Lee v. Methodist Episcopal Church

52 Barb. 116, 1866 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 202
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 8, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 52 Barb. 116 (Lee v. Methodist Episcopal Church) 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
Lee v. Methodist Episcopal Church, 52 Barb. 116, 1866 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 202 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1866).

Opinion

By the Court, Potter, J.

This action was brought, mainly, to foreclose a mortgage given to one Lee, the plaintiffs’ assignor, and alleged to have been given by the defendants, “ The Methodist Episcopal Church of Fort Edward,” for a part of the purchase money of the prop[117]*117erty described in the mortgage, and partly for moneys advanced to said defendants by said Lee.

I do not enter upon a full history of the case in its details, as it seems to me there should be a new trial granted upon some of the rulings and decisions of the learned referee, made on the trial. There was sufficient evidence in the case, to show that the defendants, “ The Methodist Church,” had an estate in the premises in question that was the subject of mortgage. The defendants, as a corporation, were the owners of the property so mortgaged; and nearly half of the sum included in, or secured by the mortgage, ($700,) was for the purchase money of the property covered by the mortgage, and the remainder was for money, or its equivalent, advanced to the corporation. The debt attempted to be secured, was the debt of the corporation. It was admitted that the said defendants were a corporation, and that the persons who executed the bond and mortgage, were trustees of the said corporation at the time of their execution of said bond and mortgage. The claim in question had been assigned to the plaintiffs. An order of the court had regularly substituted them as parties plaintiff. The plaintiffs offered to prove that the persons signing the bond and mortgage given in evidence were all the trustees of said corporation. This was objected to as immaterial, and the objection was sustained by the referee, and exception taken. The five persons who had executed the said bond and mortgage, with each a common private seal, had added to their signatures, the word, “ trustees.” In their description as parties of the first part in the mortgage, there was added to the mortgagor’s names, the words, “ trustees of the Methodist Episcopal Church in the village of Fort Edward, in the county of "Washington.” At the end of the description of the property, was also this addition : “Being the premises conveyed to the trustees of said Methodist Episcopal Church by the said second party, (Stephen B. Lee,) and this instrument [118]*118is given to secure the purchase price of said premises, and moneys advanced for the erection of the, church edifice now located on said lot.” In the bond accompanying said mortgage, executed in like manner, and bearing even date therewith, in the description of the obligors, they add to their names the words, “ trustees of the Methodist Episcopal Church of Eort Edward, Hew York;” and “bind themselves and successors in office, jointly and severally to pay;” and in the condition, the payment is to be made by the obligors, “ or thei? successors in office.” The proof of the acknowledgment of the execution of the mortgage was by the affidavits of the five mortgagors, who were severally sworn, not to their identity, for the justice before whom it was taken, certifies that they were well known to him, “ and that they did, severally, and each for himself, depose and say, that he resides in the village of Eort Edward in said county; that he is a trustee of the Methodist Episcopal Church in the village of Eort Edward, a corporation, duly organized and incorporated, under and by virtue of the laws of the state of Hew York; that said corporation "has no particular corporate seal; that he signed his name to the foregoing instrument, as such trustee and affixed the seal thereto, by and under the order and resolution of the board of trustees of said corporation, duly made and given in writing on the 10th day of August, 1857; and that the same was executed by him, as such, trustee, for the purpose therein mentioned.”

The plaintiffs then offered to prove, among other things, the following:

1. “ That on the 16th August, 1857, ‘ the Methodist Episcopal Church of Eort Edward,’ was indebted to said Lee, (the plaintiffs’ assignor,) in the sum and in the manner specified in the mortgage; and that no part has since been paid, except one year’s interest. .

2. That Lee knew that the persons signing such bond and mortgage, were trustees of the said church, and were [119]*119acting as such; and that the credit was given exclusively to the corporation.

3. That the trustees intended to bind the corporation, and not themselves individually.

4. To prove a resolution of the board of trustees, directing the execution of the mortgage to Lee, and that the mortgage was executed in pursuance of that resolution.”

Each of these propositions were objected to by the defendants, on the ground that the evidence offered was immaterial; the objections were severally sustained by the referee, and the plaintiffs excepted, severally, to the rulings..

The defendants asked the referee to nonsuit the plaintiffs, and to dismiss the plaintiff’s complaint, upon the grounds above mentioned, and of failure to prove their case, and other grounds:

1. The referee held and decided that the bond and mortgage given in evidence was not the bond and mortgage of the corporation; but was the individual bond and mortgage of the persons executing the same.

2. That the plaintiffs could not be allowed to prove that the bond and mortgage were those of the corporation; or that the trustees intended to bind the corporation, and not themselves personally.

3. That no relief, éxcept foreclosure, could be granted

in this action, under any evidence that had been given or offered. • .

4. That the plaintiffs had not established their cause of action alleged in the complaint.

5. That the plaintiffs be nonsuited, and the complaint be dismissed.

To these rulings, severally, the plaintiffs excepted.

I am unable to concur in the result of these rulings, and propose but a brief examination of them, in' the light of the law, as I understand it, of the proof given, and of the .offers of evidence to be given, as above stated, that was objected to and rejected.

[120]*120The first and second propositions, held by the learned referee, appear to me to be in direct conflict with the principle of the law of evidence as held at general term in this district, in Hunter v. Hudson River Iron and Machine Co., (20 Barb. 493, 503, 504.) It was there held, that though a mortgage purported on its face to be the mortgage of a corporation, executed only by its treasurer, but with evidence of his authority to make it, evidence was admissible to prove directly or circumstantially, that it was not their mortgage; that the treasurer had no power to execute it; and that no resolution of the corporation had ever been passed creating the authority. This case, I think, clearly establishes the principle, that this extrinsic proof of facts to show whether the mortgage was, or was not, the act of the corporation, is admissible. If it purports to be the mortgage of the corporation, but is not, it may be shown by such extraneous facts that it is not. If it was intended by the parties, and especially by the corporation, to be their mortgage, and there is, as in this case, some evidence upon the face of the papers of such intent, though without more or further evidence, it might be insufficient.

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Related

Second Methodist Episcopal Church v. Humphrey
49 N.Y. St. Rep. 467 (New York Supreme Court, 1892)
Whitford v. Laidler
32 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 136 (New York Supreme Court, 1881)
Hood v. Hallenbeck
14 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 362 (New York Supreme Court, 1876)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 Barb. 116, 1866 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-methodist-episcopal-church-nysupct-1866.