Harvey v. Beckman

64 Misc. 395, 118 N.Y.S. 602
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1909
StatusPublished

This text of 64 Misc. 395 (Harvey v. Beckman) 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
Harvey v. Beckman, 64 Misc. 395, 118 N.Y.S. 602 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1909).

Opinion

Brown, J.

On March 27, 1908, the plaintiff was the owner of a farm in the town of Otto, Cattaraugus county, H. Y., of 251 acres, about 30 acres being covered with first growth standing timber; a considerable quantity of second growth standing timber and a quantity of down timber being also on said premises; the plaintiff also having upon the said farm a dairy of thirty-five cows, three horses, other stock and a quantity of farming tools, etc., all of the value of about $11,000; the real estate being worth about $9,000. On that date plaintiff executed and delivered to the defendant a deed conveying the real estate and a memorandum agreeing to leave such live stock, farming tools, etc., on the farm for the defendant; such conveyance and sale of personal property being for the' consideration of $11,000; defendant paying $1,000 of such purchase price by conveying to the plaintiff certain other real estate and securing the balance of the purchase price, viz: $10,000, by executing and delivering to plaintiff his bond, conditioned for the payment of that amount to plaintiff in annual instalments of $100 each together with semiannual interest on the entire debt at five per cent., the whole amount to become due in twenty years; defendant having the privilege of paying any additional sums at the time of making the payment of interest upon giving plaintiff three months’ notice of intention to make such additional payments. And concurrent therewith defendant executed and delivered to plaintiff a real estate mortgage covering the farm as security for payment of the bonded indebtedness. At the time of the execution and delivery of the deed, bond, mortgage and memorandum as to personal property, it had been agreed between plaintiff and defendant that the defendant should not remove any timber from the farm, unless the selling price thereof should be paid to the [397]*397plaintiff to apply on the principal of the said bond; as the plaintiff did not want the defendant to strip the farm and then abandon it, and as the defendant wanted the timber to be used to pay for the farm and property. At the time of the preparation of the real estate mortgage, no provision was inserted therein and no writing was prepared or executed embodying the terms of the agreement as to the right to remove timber and disposing of the proceeds thereof, for the reason that the scrivener who prepared the same advised the parties that such provision was unnecessary in the mortgage and that, if defendant committed any waste or did anything in the way of cutting standing timber that would impair plaintiff’s security, plaintiff could obtain an injunction preventing such acts; and thereupon the parties agreed that such clause or provision as to removing timber should not be inserted in the mortgage.

In the summer of 1908, defendant cut some of the standing timber into logs, cut some of the tree tops and dead timber into heading bolts and fire wood, stating that there was nothing in the writings between plaintiff and himself about the timber and that he could cut what timber he had a mind to. The plaintiff found fault with the defendant for cutting some trees that she said he had no right to cut, when defendant stated: “ If I want to chop down some trees I chop them down, and I be willing to pay it on the mortgage the way we agreed to it.” Before defendant had removed any of the timber, logs, heading bolts or fire wood from the farm, the plaintiff, on August 19, 1908, brought this action' for the purpose, among other things, of having her real estate mortgage reformed by inserting therein a provision embodying the oral agreement relative to the timber on said farm and restraining the defendant from removing any of such timber in violation of such agreement. During the fall of 1908 and the following winter, the defendant removed from said farm logs, bolts and fire wood of the value and for which he received the sum of $344.41, all of which under said agreement relative to the timber was the property of the plaintiff and should have been paid by the defendant to the plaintiff to be applied on the principal of defendant’s indebted[398]*398ness. On September 27, 1908, defendant paid to the plaintiff $100 out of the moneys received by him from the sale of such timber,, to be applied upon the principal of his indebtedness to her; and he has refused and neglected to pay any more of the timber moneys to the plaintiff to be applied upon the principal of said indebtedness, although the same was duly demanded by the plaintiff on the 18th of February, 1909; the defendant alleging as a reason why he has not made such payment that he paid a part of the semiannual interest due on his bond on the 27th day of September, 1908, out of said timber moneys and that when he sold a part of such timber he agreed with the purchaser that about $90 of such selling price should not be paid to him until September, 1909, for the reason that he could not compel plaintiff to receive it before that date, owing to the fact that the bond provided for a three months’ notice of such contemplated payment, the three months expiring at a time provided for the payment of semiannual interest.

While it is true that the provision in the bond relative to the payment of any greater sums than the annual instalment of $100 or the semiannual interest at the time of making any payment of interest does require that three months’ notice of such contemplated payment be given by defendant to plaintiff, yet, this provision being solely for plaintiff’s benefit, she could waive the advantage of such provision; and when, on the 18th of February, 1909, she served upon the defendant a written demand for the moneys received by him for the sale of timber, heading bolts for fire wood, etc., removed from the farm to be applied upon the principal indebtedness, defendant could not rightfully refuse to comply with such demands. The agreement between the parties requiring the avails of such sale of timber, etc., to be applied upon the principal of plaintiff’s indebtedness, the defendant had no right to use any of such timber moneys to pay the interest upon such indebtedness. It was the duty of the defendant to pay the interest upon his debt out of some other funds, and it is no answer to plaintiff’s demand for the timber moneys to be paid to her to apply on the principal [399]*399to assert that it has been paid on the interest' accruing on the principal. The benefit of this timber-cutting and removal agreement is vital to plaintiff’s security for payment of the balance of the purchase price of the farm, stock, tools, implements, etc. If defendant’s assertion is to be upheld, it is readily seen that, by cutting and removing enough timber every six months to realize sufficient to pay the semiannual interest amounting -to about $250, in the course of the lifetime of plaintiff’s mortgage defendant "will have cut and removed about $5,000 worth of timber, paid it all to plaintiff as interest, stripped the farm of all its timber, reduced the value of the farm to that extent and will not have reduced the principal of his indebtedness; such a result would greatly impair the plaintiff’s security and be of irreparable injury to her. It is .conceded that the value of the real estate sold by the plaintiff to the defendant is about $9,000'; the value of the live stock, etc. sold to the defendant at the same time making up the consideration of the sale at $11,000. The payment of $1,000 by the conveyance of a farm by defendant to plaintiff left a balance due the plaintiff of $10,000, to secure the payment of which she only has a mortgage upon the real estate, no security being given by defendant to plaintiff on the personal property.

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Bluebook (online)
64 Misc. 395, 118 N.Y.S. 602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harvey-v-beckman-nysupct-1909.