Gearon v. Kearney

22 Misc. 285, 50 N.Y.S. 26
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 22 Misc. 285 (Gearon v. Kearney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gearon v. Kearney, 22 Misc. 285, 50 N.Y.S. 26 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

Hirschberg, J.

Convenience will be subserved by the disr position of these cases together. Each is brought to foreclose a mortgage upon the same premises and in each a defense is in-' terposed by the defendants Dunkin and Greene asserting the prior equity of the same subsequently recorded mortgage. The real estate affécted by the three mortgages in question was conveyed .to the defendant James Kearney on the 15th of September, 1891, subject to two of the mortgages,. viz.: One for $1,800, given to George H. Roberts, January 9, 1884, an,d one for $1¿20Ó, given, to Jane J. Davenport,. April 24, 1889. At the time of1 the conveyance to Kearney, these mortgagees were still the owners of the mórtgages respectively. The conveyance to Kearney was without consideration, and was effected through an intermediary from the real owner, McCann, and for reasons not disclosed. The papers.were drawn by" an attorney, William"H. Nafis, and at the time of the transaction it was understood that he would secure a new loan on the property of $3,000, and with the proceeds would take up the two mortgages above mentioned. Such a loan was procured by him at that time from one Maria N. Anderson, and [287]*287a purchase-money mortgage for $3,000 was executed September 15, 1891, by Kearney to her. The money was paid by Mrs. Anderson to Rafis, and on the 3rd of October following Rafis paid to Roberts the amount of his mortgage, viz.: $1,800, and took from him an assignment of it to Mrs. Anderson, expressing the consideration of one dollar. This assignment was recorded Rovember 13, 1891. Mrs. Anderson knew nothing of the assignment to her of the Roberts mortgage. She in common with the other parties trusted Rafis implicitly, and he was accordingly-enabled to manipulate the securities as he pleased.

On April 12, 1893, Rafis paid Mrs. Anderson the full amount of her mortgage, and took from her an assignment to himself, both of the Roberts $1,800 mortgage and her own $3,000 mortgage. The assignment of the Roberts mortgage was for the expressed consideration of one dollar, and she says she signed' it because Rafis asked her to do so, and without any understanding or knowledge of what it was. On the 20th of April, 1893, Rafis sold and assigned to the defendants Maria S. Dunkin and Ella Y. Greene the $3,000 mortgage for its full face value, assuring them that it was a first lien on the property. ' The assignments of. this mortgage to Rafis and to said defendants were recorded the next day.

On January 12, 1894, Rafis paid to Mrs. Davenport the full amount of .her mortgage, $1,200, and took from her an assignment of it to himself dated that day, and expressing a consideration of one dollar. At that time, therefore, Rafis held unrecorded assignments of both the mortgages which were prior of record to that held by the defendants Dunkin and Greene.

On July 3, 1895, Rafis sold the Roberts mortgage to the plaintiff Pauline W. Squire for $1,800, and transferred it by an assignment to her dated that day, and which assignment, together -with the assignment of that mortgage to Rafis, was recorded July 16, 1895.

On September 25, 1895, Rafis sold the Davenport mortgage to the plaintiff Artlissa Y. Gearon as a $1,000 mortgage, and for that sum. Her husband and attorney, before consummating the purchase, searched the records, and also required and received from Kearney a verified certificate to the effect that the mortgage was a valid and subsisting lien as a second mortgage upon the premises, and that there was no legal or equitable defense to it. Rafis died in the month of October, 1896. On December [288]*28822, 18,96, the assignments to him and to Mrs. Gearon of the Davenport mortgage were recorded.

The defendants insist that both the prior mortgages were paid in fact by Rafis, and that they were, therefore, dead at the time they were transferred to the plaintiffs respectively; and that if they be considered as then legally revived by Rafis, neither could be negotiated to the injury of the holders of the third mortgage. This contention is based on the assumption that the money used by Rafis in paying Roberts and Mrs. Davenport was money be-' longing to Kearney, and that the intention of the parties was that these prior mortgages should be paid off and canceled. Assuming that the money used was Kearney’s, I think a purchaser' in good faith for value.would be protected in dealing with Rafis as the owner. The intention is to be gathered from the acts of the parties. It was certainly the act of the legal owner of the property which enabled Rafis to procure the possession of the mortgages and to invest himself with the indicia of ownership, and as between himself and a purchaser for value he would be estopped from disputing the validity of the title acquired by Rafis. As has been seen, he did not hesitate to certify under oath that one of the mortgages was a valid incumbrance, and subject to the other one, four years after the money was borrowed which it is claimed was used in paying them off. But even assuming that the intention was to pay off and discharge the prior mortgages, then the act of Rafis in procuring an assignment to himself was fraudulent, but that fact would not prevent him from giving a good title to a bona fide purchaser for value. As was said in Simpson v. Del Hoyo, 94 N. Y. 194, “ It is a familiar rule of law that a fraudulent purchaser of real and personal property obtains the legal title to the property purchased, and that he may convey a good title to any bona fide purchaser from him for value.” In that cas.e, it was accordingly held that the holder of a bond and mortgage concededly worthless and uncollectible in his hands could transfer it, and the purchaser for value without knowledge or notice of the defect could collect the security by foreclosure. See, also, the recent case of Wallach v. Schulze, 22 App. Div. 57, where it was held that a purchaser of a bond and mortgage from one who has procured an assignment by using the money of the mortgagor for that purpose has a superior equity to that of a' judgment creditor whose lien precedes the sale. The court said, page 62, “ There are cases, and without them there would be reason and equity, in favor of an attack by a creditor, if directly [289]*289made against a mortgagor, or the person to whom a mortgage had been assigned, such assignment having been procured with the money of the mortgagor; but that would be upon the theory, not that the person taking the assignment obtained an invalid title, but that the title which, upon the record, was legal and valid, was open to attack and voidable as against creditors. The title which Zimmerman obtained to the bond and mortgage by the assignment cannot be regarded as void. The most that can be asserted^ of it is that it was voidable or assailable at the instance of creditors. Having a good title, therefore, Zimmerman, before such attack was made, assigned it to the plaintiff. As evidence of the plaintiff’s good faith, he not only obtained the certificates from both Mrs. Juch and Zimmerman that the mortgage was a valid subsisting lien upon the premises; that there were no- defenses, and that the full amount called for in the mortgage was unpaid, hut he also obtained possession of the bond and mortgage, which was enforced by a complete record title in Zimmerman at the time of purchase. The equities of such a purchaser as the plaintiff, we think, are superior to those of a creditor who takes no action until a period subsequent to the purchase; and the right of such creditor to attack the title to the bond and mortgage while in Zimmerman’s hands is not available against one who purchased as did the plaintiff.”'

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 Misc. 285, 50 N.Y.S. 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gearon-v-kearney-nysupct-1898.