Lynch v. Utica Insurance

18 Wend. 127
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 18 Wend. 127 (Lynch v. Utica Insurance) 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
Lynch v. Utica Insurance, 18 Wend. 127 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1837).

Opinion

After advisement, the following opinion was delivered :

By Chief Justice Nelson.

[248] That the covenant of the 10th January, 1827, operated as an equitable mortgage in the contemplation of a court of equity, has not been controverted; but it was insisted on the argument, that the respondents, by exacting other security on delivering up the note of H. Lynch and the stock, when the covenant' itself was intended as the only substituted security, have forfeited their right to a specific execution, as against the other creditors ; or, if that should be deemed too extravagant a pretension, that at least they should be charged with the nominal amount of the substituted security, though a less sum has been realized. The answer to all this was given below, that the new securities were taken with the knowledge and approbation of Lynch, the appellant, the only person interested at the time, and without any intention to cancel his covenant, and for aught that appears, the collection of the securities has been enforced by the ordinary process, with the exception of the Hoagland mortgage. One lot covered by that mortgage, was released for $300, on a private arrangement; if at a sacrifice, which I do not understand to be urged, an allowance should be made before the master.

It would be idle to stop for a reference to authorities to show, that the interest which Lynch took under the will of his father, was but an equitable estate, the legal estate being vested in the executors in express terms, and for the obvious intent of better enabling them, as trustees, to execute the several trusts thereby charged.'

[249] [250] A question was made upon the argument, though not much discussed, viz.: whether this interest or estate was liable to be seized and sold upon execution under the 4th § of our statute of uses, (1 R. L. of 1818, jo. 74,) which was taken from and is a copy of 22 Car. 2, ch. 3, § 10. If it was thus liable, then the remedjr in equity will become somewhat more perplexed and doubtful than it otherwise need be, because the omission to seize and sell at law, affords ground for contending that the judgments have thereby lost priority over a subsequent bona fide purchaser, or an encumbrancer, especially without notice, as in the present case. The 4th § provides that the sheriff, upon any suit on any judgment, may make and deliver execution unto the party suing, of all such lands, &e., as any other person is seized or possessed, to the use of, or in trust for him against whom execution is sued, the same as the sheriff' might, if the defendant in the execution had been seized of the land of such estate, as the trustee is seized of, in the use or trust, at the time of the execution sued ; and the lands, by force and virtue of the execution, shall accordingly be held and enjoyed, freed and discharged of all encumbrances of such persons as are so seized and possessed, to the use, or in trust for the defendant in the execution. This statute, as far as it goes, changed the common law, and made a trust, before cognizable in a court of equity only, the subject of a legal proceeding. But in making the lands liable to judgments against the cesiuique trust, as the statute only authorizes the sheriff to take such as the trustees are seized of “ at the time of the execution sued out,” it has beén held, that if they have conveyed away the lands before execution comes to the sheriff, though they were seized at the rendition of the judgment, the lands cannot be taken; so that at law while the judgment binds, the legal estate of a party from the time [134]*134it is docketed, it only affects his trust property at the time of execution sued out. This was so decided in Hunt v. Coles, (1 Comyn, 226,) and which has since been followed, (Hains v. Pugh, 4 Bing. 335.) If this trust, then, falls ‘within the statute, the sheriff should' have seized and sold the interest of Lynch on the executions that have heretofore been issued. This would at once have cut short all the difficulties in which the case would seem now to be involved ; the remedy ivas as simple and direct as if he had been the owner of the lepal estate, and the judgments a lien thereon; but I do not entertain a doubt that the estate of Lynch under the will, is an interest that could not have been sold on execution within the statute. It is settled according to several authorities, and one of them in this court, that the "statute only extends to clear and simple trusts for the benefit of the debtor. (17 Johns. R. 351. 1 Johns. Ch. R 52. 4 Barn. & Ald. 648. 4 Bing, 96.) In Bogart v. Perry, Spencer, Ch. J., said that it was intended to subject to execution the real estatd or hereditaments of a person having the entire interest therein, but which was nominally and formally vested in another person. The case in Bingham is not unlike the present one. There the lands were vested in trustees in trust for the judgment debtor, subject to £10.000 to be raised for another, and which had not yet been raised. The court held, that the interests of the cestuique trust was not liable within the statute, as it was not simply the debtor’s, but held jointly with another, (the person entitled to the portion of £10,000.) Here the interest is held jointly with' three others : the mother, Edward and Louisa. $60,000 was to be raised and invested, to raise the annuity for the first, and $10,000 as a portion for the other two. These were charges upon the whole estate, and the equitable interests in the eight shares subsequently devised, are of course subject to them ; these three hold an interest in the estate jointly with the defendant, Lynch, to the amount of the annuity and portions. Then without any authority, the language of the statute would be decisive ; for after providing for the seizure and sale, it declares that the lands “ by force and virtue of such execution shall accordingly be held and enjoyed freed and discharged of all incumbrances” of the trustees. In case of a sale, therefore, the executors would be divested of all interest in and control over the share of Lynch, and that freed and discharged from the annuity, portions, debts, &c. This part of the statute is so explicit that it has uniformly been held not to apply where the lands in which the debtor had an equitable interest were encumbeied with other unexecuted trusts.

[251] [252] If I am right in the foregoing conclusion, then the question referred to by the learned chancellor, and upon which he has expressed a hesitating opinion, does hot necessarily arise in the case. The question will be found well stated and discussed by Mr. Sugden, in his valuable treatise on the Law of Vendors, p. 339, ed. 1828 ; by Mr. Powell, on Mortgages, p. 616, 623 ; and more briefly by Mr. Coote, a recent writer on the same subject, p. 71. In 'order to present it distinctly, for I do not intend to discuss it, it is necessary to premise, that in .chancery, a mortgage, if seized of the legal estate, may buy in the equity of redemption at private sale, disencumbered of judgments against the mortgagor, intermediate the giving the mortgage and time of the purchase, in the absence of notice. The reason given is this: that by the contract of purchase of the equity of redemption, he acquires an equal equity with the judgment creditors, and having already the legal estate, both together give him the better title. (Crisp. v. Heath, 7 Vin. Abr. 52, e., pl. 2.

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Bluebook (online)
18 Wend. 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynch-v-utica-insurance-nysupct-1837.