Humphrey v. . Hayes

94 N.Y. 594, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 308
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 8, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 94 N.Y. 594 (Humphrey v. . Hayes) 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
Humphrey v. . Hayes, 94 N.Y. 594, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 308 (N.Y. 1884).

Opinion

Rapallo, J.

It was not necessary for the purpose of sustaining either the judgment or the order of arrest, that it should have been averred in the complaint or proved upon the trial that the defendants had been guilty of fraud in contracting the liability sued upon. The requirements of subdivision 4 of section 549 of the Code of Civil Procedure were introduced, by amendment, by chapter 542 of the Laws of 1879, and section 2 of that act expressly provides that the amendments to sections 549 and 550 shall not apply to actions theretofore commenced.

This action was commenced prior to the adoption of those amendments. It is immaterial, therefore, that the complaint was not duly amended so as to contain proper allegations showing fraud, or that the facts admitted on the trial and stated in the findings were insufficient to establish fraud.

*599 We think, however, that the judgment was erroneous in another respect. The action was brought upon a guaranty by both defendants of payment of a bond and mortgage on real estate in New Jersey for $1,250 belonging to the defendant Mary E. Hayes, wife of defendant E. L. Hayes, and assigned by both defendants to the plaintiff, in consideration of $1,100, paid in February, 1872, to the defendant Mary E. Hayes. The court rendered judgment on said guaranty in favor- of the plaintiff against the defendants April 4,1881, for the whole of said sum of $1,100, with interest to that date, from February 1, 1872, amounting in all to $1,785.75, besides costs. The mortgage had never been foreclosed, but the following facts were set up in defense and found by the court.

The mortgaged premises were, at the time of the assignment • of the mortgage to the plaintiff, subject to another mortgage for a smaller amount, bearing the same date and recorded at the same time as the mortgage in question in this action, and consequently being a concurrent lien upon the mortgaged premises. This smaller mortgage had formerly been held by the defendant Mary E. Hayes and had been assigned by her to Charles R. Abbott. In April, 1876, Abbott obtained a decree of foreclosure of that smaller mortgage, and in August, 1876, the plaintiff purchased that decree for the sum of $669.65, and afterward, on the 16th of August, 1876, the mortgaged premises were sold under that decree, to the plaintiff, for $100, and she received the sheriff’s deed therefor. It is further found that the value of the mortgaged premises at the date of the assignment and guaranty in suit, was at least $3,000, and so continued until the years 1876 or 1877, and that their value at the time of the trial was $1,500.

Neither of the defendants was a party to the foreclosure of Abbott, and it is found as a fact that it does not appear that either of them had any knowledge of such foreclosure thereof, or of the sale.

The defendants set up in their answer in this action that with ordinary diligence the plaintiff could have collected the bond and mortgage guaranteed by them. That when it be *600 came due and for a long time thereafter it was amply secured, but that through plaintiff’s neglect the security had been greatly impaired.

This defense was not sustainable, it not appearing that the plaintiff had been called upon to enforce the lien of the mortgage. The guaranty being of payment and not of collection, she was not bound to take proceedings to foreclose unless required so to do by the guarantors.

But, nevertheless, she was not at liberty to do any affirmative act which should impair the security and deprive the guarantors of any benefit which they might derive therefrom on payment off their guaranty. On making such payment they were entitled to enforce the mortgage for their own indemnity, and any act of the plaintiff which operated to deprive them of that indemnity discharged them. If the plaintiff extended the time of payment, or released the premises from the lien of the mortgage, or did any similar act injurious to the rights of the guarantors, she thereby discharged them, either wholly or to the extent to which the security was impaired.

We think that her acts, as shown by the findings, were of that character. The two mortgages having been made at the same time, and simultaneously recorded, were concurrent liens upon the mortgaged premises, and on a sale thereof the proceeds were distributable pro rata on both mortgages. Such, also, is the law of the State of New Jersey, as appears from the decree of foreclosure rendered by the Court of Chancery, and which appears in the case, under'which the plaintiff bought in the property, and which directed thé proceeds of sale to be thus apportioned. Neither of the mortgages was entitled to the whole proceeds, if the premises brought enough to pay but one of them, nor to be paid -in full unless the proceeds were sufficient to pay both. If the plaintiff had not bought the Abbott mortgage and decree and he had proceeded to a sale and the premises had brought only a sum equal to the amount due him on his mortgage, that sum should have been apportioned and the greater part of it would have gone to reduce the plaintiff’s mortgage. If she had consented that Abbott *601 take the whole proceeds, that consent would have prejudiced the defendants and could have been set up by them as a defense. She was not at liberty to waive any right they would have had in the proceeds had they taken up the mortgage guaranteed. (Lewis v. Palmer, 28 N. Y. 271; Cory v. Leonard, 56 id. 494.) But by purchasing the decree in the Abbott case, and herself causing the property to be sold, and bidding it in for a nominal amount, in a proceeding to which the defendants were not parties and of which, as the trial judge finds, it does not appear that they had any notice, leaving nothing to be credited on the guaranteed mortgage, she did a still more decided act to the prejudice of the defendants than if she had merely suffered Abbott to take the whole proceeds. She absolutely extinguished the guaranteed mortgage. She was under no obligation to purchase the Abbott decree. It was not necessary for her protection, not being a prior but a concurrent lien. She would have had the same rights in the proceeds of sale if the sale had been made by him, as if made by herself, and by her purchase from him she acquired no greater rights than he would have had if he had continued to hold the decree. The mortgaged premises were certainly worth something. Her payment to him of the full amount of the decree shows that it must have been assumed that they would bring enough to pay both mortgages, for he was entitled only to a fro rata share.

It is admitted and found, that the premises were worth at least $3,000 up to the year 1876 or 1877, when the railroad depot was removed. .That date does not appear, nor does the case show whether it was before or after the sale, which took place August 16, 1876. But supposing it was before, the subsequent value is conceded to be $1,500. By the course the plaintiff took she obtained the whole property under the Abbott decree, discharged of the guaranteed mortgage, and now recovers of the defendants the whole amount of the guaranty in addition, when in fact at least two-thirds of the value of the mortgaged premises, whatever it may have been, was applicable on the guaranteed mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
94 N.Y. 594, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/humphrey-v-hayes-ny-1884.