Jefferson v. Bangs

169 A.D. 102, 154 N.Y.S. 439, 1915 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9003
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 169 A.D. 102 (Jefferson v. Bangs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jefferson v. Bangs, 169 A.D. 102, 154 N.Y.S. 439, 1915 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9003 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Howard, J.:

William King died in 1856. At the time of his death he was seized in fee of a farm of seventy-six acres of land, the subject of this controversy. The farm was covered by a purchase-money mortgage for $1,510. King left a will hy which he gave the use of one-third of his farm to his wife during her life, and the use of the other two-thirds to Hastings A. King, [103]*103whom he styled his adopted son, but who was, in fact, neither an adopted son nor a relative. He devised the fee of his real estate to Lucy Ann King (now Lucy Ann J elferson) a daughter of Hastings A. King. She is now the plaintiff in this action. This devise, however, was subject to the two life estates previously mentioned. In 1857 Hastings A. King purchased the mortgage. Hannah King, the widow of William King, died in 1860. In 1861 Hastings A. King foreclosed, by advertisement, the mortgage. On the foreclosure sale Hastings A. King bid in the property, the purchase price being $1,200, and that being less than the amount due on the mortgage. All the time subsequent to the death of William King, Hastings A. King and his wife and daughter, the plaintiff herein, continued in possession of the farm. In 1872 King and his wife conveyed the farm to Rufus Hammond by warranty deed. At that time Hammond held a $700 mortgage on the property and it was stipulated in the deed from King to Hammond that Hammond’s title in the mortgage was not to merge in the deed. Hammond gave a land contract back to King, but this contract was never recorded and was surrendered and canceled in 1875. In 1885 Hammond conveyed the premises to the defendant Frederick E. Bangs, who assumed the payment and who did subsequently pay a mortgage of $2,000 then covering the premises. Bangs took possession of the property and made extensive improvements. In 1901 Bangs sold the property by warranty deed to his brother Loren B. Bangs, one of the defendants herein. All the deeds, mortgages, assignments, discharges and conveyances mentioned above, with the exception of the land contract, were duly recorded in the Tompkins county clerk’s office. The wife of Hastings A. King died in 1901 and Hastings A. King died hi 1904. The plaintiff was born in 1848, so that in 1872 at the time when her father deeded the farm to Hammond she was about twenty-four years old. She continued to live with her parents on the farm for several years afterwards, that is, until she was twenty-nine years old, and must have been entirely familiar with the transactions up to the time when she left the farm in 1878.

The case has been tried before, and a judgment was rendered [104]*104at the first trial for the defendants. An appeal was taken to the Court of Appeals where the judgment was reversed and the case sent back for a new trial. In the Court of Appeals it was determined that the foreclosure procedure was regular and lawful; but the defendants had succeeded in the court below on the theory that the Statute of Limitations had run against the plaintiff; and the Court of Appeals held against the defendants on this issue. As to whether the. foreclosure deed was void or only voidable, the court said: “The mortgagee [Hastings A. King] was her guardian in socage, but this did not render the purchase by him absolutely void. (Boyer v. East, 161 N. Y. 580.) But the mortgagee was also the life tenant bound to discharge the interest on the mortgage. While the purchase was not void, it was, undoubtedly, by reason of the trust relation the mortgagee bore to the plaintiff, voidable at her election, and so the trial court held.” (197 N. Y. 42.) It was thus determined, as the above quotation discloses, that the title taken by Hastings A. King upon the foreclosure sale was not void but only voidable; that question, therefore, is settled and out of this appeal. The title taken by Hastings A. King being voidable, it might have been rendered void under certain conditions, or valid under certain conditions. Are the circumstances such that it has been rendered valid ? Had the plaintiff proceeded against her father while he yet held the title, there is no doubt that the courts would have declared the voidable deed void. Or had she proceeded against Hammond, if he had notice of her rights under the will, the deed would have been declared void. But now men who claim to be innocent purchasers, relying upon the Recording Acts, present themselves to the court. Do the circumstances surrounding their purchase protect them and render valid and sound this deed which in its inception was voidable %

Without repeating the language' of the Recording Acts or quoting from the numerous decisions construing them it may be assumed here, as it appears to have been assumed by the attorneys at the trial, that it is the settled law of the State that when a bona fide purchaser of real estate, the record title of which is clear, purchases for a valuable consideration without notice of a prior unrecorded title or claim or [105]*105equity, his title takes precedence over the unrecorded interest. In other words, applying the elementary law of the State to the facts of this case, if the defendant Frederick E. Bangs was a purchaser in good faith under an uninterrupted record title, coming down from the foreclosure sale, for a valuable consideration, without any notice of the rights of the plaintiff under the will of William King, his title takes precedence over hers and bars her recovery in this action. Therefore, the only question to determine here is whether the defendant Frederick E. Bangs had notice; for if he had no notice and was the holder of a valid deed, his conveyance to Loren B. Bangs was sound even if the latter had notice. (Ward v. Isbill, 73 Hun, 550.) The trial court has found as a fact that Frederick E. Bangs had no actual notice, and a careful examination of the record shows that the evidence supporting this finding is abundant and convincing.

Having concluded that the Trial Term was right in holding that there was no actual notice we have now only to determine whether there was constructive notice. The plaintiff urges that there was constructive notice and that this arose from the fact that the will of William King, under which the plaintiff claims, was on file and was recorded in the surrogate’s office of Tompkins county. The Recording Acts

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Conklin v. Jablonski
67 Misc. 2d 286 (New York Supreme Court, 1971)
Harris v. Moskowitz
236 A.D. 196 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1932)
Barber v. Rowe
200 A.D. 290 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
169 A.D. 102, 154 N.Y.S. 439, 1915 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9003, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jefferson-v-bangs-nyappdiv-1915.