The Assistant Vice-Chancellor
The objection made to the complainants paper title to the mortgage set forth in the bill, is obviated by the production of the letters testamentary issued to Mary Green. This makes the legal title to the mortgage complete in the three complainants who filed the bill originally.
The question as to the abatement of the suit by Mrs. Green’s death, during its pendency, so far as her third part of the mortgage is concerned, was first made at the hearing; and upon the surviving complainants, undertaking to give effect to the rights of her legal representative, (such rights in no manner affecting the defendants,) the defect may be cured by a suitable provision in the decree. (Harvey v. Cooke, 4 Russell, 34 ; 1 Daniell’s Ch. Pr. 389, 390.)
As to the trust in the mortgage money, which is claimed to have existed from the inception of the mortgage, I find no satisfactory evidence, that the mortgagor was informed of it, during the life of T. R. Green and I will first examine the case, as if this bill were filed by the executrix of T. R. Green, to foreclose the mortgage as a part of his estate. Before doing this, I will remark that under any aspect of the case, I do not discover any design to defraud, or any wrongful proceeding in reference to the mortgage, or its ownership. If T. R. Green were a trustee, as is insisted by the complainants, it was highly proper for him to provide for the contingency of his death, by indorsing upon or [309]*309attaching to the securities, some written testimonial that they were not his own property; and he may well have deemed that it was a matter of entire indifference to the mortgagor, whether the debt belonged to him, or to his mother and sisters, so long as the .proper credits were given upon the mortgage. And although the complainant’s title under the trust, may have been sufficient to have foreclosed the mortgage in equity, without an assignment, yet their legal title was defective, and it is no impeachment of their equity, that it was deemed prudent to unite both by an assignment. I am not to presume that they or their legal advisers were so ignorant of the law, as to suppose that the formal assignment would impair or alter any prior rights or equities of the mortgagor, or of those claiming under him.
The defence set up in both of the answers is the same. The defendants deny that the whole principal sum is due on the mortgage, and they charge that sundry large payments of money, have been made at different times by the mortgagor to T. R. Green, or to some one for his use, on account of the principal and interest of the mortgage, besides the payments admitted in the bill. They are ignorant of the particulars and amounts of such payments, but one defendant believes they exceed $1500, and the other is informed that they will reduce the amount due on the mortgage to $900.
Now the whole controversy in this respect arises upon testimony, not of payments on account of the mortgage, but of three sums of money, which came into the hands of Mr. Green, from the mortgagor, and which it is claimed the latter had a right to set off against the mortgage. Two of those sums, so far from being a payment on the mortgage, were paid to Mr. Green for entirely different purposes, But the defendants insist as to all these sums, that they remained in Green’s hands, after the object for which they were placed there had been accomplished, that Green was thereupon liable to account for the same to the mortgagor, and therefore the law applies the same to the bond and mortgage.
There is a wide distinction between a payment and a set off, and I am not aware of any rule of law which will apply distinct debts due from and to the same parties, as a payment of each [310]*310other, unless by the positive assent of both parties, of by proof of a state of facts, from which such assent is clearly inferrible. In this case, neither of these things exist. There is an attempt to imply an assent or acquiescence on the part of Mr. Green, but the inference is fully rebutted by the existing and increasing indebtedness of Storm the mortgagor, to Green "and to Green and Mitchell, on simple contract. It is not to be presumed that he would apply these moneys on a mortgage debt, while his sole and partnership claims against Storm, were unpaid, and accumulating. The inference is also repelled, as to the largest sum, by the fact that it was paid to Mr. Green, in a suit pending or about to be commenced, and which went to the court for the correction of errors ; and no lawyer would be likely to apply that money to any purpose, after the suit was disposed of, until his costs and charges of the litigation were paid.
To test further the defendant’s claim that these were payments, suppose that Storm, after the Wes'tervelt bond was given up, had sued T. R. Green, for the $1000, deposited ; and Green had pleaded the general issue or payment, relying upon the production of Storm’s bond and mortgage, and the application of the sum as a payment on the same. His defence would have failed beyond all doubt, upon Storm’s proving that the $1000, was deposited for a special purpose which had been accomplished, and which had no connection with the bond and mortgage. In such an action, nothing short of a plea or notice of set off, would have enabled Green to avail himself of the bond and mortgage as a defence.
It is thus very apparent that the defendants in this suit, have not set up in their answer, the defence to which their testimony is directed. This court is as much restricted, as any other, to the issues made by the pleadings; and while it endeavors to avoid technical and narrow grounds of objection, it cannot without losing sight of essential principles, admit evidence of a different case from that pleaded. It cannot allow one who has pleaded a set off, to prove a payment, any more than it can permit evidence of a trust, to substantiate a charge of fraud. In Roosevelt v. The Bank of Niagara, (Hopk. R. 579,) affirmed on ap[311]*311peal, (9 Cowen, 409,) the demand of the mortgagor was allowed as a set off, in express terms, and it was claimed in that form.
