Fox v. Salzano
This text of 136 N.Y.S. 699 (Fox v. Salzano) 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.
Opinions
The plaintiff sues to foreclose a mortgage on real estate in the city of New York, made by one John Di Mattia on April 16, 1909. Among the allegations of the complaint is one to the effect:
“That the defendants (of whom appellant is one) have or claim to have some interest in or lien upon the said mortgaged premises, or- some part thereof, which interest or lien, if any, is subject and subordinate to the lien of the safd mortgage held by plaintiff.”
This is the usual clause inserted in complaints in foreclosure cases, and its purpose and effect is to foreclose and cut off the defendants from thereafter asserting a claim or lien superior to the lien of plaintiff’s mortgage. The defendant, by her guardian ad litem, controverted this allegation of the complaint, and set up in her answer a prior mortgage upon the same property given to her by her father before the execution of the mortgage held by plaintiff.
The facts, which the court refused to find, are undisputed, and are as follows: On April 20,1908, John Di Mattia executed and delivered to appellant, then an infant 17 years of age, a bond for $1,000 with a mortgage to secure the same covering the same premises afterwards mortgaged to plaintiff. The mortgage was recorded in the register’s office on July 1, 1908. The precise consideration for this bond and mortgage was not shown, because the trial court refused to receive evidence of the conversation between the appellant and her father when the delivery was made. It does appear, however, that the bond and mortgage was delivered on the occasion of appellant’s marriage, and it may perhaps be inferred that it was given as a wedding gift or settlement. On July 10, 1908, at her father’s request, and while she was still a minor, she executed a satisfaction piece of said mortgage, which was recorded in the register’s office on October 19, 1908. The mortgage was thereupon discharged of record, and appeared as so discharged when plaintiff’s mortgage was executed. It appears that appellant received from her father, in exchange for the surrender of the bond and the execution of the satisfaction piece, an undivided' one-third interest in other premises then belonging' to her father, and known in this case as the “brick house.” The guardian ad litem of the appellant has deemed it his duty to set up the mortgage executed to appellant as an existing lien superior to the lien of plaintiff’s mortgage, and to disaffirm, in behalf of his ward, her execution of the satisfaction piece. He expressed on the trial the appellant’s willingness to reConvey the interest in the brick house, but such an offer was necessarily futile because the appellant, being at the time of the trial still an infant, could not make a valid conveyance.
The judgment appealed from must be reversed, and a new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
MCLAUGHLIN, MILLER, and DOWLING, JJ„ concur. •
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
136 N.Y.S. 699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fox-v-salzano-nyappdiv-1912.