Jones v. Garrigues

75 A.D. 539, 78 N.Y.S. 400

This text of 75 A.D. 539 (Jones v. Garrigues) 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
Jones v. Garrigues, 75 A.D. 539, 78 N.Y.S. 400 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Hatch, J.:

The plaintiff brings this action for the purpose of removing a cloud upon his title to certain real estate. The complaint is based upon a contract, entered into between the plaintiff and the defendants, and the claim of the plaintiff is, that such contract constitutes a cloud upon the title, that the defendants are not entitled to enforce the same, and, therefore, it should be removed as an incumbrance. There does not seem to be any dispute but that the contract as it exists constitutes the same a cloud upon the title, and, therefore, the plaintiff becomes entitled to enforce its provisions. The_ execution of the contract arose out of the following facts. The plaintiff being the owner of the premises, contracted to sell the same to one Henry S. Wood for the agreed price of $165,000 to be paid by Wood’s [546]*546assumption of a mortgage upon the premises of $90,000 and the execution to the plaintiff of a purchase-money mortgage of $15,000. No money consideration passed from Wood to the plaintiff for the purchase price of the premises.

By the terms of the contract, Wood agreed to immediately begin the construction, upon said premises, of two eight-story buildings, and plaintiff was to loan and advance to Wood as the buildings progressed $50,000, which was to be secured by a building loan mortgage. Wood was a man of no means, and became financially -embarrassed as the work proceeded. He was only able to continue the work as money was advanced by the plaintiff. The $50,000 proving insufficient for the erection of the buildings, and Wood ■having no money, the plaintiff procured to be executed by Wood a second building loan mortgage, running to the plaintiff, of $42,500. After the giving of the building loan mortgages the plaintiff conveyed the property, by deed, to Wood.

In erecting the buildings Wood entered into contracts with the defendants to furnish material and perform work, labor and services in and about the construction of the buildings, and incurred an indebtedness therefor, which furnished the consideration in part for the execution of the contract, the subject of this action.

The performance of the contract of. sale by Wood proceeded to a point where he became hopelessly involved and unable to pay the materialmen or proceed further with the construction of the buildings. Thereupon the plaintiff commenced an action for the foreclosure of the two building loan mortgages executed by Wood.. In this action all of the defendants were made parties, but some had not been served with process prior to the execution of the contract, the subject of the action.

It was the contention of the defendants at this time that certain of their claims were superior to the lien of the two mortgages and should be paid in preference thereto; that they also had a defense upon the merits,, based upon the claim that the full amount of money secured to be paid by the mortgages had not been advanced by the plaintiff to Wood, but that the plaintiff had appropriated to ■himself a very large sum of money, the proceeds of the mortgages, and that his son, with the consent of the plaintiff, had profited in an unconscionable amount in the contract which he made with Wood [547]*547for doing the mason work upon the buildings ; that the sums secured thereby by the plaintiff and his son should be deducted from the amount of the building loan mortgages and paid to the defendants upon their several claims. Some of the materialmen, if not all, employed counsel to protect their rights in the premises.

After these claims had been advanced negotiations, were had between the parties and the counsel representing the respective interests, and such negotiations finally resulted in the making and execution of the contract, the subject of the action.

No answers were interposed by the defendants or any of them in the foreclosure action and upon the sale the premises were bid in by Jones. In the answers which have been interposed in this action it is set forth that Wood was the mere dummy of Jones, and in substance that the transaction between Jones and Wood was a scheme upon the part of Jones to defraud the material-men who should be engaged in constructing these buildings, and that pursuant thereto Jones appropriated a large part of the proceeds of the building loan mortgages, and, through the contract with his son, adverted to above, and in other matters, he fraudulently procured for himself, at the expense of these defendants, considerable sums of money, which now ought to be applied in payment of these defendants’ claims.

A perusal of the testimony discloses much in justification and support.of the claims set forth by the defendants in their answers and otherwise. It is not, however, averred in any of the answers interposed by the defendants that they were without knowledge of the existence of these fraudulent acts on the part of Jones; on the contrary, the evidence discloses the fact that the defendants did have knowledge of the act of Jones in appropriating money, and of the contract for the mason work secured by his son. It must be assumed, therefore, for all the purposes of this action, that these defendants were informed of existing conditions at the time of the negotiations, which led to the execution of the contract, the subject of the action.

Such being the fact, and as they and each of them consented and agreed that Jones should be permitted to continue the foreclosure of the mortgages for the full amount for which they stood as security, and that the defendants were to be paid the amount of their [548]*548claims by the proceeds of a mortgage or from the proceeds of the sale of the property, subject to the amount of the mortgages, and of the amount of Jones’ advances otherwise made upon the property, they must be held to be concluded by such agreement, and cannot now attack the transaction between Jones and Wood, or have the settlement relating thereto disturbed.

The effect of the execution of the agreement was to substitute an independent executory contract for the protection of the defendants and to settle the matters in difference, and as such it became binding upon the parties thereto and resort can only be had to it in the enforcement of the respective rights and liabilities of the parties. (Morehouse v. Second Nat. Bank of Oswego, 98 N. Y. 503; Nassoiy v. Tomlinson, 148 id. 326.)

This brings us to a consideration of the construction to be placed upon the contract. It recited the mortgages given by Wood and held by Jones, and provides that Jones should press the foreclosure actions to judgment and sale, and bid in the property if upon such sale an amount to pay the judgment, interest and costs was not bid, and take title thereto and would immediately thereafter execute and deliver-a good and proper deed of the same to Melvin G. Palliser “ upqn the understanding and agreement that before the delivery of said deed a bond and mortgage shall have been negotiated upon the said premises when completed for the sum of $250,000, which sum, less the expenses of procuring the same, shall be paid over and applied to pay off the liens upon said property prior to those of said Jones, and then upon the judgments and mortgages of the said Jones, as far as the same will go, and that he will, if necessary, as hereinafter set otit, accept a second mortgage upon and against said premises for the difference coming to him, payable on or before six months after date, with interest.”

The 2d clause of the contract appoints Melvin G.

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Related

Morehouse v. . Second Nat'l B'k of Oswego
98 N.Y. 503 (New York Court of Appeals, 1885)
Sahler v. Signer
44 Barb. 606 (New York Supreme Court, 1865)
Phyfe v. Riley
15 Wend. 248 (New York Supreme Court, 1836)

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Bluebook (online)
75 A.D. 539, 78 N.Y.S. 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-garrigues-nyappdiv-1902.