Howard Insurance v. Halsey

6 Sandf. 565
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedMay 10, 1851
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Sandf. 565 (Howard Insurance v. Halsey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howard Insurance v. Halsey, 6 Sandf. 565 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1851).

Opinion

By the Court.

Duer, J.

It may be true, as Mr. Justice Story has suggested, that some exceptions from the equitable doctrine upon which this defence is rested, ought to be admitted ; but the doctrine, as supplying a general rule, has been too firmly established by repeated decisions to be now shaken; nor is it pretended that there are any circumstances in the present case that can lay a ground for an exception. The doctrine is, that when a mortgagor sells a portion of the lands which the [571]*571mortgage covers, those which he retains become primarily liable for the satisfaction of the debt, those which he has conveyed being answerable only for an eventual deficiency;. and, as a necessary consequence, that a similar equity prevails between purchasers, so that distinct parcels or lots of the mortgaged lands, which have been conveyed at different times to different purchasers, are chargeable in the inverse order of their alienation, and must be sold in that order under a decree. The equity which may thus have been created between a purchaser and the mortgagor, or between several purchasers, the mort-‘ gagee, when he has a knowledge of the facts, is not permitted to disregard or disturb, and, with this knowledge, he acts at his own peril when he releases from the lien of the mortgage any portion of the lands which it embraces. If the lands released are primarily liable, and are of sufficient value to satisfy the debt, those previously conveyed are wholly discharged, and in no case can they be charged with any larger sum than the proportion of the debt that may remain unsatisfied when the value of the lands released has been applied and exhausted.

As these rules' are undisputed, and it is admitted that the value of the lands which were released by the plaintiffs to J. Hunt, in April, 1846, exceeds the whole amount of the original debt, the only question necessary to be considered is, whether the company, at the time of the execution of the release, are chargeable with notice that the 92 acres, not released, and upon which they meant to retain their lien, had been previously conveyed. If notice cannot be justly imputed to them, their lien is retained, and they are entitled to a decree. If they are chargeable with notice, actual or constructive, their lien upon the lands thus conveyed is wholly gone, and the bill as to the defendants, now before us, must be dismissed.

The deed for the 92 acres to Gr. Wildes, from whom the other defendants derive their title, was recorded in the proper clerk’s office several years before the execution of the release ; but we agree with Chancellor Walworth, (Stuyvesant v. Hall, 2 Barb. Ch. E. 151,) that the recording of a subsequent deed from the mortgagor cannot operate, per. se, as notice to the mort[572]*572gagee; since, by the plain terms of the statute, the constructive notice which arises from the recording of a conveyance is limited to subsequent purchasers of the lands which it embraces. Yet the fact that this deed was recorded, is not to be regarded as wholly unimportant; since, if it shall appear from other circumstances that the plaintiffs were bound to inquire, the record of the deed is evidence that an inquiry, properly conducted, must have led to a knowledge of its existence.

Nor shall we lay much stress upon another circumstance, upon which a good deal of stress was laid in the argument, namely, that the existence of the conveyance to Wildes was ascertained in 1842, by the attorney and agent, who was then employed by the plaintiffs to foreclose the mortgage. It is true, as a general rule, that the knowledge of an agent is, by construction of law, the knowledge of his principal; but the .sole grounds of this imputation are, that it is the duty of the agent to communicate to his principal all the facts which have been ascertained by him in the course of, and relating to the subject of his agency, and this duty, when it has attached, the law presumes to have been discharged. (Story on Agency, § 160, 208.) In this case, .however, by the sudden discontinuance of the proceedings in the foreclosure suit, the agency of the attorney was terminated before his inquiries were completed, and at any rate before it was necessary for him, or it became his duty to communicate their result to the plaintiffs. As the reasons for the communication had ceased, the obligation also ceased. Hence, since the duty of communication never attached upon the attorney during the course of his agency, there is no room for the presumption that it was actually made; the ground of the presumption wholly fails; and that the communication was not in fact made, we think the evidence shows.

But there are other facts in this case of far greater significance and value than those to which we have adverted. It appears from the evidence, that Wildes took possession of the lands conveyed, by his agent or tenants, immediately, or shortly after he received the deed, and that the fact of his possession [573]*573was so public and notorious, that it was generally known in tbe vicinity that he was, or claimed to be the owner. When lands contracted to be sold, are in the actual possession of the vendee, his possession is notice of his equitable title to all persons, who may subsequently deal in relation to the same lands with the vendor, so that a subsequent purchaser, who has paid the full value of the lands, in total ignorance of the contract, is yet bound by its terms, and may be compelled to execute its provisions by a conveyance of the legal title which he had acquired. We are not prepared to say that this rule, which is constantly applied to a subsequent purchaser, may with equal justice be applied to a prior mortgagee. There is undoubtedly a distinction that may prevent this extended application; yet, it may deserve consideration, whether a knowledge of the actual state of the possession and of the title and claims of those holding the possession may not, even with greater reason, be imputed to the mortgagee than to the purchaser. His existing relation to the lands makes it his interest, generally speaking, to possess the knowledge, and it therefore seems a fair presumption that he has not neglected the means of acquiring it. The actual question has never been decided, nor is it necessary that it shall now be determined, since there are other grounds upon which, with more satisfaction to our own minds, and as we cannot but think, with a very slight hazard of error, we may place the judgment we intend to deliver.

The last and most material allegations on the part of the defendants are, that the plaintiffs, by the very terms of the release to Hunt, had notice that George "jYildes was then .the owner of that portion of the mortgaged premises which, with a view to retain the lien of the mortgage, was excepted from the operation of the rel'ease, and that the notice, if not direct and positive, was yet sufficient to put them upon inquiry, and by a legal consequence to charge them with a knowledge of all the facts which upon inquiry they would have ascertained. The release embraces three distinct lots or parcels of land, and in giving the boundaries of parcel No. 3, closes the description with these words, “ being part of the same premises conveyed to "William [574]

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Bluebook (online)
6 Sandf. 565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-insurance-v-halsey-nysuperctnyc-1851.