I must decide against the defence, assuming it to have been proved as it was claimed at the hearing. ■
In reference to the costs, as to which a distinct point was made, it is necessary to look into the testimony to the extent of ascertaining the propriety of the course pursued in the examiner’s office.
The first item claimed in the defendants proofs, is $288 75, received by Mr. Green for Storm, of Samuel Swartwout in January, 1837. There is no direct testimony that Green received this, but the defendants seek to infer it from a statement made by him, in which he charges himself with the principal sum of $4500, on which the $288 75, was the interest, and it was payable in and by the same security with the principal. But this inference fails, because the statement being the only evidence, that he received any part of it, cannot be stretched to cover any more than it admits. The more just inference from Swartwout’s testimony, and the statement is, that Storm himself received the $288 75.
Next is $1000, which Mr. Green retained out of the Swartwout fund, “ as security against his signing Storm’s bond, to J. Westervelt sheriff, to be retained (by Green,) until the event of Sears’s application.”
On this subject, the proof is very defective. A paper is made an exhibit, which purports to be this bond, but its execution is not proved.
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The Assistant Vice-Chancellor
The objection made to the complainants paper title to the mortgage set forth in the bill, is obviated by the production of the letters testamentary issued to Mary Green. This makes the legal title to the mortgage complete in the three complainants who filed the bill originally.
The question as to the abatement of the suit by Mrs. Green’s death, during its pendency, so far as her third part of the mortgage is concerned, was first made at the hearing; and upon the surviving complainants, undertaking to give effect to the rights of her legal representative, (such rights in no manner affecting the defendants,) the defect may be cured by a suitable provision in the decree. (Harvey v. Cooke, 4 Russell, 34 ; 1 Daniell’s Ch. Pr. 389, 390.)
As to the trust in the mortgage money, which is claimed to have existed from the inception of the mortgage, I find no satisfactory evidence, that the mortgagor was informed of it, during the life of T. R. Green and I will first examine the case, as if this bill were filed by the executrix of T. R. Green, to foreclose the mortgage as a part of his estate. Before doing this, I will remark that under any aspect of the case, I do not discover any design to defraud, or any wrongful proceeding in reference to the mortgage, or its ownership. If T. R. Green were a trustee, as is insisted by the complainants, it was highly proper for him to provide for the contingency of his death, by indorsing upon or [309]*309attaching to the securities, some written testimonial that they were not his own property; and he may well have deemed that it was a matter of entire indifference to the mortgagor, whether the debt belonged to him, or to his mother and sisters, so long as the .proper credits were given upon the mortgage. And although the complainant’s title under the trust, may have been sufficient to have foreclosed the mortgage in equity, without an assignment, yet their legal title was defective, and it is no impeachment of their equity, that it was deemed prudent to unite both by an assignment. I am not to presume that they or their legal advisers were so ignorant of the law, as to suppose that the formal assignment would impair or alter any prior rights or equities of the mortgagor, or of those claiming under him.
The defence set up in both of the answers is the same. The defendants deny that the whole principal sum is due on the mortgage, and they charge that sundry large payments of money, have been made at different times by the mortgagor to T. R. Green, or to some one for his use, on account of the principal and interest of the mortgage, besides the payments admitted in the bill. They are ignorant of the particulars and amounts of such payments, but one defendant believes they exceed $1500, and the other is informed that they will reduce the amount due on the mortgage to $900.
Now the whole controversy in this respect arises upon testimony, not of payments on account of the mortgage, but of three sums of money, which came into the hands of Mr. Green, from the mortgagor, and which it is claimed the latter had a right to set off against the mortgage. Two of those sums, so far from being a payment on the mortgage, were paid to Mr. Green for entirely different purposes, But the defendants insist as to all these sums, that they remained in Green’s hands, after the object for which they were placed there had been accomplished, that Green was thereupon liable to account for the same to the mortgagor, and therefore the law applies the same to the bond and mortgage.
There is a wide distinction between a payment and a set off, and I am not aware of any rule of law which will apply distinct debts due from and to the same parties, as a payment of each [310]*310other, unless by the positive assent of both parties, of by proof of a state of facts, from which such assent is clearly inferrible. In this case, neither of these things exist. There is an attempt to imply an assent or acquiescence on the part of Mr. Green, but the inference is fully rebutted by the existing and increasing indebtedness of Storm the mortgagor, to Green "and to Green and Mitchell, on simple contract. It is not to be presumed that he would apply these moneys on a mortgage debt, while his sole and partnership claims against Storm, were unpaid, and accumulating. The inference is also repelled, as to the largest sum, by the fact that it was paid to Mr. Green, in a suit pending or about to be commenced, and which went to the court for the correction of errors ; and no lawyer would be likely to apply that money to any purpose, after the suit was disposed of, until his costs and charges of the litigation were paid.
