Mertens v. Wakefield

35 Misc. 501, 71 N.Y.S. 1062
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 35 Misc. 501 (Mertens v. Wakefield) 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
Mertens v. Wakefield, 35 Misc. 501, 71 N.Y.S. 1062 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1901).

Opinion

Andrews, W. S., J.

On December 9, 1889, Robert A. Titus was one of the trustees of the estate of Alexander Dissel, deceased. He was also the owner of lot No. 1 in block No. 37 in the city of Syracuse. Upon that day, for the expressed consideration of one dollar, he conveyed the said lot to his wife. Upon the same day, Mr. Titus and his wife gave a bond to the father of the former, Silas Titus, for the sum of $2,500, secured by a mortgage upon the same property. Silas Titus appears to have paid nothing therefor, but he immediately thereafter assigned such bond and mortgage to Alexander Dissel, Jacob M. Mertens, Robert A. Titus and John McCarthy, as executors and trustees of the Dissel estate. The latter gave a check upon the First Mational |Bank of Syracuse for the sum of $2,500 to the order of Emma J. Titus. This check was indorsed by her and handed to her bus-[503]*503band, Robert A. Titus. He took the same to the Tryst & Deposit Company of Onondaga and deposited it to his individual credit.

Robert A. Titus died on or about September 17, 1892. At this time he was carrying life insurance to the amount of $15,000, $5,000 of which was payable to his estate and the balance to his wife. On the evening before his death, he requested her to re-convey the property to him, and to apply the life insurance coming to her to the payment of the mortgage liens upon it and other lands. If she would do so, he promised to give her by will, for life, all his real and personal estate. She accepted the proposition; at once reconveyed to him by warranty deed, in consideration, as expressed, of “ one dollar and other good and valuable considerations,” the lot in question; and he, in turn, executed such a will as he had agreed.

On February 25, 1893, Mrs. Titus, now remarried and known as Mrs. Wakefield, paid to Mr. Mertens, one of the trustees of the Dissel estate, out of the insurance moneys which she had then received, $6,000. This sum included the entire amount that was due upon the mortgage, and also a certain amount upon other indebtedness. Upon receiving the payment, Mr. Mertens gave to Mrs. Titus a receipt, stating that he had received $6,000 to apply on bond and mortgage to Alexander Dissel and others, as trustees; and also delivered to her an assignment of this same bond and mortgage.

This bond and mortgage Mrs. Titus held until April 4, 1894, when she assigned the same to Hath an Jacobson. A few days later she came to Mr. Mertens and told him that the Dissel estate held other mortgages upon which the Titus estate was liable; said that she desired to have all of these mortgages held by one person, and asked him to buy the bond and mortgage of Dr. Jacobson. Mr. Mertens finally consented, gave her the amount due thereon and she thereupon delivered that amount to Dr. Jacobson, and obtained from him an assignment of the securities to the Dissel estate.

It is this mortgage, so held, which it is now sought to foreclose.

Mr. McGregor, as one of the executors of the estate of Robert A. Titus, appears and answers, alleging that the payment made by Mrs. Titus to the trustees of the Dissel estate on the 25th day of February, 1893, satisfied and extinuguished the mortgage in question, and that it had thereafter no force and effect.

[504]*504The four minor children of Mr. Titus also appear by Alexander J enney, as their special guardian, and submit their rights to the court.

The proposition that where a mortgage executed to secure a specific debt is once paid, it is dead for all purposes, and cannot be revived to secure a new obligation as against those whose rights have intervened, is too well settled to require the citation of authorities.

It is also equally well settled that while, on the one hand, a written document purporting to be a discharge of a mortgage may, under some circumstances, have the effect of an assignment, so, on the other, a conveyance in the form of an assignment may operate as a satisfaction. This is a matter in which the form of the conveyance is not a decisive test, and a court of equity will go- behind the form to reach the substantial merits of the case. Ryer v. Gass, 130 Mass. 227.

Whether, as is said by Ohief Justice Shaw, a given transaction shall be held, in legal effect, to operate as a payment and discharge, which extinguishes the mortgage, or as an assignment, which preserves and keeps it on foot, does nót so much depend upon the form of words used, as upon the relations subsisting between the parties advancing the money, and the party executing the transfer or release, and their relative duties. Brown v. Lapham, 3 Cush. 551.

The general principle cannot be better stated than in the words used by the chief justice in the case last cited: “ If the money is advanced by one whose duty it is, by contract or otherwise, to pay and cancel the mortgage, and relieve the mortgaged premises of the lien, a duty in the proper performance of which others have an interest, it shall be held to be a release, and not an assignment; although in form it purports to be an assignment.

When no such controlling obligation or duty exists, such an assignment shall be held to constitute an extinguishment or an assignment, according to the intent of the parties; and their respective interests in the subject will have a strong bearing upon the question of such intent.”

Illustrations of these rules are found in many cases. If, for instance, a grantee who has taken lands expressly subject to a mortgage which he covenants to pay, does pay the amount due and then takes an assignment to himself, the mortgage - will be [505]*505deemed paid as regards those who have an interest in the performance of such duty.

It was so held in Carlton v. Jackson, 121 Mass. 592, where it was said that “ the rule applies, that when the money is paid by one whose duty it is by contract, or otherwise, to pay the mortgage, it is a release, though in form it purports to be an assignment.” Such was the case of Burnham v. Dorr, 72 Maine, 198, where the language of Judge Shaw was quoted with approval. Such also was the case of Clay v. Banks, 71 Ga. 363, where the same language is again quoted and approved. The same rule had been enforced in the courts of this State.

In Ely v. McNight, 30 How. Pr. 97, the head-note states that Where a mortgagor conveys the premises mortgaged to a purchaser, under an agreement that the latter shall pay the mortgage as a part of the consideration for the premises purchased, and instead of paying the mortgage the purchaser takes an assignment of it, with the accompanying bond, to himself, and subsequently assigns the same to a third person, who sues the mortgagor upon the bond, the action cannot be sustained. As between the mortgagor and the purchaser, the agreement operates to discharge the mortgage debt.” And the same rule is laid down in Kellogg v. Ames, 41 Barb. 218.

A similar illustration is found in the doctrine that a grantor who covenants against incumbrances, and who subsequently pays off the mortgage existing at the time of the conveyance, cannot, by taking an assignment to himself, keep the security alive. Wadsworth v. Williams, 100 Mass. 126 ; Stoddard v. Rotton, 5 Bosw. 378; Mickles v. Dillaye, 15 Hun, 296; Mickles v. Townsend, 18 N. Y. 575.

So a person who, with the funds of a mortgagor, and, as his agent, pays a mortgage, cannot enforce the security even if he has it assigned to himself. The assignment will be treated as a satisfaction. . Shepherd’s Ex’x v. McClain, 18 N.

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Bluebook (online)
35 Misc. 501, 71 N.Y.S. 1062, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mertens-v-wakefield-nysupct-1901.