Heburn v. Reynolds

73 Misc. 73, 132 N.Y.S. 460
CourtOneida County Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 73 Misc. 73 (Heburn v. Reynolds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oneida County Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heburn v. Reynolds, 73 Misc. 73, 132 N.Y.S. 460 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

Hazard, J.

This action is in foreclosure, and the complaint is in_ about the usual form in such cases, except as it may be modified by the absence of a bond or other per[74]*74sonal security. The defense is somewhat vague, and consists of a denial that the mortgage or document in suit was executed, acknowledged and delivered to the plaintiff as a mortgage ; also that the plaintiff’s claim is outlawed.

Upon the trial of the action the plaintiff offered the mortgage upon which the suit is 'brought in evidence and rested; and the committee did not offer any evidence, resting his case upon several points of law which lie has raised; and it, therefore, becomes necessary to consider those points in detail.

It is claimed that the committee as such was a necessary party to the action. Section 426 of the Code of Civil Procedure, paragraph 2, provides that, if the defendant is a person judicially declared to be 'incompetent, and for whom a committee has been appointed, service of the summons shall be made upon the “ defendant ” and also upon the committee. Section 428 of the Code makes provision in such a cáse for the appointing of a special guardian acl liiem, “ where the court has, in its opinion, reasonable ground to believe” that the interest of the incompetent requires it. These provisions do not seem to indicate an intention on the part of the law makers to provide that, in such a case as the one at bar, it is necessary to make the committee also a party. It would seem that the purpose of the statute is tg give him permission to come in and protect the rights of his ward, as has been done in this case, without haying the committee formally made a party to the action. I think the decision in Behlen v. Behlen, 73 App. Div. 143, is to that effect.

The committee raises the further-point that the plaintiff must allege and prove, as a part of his case herein, that a committee has been appointed, and that permission has been given to bring suit, and cites Scofield v. Doscher, 72 N. Y. 491, as authority for that proposition. That was an action brought to recover an alleged deficiency arising on foreclosure and sale against an executor; and the court held that an action was not maintainable 'without leave' of the court, and that the plaintiff must affirmatively plead and prove that consent. The question thus raised is not without diffi[75]*75culties, as in sonic respects the Scofield v. Doscher case is similar to the. case at bar. It was held on a motion made earlier in this case, upon the authority of the case of Smith v. Keteltas, 27 App. Div. 279, that this action could not proceed without leave of the court. The theory and reason for that order was that the property of this incompetent is in the custody of the court and the committee appointed by the court, and that it is not rulable to allow proceedings against property in that situation, without obtaining permission from the court. I .think, however, that- is as far as that ruling should go, and that the reason for the ruling referred to is -simply to protect the estates of incompetents from unnecessary waste, and that there is no such condition here as existed in the Scofield v. Doscher case. In the latter case the court said: But here, when h-e has shown that this action is for a deficiency upon a foreclosure of a mortgage and sale of the lands, he shows at the same instant that he must have authority' from the court to bring his action; and, unless he has that, he has no present right of action.” There is no allegation in the complaint in the action that the defendant "Reynolds is an incompetent person or that a committee has been appointed; and the committee, as above stated, is not in fact a party defendant. In all these particulars the case at bar is to be differentiated from the Scofield v. Doscher case, and I, therefore, think that it is not necessarily applicable to the case at bar. The com- • mittee further claims that the instrument sought to be foreclosed herein is not a mortgage, and that no action of fore-, closure can, therefore, be maintained; and he points out' some very remarkable features in the instrument under consideration. The mortgage, if such it is, is certainly most unskillfully drawn. There is at no place in it an express promise to pay the debt which it purports to secure, and it is not accompanied by any bond or note or other instrument. .Furthermore, it has no seal, and is lacking in what is usually known among conveyancers as the “ interest clause.” It is also lacking in the usual provision found in mortgages to the effect that, upon payment of the debt secured thereby, the conveyance shall he void. The document is a remark[76]*76able illustration of the folly of having legal documents prepared by unskillful parties; but it is as it is,- and we must consider the alleged defects, which are certainly deformities, somewhat in detail.

It is the plaintiff’s claim that a seal may be construed into the instrument, thus carrying out what plaintiff’s attorney claims is the obvious intent of the mortgagor. The instrument winds up with the usual clause: “ In witness whereof, the party of the first part has hereunto set her hand and seal the day and year first above written.” This is followed by the usual “ sealed and delivered in the presence of,” and then follows the signature of defendant Sarah J. Reynolds; but there is no' seal nor anything which the law will consider such. It is the claim of the plaintiff that, under section 348 of the Code, and Barnard v. Grantz, 140 N. Y. 258, and Town of Solon v. Williamsberg Savings Bank, 14 id. 134, and other cases cited by him, this court has the equitable power to amend or revise a mortgage the same as the Supreme Court would have. It is held in Thomas v. Harmon, 122 N. Y. 84, that an action to foreclose a mortgage and an action to reform a mortgage are independent remedies that may be attained by separate actions open to separate and independent defenses, and that the power to foreclose a mortgage does not include, as incidental thereto, the power to reform it and that, hence, a County Court has no jurisdiction under section 348 of the Code to reform a mortgage.

. In Mead v. Langford, 56 Hun, 279, the reformation of a bond, accompanying the mortgage sought to be foreclosed, was held to be secondary and ancillary ” to the proceeding to foreclose, and that it was, therefore, within the jurisdiction of the County Court to grant that relief. It is probably unnecessary to decide whether the power to reform the instrument at bar rests in this court, because, it seems to me that a seal is unnecessary. As the law now exists, a seal simply imports a consideration and appears to be principally useful when that matter comes into question. "The paper in suit recites a consideration of $1,500, which of course is sufficient. Moreover, it does not appear that a seal is any [77]*77longer necessary, even on a grant of a fee or freehold, the statute now only requiring that it must he “ subscribed by the person from whom the estate or interest conveyed is intended to pass.” Real Prop. Law, §§ 242, 243; Fitzpatrick v. Graham, 122 Fed. Rep. 405.

I,, therefore, reach the- conclusion that, in the present state of the law, a seal is not necessary upon a mortgage, and that in that particular the instrument in suit does not require any reformation. -

The committee raises the further claim that no action can be maintained unless there is contained in the mortgage sought to be foreclosed, or some accompanying instrument, a promise to pay the debt thereby secured, citing Borst v. Corey, 15 N. Y. 505.

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Bluebook (online)
73 Misc. 73, 132 N.Y.S. 460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heburn-v-reynolds-nyoneidactyct-1911.