To test further the defendant’s claim that these were payments, suppose that Storm, after the Wes'tervelt bond was given up, had sued T. R. Green, for the $1000, deposited ; and Green had pleaded the general issue or payment, relying upon the production of Storm’s bond and mortgage, and the application of the sum as a payment on the same. His defence would have failed beyond all doubt, upon Storm’s proving that the $1000, was deposited for a special purpose which had been accomplished, and which had no connection with the bond and mortgage. In such an action, nothing short of a plea or notice of set off, would have enabled Green to avail himself of the bond and mortgage as a defence.
It is thus very apparent that the defendants in this suit, have not set up in their answer, the defence to which their testimony is directed. This court is as much restricted, as any other, to the issues made by the pleadings; and while it endeavors to avoid technical and narrow grounds of objection, it cannot without losing sight of essential principles, admit evidence of a different case from that pleaded. It cannot allow one who has pleaded a set off, to prove a payment, any more than it can permit evidence of a trust, to substantiate a charge of fraud. In Roosevelt v. The Bank of Niagara, (Hopk. R. 579,) affirmed on ap[311]*311peal, (9 Cowen, 409,) the demand of the mortgagor was allowed as a set off, in express terms, and it was claimed in that form.
I must decide against the defence, assuming it to have been proved as it was claimed at the hearing. ■
In reference to the costs, as to which a distinct point was made, it is necessary to look into the testimony to the extent of ascertaining the propriety of the course pursued in the examiner’s office.
The first item claimed in the defendants proofs, is $288 75, received by Mr. Green for Storm, of Samuel Swartwout in January, 1837. There is no direct testimony that Green received this, but the defendants seek to infer it from a statement made by him, in which he charges himself with the principal sum of $4500, on which the $288 75, was the interest, and it was payable in and by the same security with the principal. But this inference fails, because the statement being the only evidence, that he received any part of it, cannot be stretched to cover any more than it admits. The more just inference from Swartwout’s testimony, and the statement is, that Storm himself received the $288 75.
Next is $1000, which Mr. Green retained out of the Swartwout fund, “ as security against his signing Storm’s bond, to J. Westervelt sheriff, to be retained (by Green,) until the event of Sears’s application.”
On this subject, the proof is very defective. A paper is made an exhibit, which purports to be this bond, but its execution is not proved. The offer to deliver it to the complainants, was there-, fore nugatory. Westervelt’s testimony is open to the objection, that no bond was identified or produced to him.
If these difficulties were overcome, there is no evidence to fix the time when the bond was discharged. I was referred to the report of the case of Westervelt v. The People, ex rel. Sears, (in 20 Wend. 416,) as showing that the suit terminated late in December, 1838. But this would not establish that Mr. Green was exonerated from that bond in his lifetime; while it does show, (if it be proper evidence in the cause,) that in respect of this $1000, no right of set off existed in Storm, when he gave his mortgage to O’Daniel.
[312]*312The testimony on the other side, proves that Mr. Green, alone and together with his law partner Mr. Mitchell, had a large account against Storm, for professional services. Under these pleadings, it was not necessary to" prove the extent or the particulars of these demands. It appears that in the settlement of the iSwartwout money, and in an account rendered apparently in May, 1838, the demands of Green and Mitchell were brought in by Mr. Green, in his accounting with Storm, and the paper last mentioned, shows that Green and Mitchell were Storm’s lawyers in the case of Sears v. Westervelt. I think it will be found upon a full investigation, in connection with these circumstances that there has been such a course of dealing between Storm and Green and Mitchell, that the latter were entitled to set off their joint demands against either of the items of account, which have ■been introduced in favor of Storm against Green. (See Vulliamy v. Noble, 3 Merivale, 593, 617, 618, 621.)
The last item is $156 50, received by Green in February, 1837, from the tenant, for .the rent of the leaseholds in controversy in the Westervelt suit, to be held by him subject to an arrangement between Storm and the tenant. I cannot find any ■evidence in the case, which shows that Storm ever became entitled to receive this money.
Upon the whole, there was no good cause for the complainants to go into the testimony of Mr. Green’s, or of Green &. Mitchell’s demands against Storm, beyond the point of showing that they conducted suits for him, and in general, the character and extent of the services. And there was no cause for bringing forward the demands which were Mr. Mitchell’s exclusively. Their costs of the suit must be restricted accordingly.
They are entitled with this limitation, to the usual decree for the foreclosure and sale of the mortgaged premises. The decree must provide for the payment of one-third of the mortgage debt, to the legal representative of Mrs. Green.
[313]*313Much was said of the hardship of this case on Mr. O’Daniel, but surely there is no just cause for it. He knew of the mortgage to Mr. Green ; and as a man of ordinary prudence, he should have applied to Green, instead of trusting to Storm’s representa- ' tion, as to the amount due on the mortgage.
The provisions of the decree on this subject, were as follows:
It declared that two-thirds of the mortgage debt belonged to the complainants, and the remaining third part to the executors or administrators of the former complainant, Mary Green, deceased. It directed a reference to a master, to compute ■and ascertain the amount due to the complainants, and to the legal representatives