Jackson ex dem. New Loan Officers v. Bull

1 Johns. Cas. 81
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1799
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 1 Johns. Cas. 81 (Jackson ex dem. New Loan Officers v. Bull) 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
Jackson ex dem. New Loan Officers v. Bull, 1 Johns. Cas. 81 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1799).

Opinion

[*83] *Lewis, J.

The loan officers, are trustees for the people df the state, and although their authority to’ sell be coupled with an interest, yet, as it is not a.beneficial one, a purchaser does not take under them,, but under the power created by the statute and the. mortgage.deed. He will not,. perhaps, take by relation from the creation of the power, but cértainly from the time of executing the power. What, in the.present case, was.the. act executing the power? Was it. the sdlehy the loan officers, or their execution of the deed of' [95]*95conveyance? I am of opinion that it was the former, and that whatever interest the mortgagor had at the time of executing the mortgage, was immediately upon the sale and payment of the purchase money, transferred to, and vested in the purchaser, and that his title would have been complete, though no deed had ever been executed by the loan officers. This opinion is founded on the following principles: 1st. That where a purchaser takes by the execution of a power, he is in, and holds under the authority creating such power: 2d. That where an authority is coupled with an interest, it shall be construed liberally, and an execution in substance, shall be sufficient. Thus a sale by executors under a power contained in the will of their testator, is a good execution without deed; (Litt. 169 ;) and if a power be coupled with an interest, though it be joint, it might, before the statute of wills, be executed by a survivor. So also in a feoffment to uses to be declared by will, the cestui que use is in by the feoffment, and not by the devise. (See the Case of Sir Edward Clere, 6 Rep. 18. Bagley v. Warburton, 2 Com. and Duke of Marlborough v. Lord Godolphin, 2 Vez. 78.) So also a purchaser at a sheriff’s sale is in under the judgment and execution.

These principles are not opposed to any thing contained in the act from which the loan officers derive their authority; on the contrary they appear to me in perfect coincidence with it. The 16th sec. declares that the purchaser shall hold the lands for such estate as was conveyed to the loan officers by the mortgage. The injunction on them to execute a conveyance, is merely directory; and though ¡t may serve as an additional evidence of the sale, it is not in my opinion, essential to the purchase; nor does their erection into a body corporate in any wise alter the case, *this being evi- [*84] dently intended to give a facility to the discharge of their various duties, and perhaps to prevent doubts and embarrassments that might arise from death or other circumstances. The deed also is not directed to be given in the usual form of a corporate act merely, for though made under their seal, they must respectively subscribe their names.

[96]*96But should the deed be considered as essential to the execution of the power, I do not see that it would alter the case; the act contemplates the conveyance to be made immediately upon the. sale ; the words are, •“ and upon such sale shall convey,” <fec- Now the maxims of equity, (Lechmere v. Earl of Carlisle, 3 P. W. 215,) that what ought to be done, shall be considered as done, and that trustees shall not affect the rights of other persons by not doing, or by delaying to do their duty, will forcibly apply; and we may, accordingly, so construe the words of the act as to make the conveyance relate to the time of sale, or it may be done by analogy to- the case of the Duke of Marlborough, (2 Vezey,. 70,) where it was determined, that although by bargain and sale nothing passed without enrolment, yet if the deed be acknowledged and enrolled within the six months, though the bargainee be dead, the whole should relate to the time of'execution.- The reason is that the enrolment is a collateral act required by the statute, and does not arise from the nature of the conveyance ; so here, the execution of the deed was a collateral act required by the statute, and did not arise from the nature of the transfer, which, as has been shown, would have been, sufficient in an ordinary case without deed.

My opinion therefore is, without considering the second point, that the conveyances from Crabb to Lansing, and from them to Francisco, legally transferred the title to the 14Q: acres, and of course, that the plaintiff ought to récover the remaining 20 acres only.

Kent, J.

I incline to the opinion, that no legal estate except a mere tenancy at will, vested in Crabb,-until the loan officers had executed the deed. The statute of frauds 0 [*85] *prevents a greater estate from vesting without writing ; if is besides a general rule of law, that a corporation cannot sell land without deed, and the loan officers, in the present instance, are ■ ordered by the act to convey the land which they should sell at auction, by deed under the loan office seal.

But I adopt as a just rule of construction, and applicable to the present case, the principle laid down by this court, in [97]*97the cause of Jackson, ex dem. June, v. Raymond,

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1 Johns. Cas. 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-ex-dem-new-loan-officers-v-bull-nysupct-1799.