McKechnie v. McKechnie

3 A.D. 91, 39 N.Y.S. 402
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 3 A.D. 91 (McKechnie v. McKechnie) 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
McKechnie v. McKechnie, 3 A.D. 91, 39 N.Y.S. 402 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Follett, J.:

From July 10, 1858, the date of the. sale under the mortgage foreclosure, to October 15, 1891, the date of the commencement of this action, a period of more than thirty-three years, the defendants and their testators, have been in the undisputed possession of the mortgaged premises, claiming to be the owners thereof, and enjoying all of the rights of proprietorship. Each of the defendants interposed, in addition to defenses on the merits, the defense that the cause of action alleged in the complaint was barred by the ten and twenty years’ Statutes of Limitations.

During all of these years Jane McKechnie, plaintiff, has been of full age and under no legal disability. Mary McKechnie, plaintiff became twenty-one years of age October 9, 1869, and for twenty-two years before the commencement of this action lias been of full age and under no legal disability. February 14, 1872, John A. McKechnie, plaintiff, became twenty-one years of age, and for eighteen years before the commencement of this action has been of full age and under no legal disability. The litigants have been during this period residents of the village'of Canandaigua, which is only thirteen miles from the village of Palmyra, the place where the mortgaged property is situated.

Prior to September 1,-1877, when chapter 4 of the Code of Civil Procedure took effect, an action to redeem land from the lien of a mortgage brought against a person in possession claiming title in hostility to the mortgagor was barred after such possession had continued for ten years. (Miner v. Beekman, 50 N. Y. 337; Hubbell v. Sibley, Id. 468.) By section 379 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which took effect September 1,1877, the time in which such an action might be brought was extended to twenty years. By section 101 of the Code of Procedure and by section 396 of the Code of Civil Pi’ocednre- the time in which infants may sue is extended one year after they .become of age. Under both Codes the cause of action set forth in the complaint is barred, unless it is established that the possession of the defendants and of their testa[97]*97tors has not been hostile to the title of the mortgagor and to his successors in interest.

The learned trial court found that defendants’ testators entered into possession of the premises and continued therein as mortgagees and not as owners under a promise made through James Peddie, their attorney, to the plaintiff Jane McKechnie, that the proceeds of the premises, over and above necessary and reasonable charges and expenses, should be applied to the support of herself and children, and that the promise was authorized by the mortgagees who afterwards recognized and ratified it. This is the only finding relied on by the plaintiffs to take this case out of the operation of the statute, which finding is challenged by the defendants as contrary to the weight of evidence.

It is conceded by the learned counsel.for the respondents that there is' no legal evidence of an express promise by the defendants’ testators to hold the premises as mortgagees in possession and account for the rents and profits, and the only evidence tending to show that Jane McKechnie ever believed in the existence of such a .promise was given by her. She testified that in June, 1858, before she left the premises, James Peddie, the attorney who foreclosed the mortgage, called on her and the following conversation occurred: “ Q. I (plaintiffs’ counsel) only want to know what the conversation was ? * * * A. He (James Peddie) came to tell me that James McKechnie said that he was not going to settle my husband’s business as he had promised him to; he thought I was not to make myself at all uneasy about the business, because it was going to be thrown altogether, and I would be well supported out'of the business. As he was leaving, he stopped at the door and he said, ‘ Don’t make yourself at all uneasy; you are to be well supported out of this business.’ Mr. James told him so. * * * Q. I understood you to say that Mr. Peddie told you that James McKechnie told him to come and tell you that ? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did you make any reply to him? * * * A. Yes, sir. Q. Did you tell Mr. Peddie what James had told you? A. Yes, sir. Q. Will yon state what you told Peddie that James had said to you ? A. I told Peddie that James told me that Mr. Peddie would come and tell me all about the business ; I had spoken to James and —— Q. I only asked for what you told Mr. Peddie. A. Yes, sir.”-

[98]*98An attorney employed to effect a statutory foreclosure of a mortgage has no implied power to compromise the rights of his client, or to nullify the act which he is employed to perform, and before the defendants can be bound by the promise of Peddie it must be shown that he was expressly authorized to make the promise. (Lewis v. Duane, 141 N. Y. 302, affg. 69 Hun, 28.)

There is 'no evidence that James Peddie liad any authority to make such a promise. It appears that at this time he was engaged in foreclosing the mortgage, which proceedings* were begun April 14, 1858. His' former partner, called by the plaintiffs, testified that he could not say that James Peddie was the agent for J. & A. McKechnie in any way, was simply an attorney for them in legal matters which they had at Palmyra. He did not know that Peddie had any charge of the brewery property, and, so far as he knew, his employment related to the brewery business, debts and accounts. This falls far short of showing that Peddie was vested with authority to make the promise testified to by Jane McKechnie. On the contrary, it tends to show that he had no such ■authority.

It is argued in behalf of the plaintiff that the snbsecpient deal ings between J. & A. McKechnie and the plaintiffs tend to support the findings that such a promise was made, and that by such dealings it was ratified. I am unable to find any support in the evidence for this contention. During these thirty-three years none of the plaintiffs, so far as the record shows, took the slightest interest in the Palmyra brewery. Had there been an agreement that the mortgage and interest thereon, the taxes and expenses of managing the brewery and the value of the goods and the house rent furnished, were to be charged on one side and the rents and profits on the other side of a mutual account, it seems to me there would have been some entry in the books denoting such an understanding, or, at least, that "these plaintiffs, or some one of them, during these years, would have taken some steps to ascertain the state of the accounts and the condition of the property. If such an agreement had been made a.nd acted on by the parties it is altogether unlikely that John A.. McKechnie would have been ignorant in respect to it. He was the only son and lived with his mother and sister. At the time of the trial of this action he was forty-three years of age,- and, as he testified, a man of [99]*99property. The first conversation he ever had with either of the defendants, in respect to the Palmyra brewery, was in April, 1890, when Crin S. Bacon, the executor of James MeKechnie, stated that" thereafter he "would have to pay rent for the house which he and his mother had occupied for so many years. John A. MeKechnie testified that the mortgage was then spoken of by Bacon, but John A. MeKechnie did not then assert that he knew of its existence, or that he,, his mother and sister, had a right to redeem the property. As before stated, from October, 1858, to September, 1865, J. & A.

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Bluebook (online)
3 A.D. 91, 39 N.Y.S. 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckechnie-v-mckechnie-nyappdiv-1896.