McGiven v. Wheelock

7 Barb. 22
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 3, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 7 Barb. 22 (McGiven v. Wheelock) 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
McGiven v. Wheelock, 7 Barb. 22 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1849).

Opinion

By the Court, Gridley, J.

We think that the bill in this cause should be dismissed, upon grounds which we will proceed to state with as much brevity as possible.

I. We are of the opinion that the inference may be justly drawn from the acts of Wheelock, and his agreement with Mr. Clarke, that as between him and Penniman, he had assumed to pay the debt which the mortgage in question was executed to secure.

(1.) The debt was, when contracted, due from the defendants jointly, and though payable in one year, was suffered to remain unpaid until the 15th of April, 1843. At that time Whee-lock did in fact assume the satisfaction of the debt, upon himself, and on that day executed a bond and mortgage for $1565 to Mr. Clarke, who was then the holder and owner of the mortgage in question, to secure an individual debt of Wheelock, and also the balance that remained due on the joint bond and mortgage of Penniman and Wheelock. Why did Wheelock do this, unless, by some arrangement with Penniman, he had assumed the joint debt ? If he had paid it up in money, it would excite less surprise; but why should he mingle it with his own indi[25]*25vidual liabilities, and incumber his individual property to secure the payment at a future day, unless he had assumed it as his own1 There is no evidence that Clarke was pressing for payment or further security, or that the premises were not an ample fund to secure the balance then due; or that Penniman was not then and since perfectly responsible. The actual assumption of this debt as an individual liability, and the giving of a new security for it by Wheelock, unexplained, certainly furnishes a very strong presumption that he thus assumed this debt because he had agreed with Penniman to do so.

(2.) The mortgage in question was not extinguished; for Mr. Clarke, as a prudent man, was unwilling to relinquish any secuiity which he possessed. But it was kept alive solely as a collateral security for the amount of the balance then due upon it, to the same amount secured by the new $1565 mortgage. The important point in this transaction is, that the new bond and mortgage became, hy the agreement between Wheelock and Clarke, the principal debt, and the old bond and mortgage, that is, the joint obligation of Penniman and Wheelock, a collateral security only. In other words, the individual obligation of Wheelock was substituted as the principal debt, and the joint obligation of Penniman and Wheelock took the place of a mere surety fund. That I am right in the conclusion, that the joint mortgage was merely kept alive as a collateral security until the mortgage for $1565 was paid, I refer to the statement of this fact contained in schedule A. annexed to Whee-lock’s general assignment: to the admissions in folio 8th, that Mi-. Clarke drafted and witnessed the said assignment and schedule; and to the testimony of Mr, Clarke in folio 26 of the evidence, when he testifies unequivocally to the fact, Now, it is entirely clear, that the object sought, by including the debt secured by the old mortgage, in the new one, was not to increase the security merely, for that would have been effected by retaining the old joint mortgage as the principal debt, and making the new one collateral to it pro tanto. But the object must have been that Wheelock should assume the joint debt as his individual obligation, and secure it with his own separate [26]*26property. In the absence of any explanation, we are brought to this inevitable conclusion. The question then recurs why he should do this, unless it had been agreed between him and his partner Penniman, that he should assume this debt ? (3.) On the third day of April, 1846, Wheelock having become utterly insolvent, assigned all his property, real and personal, in law and in equity, to be applied to the payment of his debts, giving certain preferences, for the reason, as stated in the assignment, that his property was insufficient to pay all his creditors. Under these circumstances, he makes the $1565 debt a preferred demand. Why should he thus devote his individual property (over and above that bound by the mortgage) to the payment of that portion which represented the joint debt, postponing and sacrificing many of his individual creditors, unless it had become his own separate debt ? Would he have volunteered his own property to pay off Penniman’s portion of the debt, unless he had agreed with Penniman so to do ? Would he not have-called upon Penniman to contribute his portion of the joint debt, and thus relieve his broken fortune from the pressure of this copartnership demand ? Again; while he was making provision for the payment of this entire $1565 demand as a preferred debt, if it was true that he was paying the half of this original joint debt for and on behalf of Penniman, (and not on account of a consideration theretofore received from Penniman,) he would lay the foundation for a just claim against Penniman for the one-half the amount advanced. And whether this claim existed as an interest in the mortgage, by way of an equitable substitution, or in a demand for money paid, it passed by the general assignment to his assignees. And the question then arises, why it is not found in the inventory of his property assigned? He could not have forgotten such a claim as this; and it is therefore reasonable to conclude that he had no such claim. How then can we escape the conclusion that he paid this joint debt because he had long since agreed to do so, and had received the consideration for so doing ? But

II. We think that the mortgage has been substantially paid and satisfied; and that Mr. Clarke had no power to transfer it [27]*27as a subsisting security, to the complainant. We have already seen that after the execution of the $1565 mortgage, it survived only as a collateral security, to an equal amount of that mortgage which had been substituted for it and in which the joint debt had been merged. When therefor the $1565 mortgage was satisfied, the mortgage in question being collateral to it, became functus officio. Wheelock’s real estate, which was bound by the $1565 mortgage, was advertised and sold by the assignees, free from incumbrance. The complainant became the purchaser of a part of it, and a Mr. Hawkes of another portion. The assignees were bound, therefore, to remove all incumbrances, and to convey the premises to the complainant unincumbered by the $1565 mortgage. They desired, therefore, to pay off Mr. Clarke ; and they were to receive the money to make this payment from the complainant as a part of his bid for the property. But it was arranged, by McGiven paying, or rather securing, to Mr. Clarke, the sum due upon this mortgage then amounting with interest, to $1783, which Mr. Clark received in payment of his mortgage, and receipted the amount to the assignees. The assignees, being the owners of the fee of this land, subject to the $1565 mortgage, having contracted to sell it free from incumbrance, insisted on paying up and satisfying that security. This would be done directly by their paying Clarke the $1783, thus removing the lien of the mortgage, and McGiven paying it to the assignees as the purchase price of the premises. Instead of this direct mode, however, McGiven undertakes to satisfy the mortgage to Clarke, and Clarke to receipt the money to the assignees. This is, for all the purposes of this suit, a payment of the $1565 mortgage. It is true that Mr. Clarke recites, in his receipt, that as between him and McGiven,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Barb. 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgiven-v-wheelock-nysupct-1849.