase price, he was already the owner of two-thirds of the farm, and the plaintiff had a right of dower therein, and by giving a mortgage upon the entire farm to secure the purchase price of one-third of it, and describing the mortgage as a purchase-money mortgage, the lien of the mortgage, as a purchase-money mortgage, was not extended to the other two-thirds of the farm, and the dower right of the plaintiff rendered subordinate to the mortgage.

And assuming that George Fern borrowed money of the defendant Marble for the purpose of paying the mortgage to his brother James, and that thereby Marble became equitably subrogated to [323]*323the rights of James Fern, and that the mortgage given to him to secure the payment of the money so borrowed took the place of the mortgage to James Fern ás a purchase-money mortgage, he could equitably acquire no greater lien or interest than James Fern possessed by virtue of his mortgage, and assuming for the purpose of this appeal that it was equitably a purchase money mortgage, it was a lien as such upon only one-third of the premises in question.

Courts have always been tender of the right of dower, and solicitous to protect it. Coke said “that three things be favored in law — life, liberty and dower.” (1 Coke upon Lift. [2d Am. ed.] 14.)

The right of dower can only be cut off or barred by the clear unequivocal act of the dowress herself, or by proceedings where such right of dower is clearly and legally brought in question.

In this action it is claimed that the proceedings in foreclosure, under which the premises were sold, and to which proceedings the plaintiff was made a party, extinguished her right of dower.

It has been held that an action of foreclosure is not a proper proceeding in which to determine the right of dower, and that a judgment in such an action, wherein the widow is made a party, and in the complaint in which no specific allegations are made as to her dower, does not bar her right thereto. (Lewis v. Smith, 9 N. Y. 502; Merchants’ Bank v. Thomson, 55 id. 7; Nelson v. Brown, 144 id. 384.)

In the case of Nelson v. Brown (sugra) the husband of the plaintiff left a will whereby he devised and bequeathed unto his widow the use, income, profits and rents of all his real estate during her natural life, to be enjoyed, accepted and received by her in lieu of dower. She xvas made a party defendant in a proceeding to foreclose a mortgage executed by her husband, in his lifetime, but in the execution of which mortgage she did not join. The complaint in foreclosure contained a general allegation to the effect that the defendant (the widow) had, or claimed to have, some interest in the mortgaged premises which had accrued subsequently to the lien of the mortgage. She did not appear or answer in the foreclosure proceedings.

The judgment in foreclosure provided that the premises should be sold “subject to the dower therein of the defendant, Jenette [324]*324Nelson,” following a finding of fact and conclusion of law to that effect. In speaking of the effect of the judgment rendered therein, and the sale had thereupon, the court said: The proceedings in the foreclosure action were ineffectual to determine the question of the plaintiff’s right to dower in the mortgaged lands. * * "* When, after her husband’s death, the action of foreclosure was brought, though she was made a party defendant, the complaint tendered no issue upon her right to dower. The general allegation to the effect that the defendant had, or claimed to have, some interest in the mortgaged premises, which had accrued subsequently to the lien of the mortgage, could have no reference or relation to her dower right, if it existed; for it would have been a right paramount to that of the mortgagee. It is not proper to say that the allegation had no meaning as to Mrs. Nelson ; for if she took only a life estate under the will of her husband, that would have been an interest which had accrued subsequently to the lien of the mortgage. If she accepted the provision for a life estate in the testator’s real property in lieu of her dower, her interest in the mortgaged premises was subordinate to the mortgagee’s. The question of the competency of adjudicating in foreclosure proceedings upon a dower right has been passed upon in the case of Merchants' Bank v. Thomson (55 N. Y. 7).

“ The wife, there, did not join in the mortgage; but she was made a party defendant in the action to foreclose it, though there was no averment in the complaint relating to her. Folger, Ch. J., in the course of his opinion said : ' A foreclosure action is not the proper' mode to litigate rights claimed, in priority or hostility to the mortgage. A judgment passing upon them is erroneous. A person claiming dower by title paramount to the mortgage cannot be brought into court in such a suit to contest the validity of her dower. The position is the same as if she had not been a party to the foreclosure action.’ That opinion was founded upon the inadequacy of the proceeding to determine the question of dower; not only because of the non-existence of any issue respecting the dower right, but because the wife could not be compelled to come into such a proceeding and there to litigate her rights. It is very evident, as no issue had been tendered nor made as to Mrs. Nelson’s dower right, and as the question was not one which was essential or [325]*325material to be decided in the foreclosure action, that no valid adjudication thereupon could be made.”

In the cases cited, it will be observed that the persons subsequently claiming dower did not appear or answer, and the proceedings being proceedings where it was not necessary for the purposes of the action to determine any question of dower, and being proceedings wherein it was improper to litigate a claim of dower, the dowress' did not waive her rights, as such, by not appearing or answering in the proceedings where those rights were not necessarily or properly to be passed upon.

In this case, however, it is claimed that the complaint in the foreclosure action was sufficient to charge the plaintiff here with knowl edge that her right of dower would be barred by the judgment sought. This claim is based upon the fact that in the complaint in the foreclosure action occurs this language:

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Bluebook (online)
11 A.D. 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fern-v-osterhout-nyappdiv-1896.