Granger v. . Crouch

86 N.Y. 494, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 245
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 25, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 86 N.Y. 494 (Granger v. . Crouch) 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
Granger v. . Crouch, 86 N.Y. 494, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 245 (N.Y. 1881).

Opinion

Finch, J.

An interesting question is presented by the facts in this case. The defendants sold to one Purdy, for a consideration of about $13,000, certain real estate in the city of Rochester, upon a contract, by the terms of .which the vendee was to pay and secure the purchase-price through a conveyance to the vendors of certain other real estate, and a bond and mortgage upon the lands purchased for $6,500, and paying the balance of about $3,200, in cash. When the parties came to carry the contract. into execution, the arrangement was modified by substituting for the cash payment the notes of the vendee, running for two. months and three months respectively, and secured by another bond and mortgage upon the property purchased. As a result, Purdy became the owner of the land, and the defendants held two several mortgages upon it, one for $6,500, which was payable, one-half in one year and the balance in two years; and another for about $3,200, payable in two and three months. . Both of these mortgages were recorded at the same moment and their lien was apparently concurrent. There was quite a *497 sharp dispute at the trial over an alleged agreement giving the larger mortgage priority, but the referee has found against the existence of any such agreement, and we must, therefore, assume that, at the date of the delivery of the mortgages, there was no contract expressed by which one lien was to have priority over, the other. Thus matters rested until about the time of the maturity of the notes, when Purdy again found himself unable to meet the liability which was close at hand. In this emergency he resorted to the plaintiff, Granger. He told the latter of his purchase, and described the property as worth $13,000 or $14,000; that he had given two mortgages on it “at the same time;” that one of these was to secure two notes which were about maturing; and proposed that Granger should take the notes and their collateral mortgage, and extend their time of payment for a year, offering in addition to pay a bonus of $150, for the accommodation. The plaintiff postponed an answer until the next day. In the meantime he went to the clerk’s office, and saw the record of the two mortgages, and that they were concurrent, neither having priority of lien over the other. He also went and examined the mortgaged property. On the next day Purdy called for his answer. Granger at first declined the proposition. Purdy then proposed to strengthen the security by giving a further collateral mortgage upon his real estate in Palmyra, the situation of which he described. Granger thereupon intimated a disposition to make the arrangement if he could buy the paper at a discount of ten per cent, and in the afternoon, at the office of his counsel, and after consultation with him, announced to Purdy that he would make the arrangement. The agreement thus made, and requiring only to be formally executed, was wholly between these parties, and intended for their mutual benefit and accommodation. Indeed, if Granger is to be taken as the witness detailing the facts correctly, he did not see Craig or the Crouches, who held the mortgages, until after the entire transaction in all its details was, executed and closed. How that was done we are told by Mr. Dunning who acted as attorney for Granger. He first drew the bond and mortgage *498 on. the Palmyra property which Purdy executed. Having Granger’s checks for the amount of each note, less the ten per cent, in his possession, as each matured, he met Craig at the bank where they had been discounted, paid over the checks, took the notes indorsed by Craig and Crouch “without recourse,” and an assignment to Granger of the $3,200 mortgage. This account of the transaction follows the version of the plaintiff and his attorney, and accords with the referee’s conclusions upon the facts. Its characteristic feature is the utter absence of any agreement or understanding with Craig and the Crouches, save only what is indicated by the character of the transaction, and the mode and manner of its execution. The assignment to Granger of the $3,200 mortgage contained an ordinary and usual provision, upon which, however, the conclusion of the referee is largely founded, and is in these words, viz.: “ And we do hereby make, constitute and appoint the said party of the second part our true and lawful attorney, irrevocable, in our name or otherwise, but at his own proper costs and charges, to have, use, and take all lawful ways and means for the recovery of said money and interest, and in case of payment to discharge the same as fully as we might or could do if these presents were not made.”

Out of this state of facts the question now arises as between Granger, the holder of the $3,200 mortgage, and Crouch, who is the holder of the $6,500 mortgage, which security, if either, has priority of lien. It is contended, on behalf of the plaintiff, that his mortgage is entitled to be first paid out of the proceeds of the property, and such is the, conclusion of the referee and of the General Term. It is claimed by the appellant that the $6,500 mortgage is entitled to priority, or, if not, that at least the two mortgages are to be treated as concurrent, and to share fro rata in the proceeds of the foreclosure.

The authorities in this State do not put the question beyond the domain of reason and reflection. They do little more than point out the way. They are plainly founded upon the idea that the decisive test in every case is the intention of the parties, either as actually expressed, or as derived from the natural *499 equity of the situation. In The Mechanics' Bank v. Bank of Niagara (9 Wend. 410) both the expressed intention and the natural equity were present. The Bank of Niagara owed the Bank of Hudson. The latter pressed for payment. The debtor bank responded by assigning a specified portion of a bond and mortgage which it held against a third person. In the assignment itself it expressly provided that the transfer should not destroy the right of the assignor to collect and receive the residue. There was here one mortgage and not two. The proviso plainly indicated an understood purpose to give priority to the assignee, and reserve to the assignor only the balance which might then remain; and this expressed intention accorded with the natural equity of the situation. The assignment was to pay a debt. It was sought to be paid in full, and expected to be received in full. If there was to be loss or shrinkage it fell justly upon the assignor. There was no shadow of equity in imposing it on the assignee. He was properly held entitled to be paid in full. In Stafford v. Van Rensselaer (9 Cow. 316) there was clear evidence of the intention of the parties that the mortgage to be given by Wright to Van Rensselaer was to have priority, and that the concurrent registry was accidental and a mistake; and the court further gave weight to Van Rensselaer’s equitable lien upon the land for the purchase-money.

The cases cited from the reports of other States seem, at first glance, to disregard the intention and the equity, and to establish an arbitrary rule. They determine that where there are several holders of notes or bonds secured by one mortgage, and such notes or bonds mature at different dates, those first falling due have priority of lien, for the reason that the power to first foreclose implies such priority. (Isett v. Lucas, 17 Iowa, 503; Funk v.

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Bluebook (online)
86 N.Y. 494, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/granger-v-crouch-ny-1881.