Mowry v. . Sanborn

68 N.Y. 153, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 700
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 16, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 68 N.Y. 153 (Mowry v. . Sanborn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mowry v. . Sanborn, 68 N.Y. 153, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 700 (N.Y. 1877).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

This action has been twice tried. On the first trial the plaintiff recovered, on proving title in Sanborn ; a mortgage from him to the Washington County Bank, July 7, 1856; its assignment to the Washington County Rational Bank; the affidavits in the foreclosure proceedings; a deed from the bank (the purchaser on the mortgage sale) to the plaintiff; and that the- defendant was in possession of the premises. The plaintiff upon this proof, maintained his right of action, provided the affidavits showed a compliance with the statute relating to the foreclosure of mortgages by advertisement. The judgment on the first trial was reversed by the Commission of Appeals, on the ground that the affidavit of service of the notice of sale upon the mortgagor and others, did not show that service had been made as required by the statute. The affidavit was made by the attorney who conducted the foreclosure, and it alleged a service, by mail, upon the mortgagor, and other persons, of the notice of sale, by *159 depositing notices in the post-office addressed to the persons named at the places mentioned, and that at the time each of the said persons resided, as the deponent is informed and believes, at the respective places to which the said notices were so addressed.”

The notice to the mortgagor was, as appears by the affidavit, mailed at Greenwich, directed to him at Sandy Hill, and the only evidence that he resided there, given on the former trial, was the statement in the affidavit made upon the information and belief of the affiant. The Commission of Appeals (Eael, 0., dissenting) held, that this was not competent or legal evidence of the fact, arid that the case stood without proof that notice of the sale had been served on the mortgagor, and consequently, that the plaintiff had failed to establish a valid foreclosure of the mortgage.

On the last trial the judge permitted oral evidence to be given, that the mortgagor resided at Sandy Hill, where the notice mentioned in the affidavit was mailed, and the judge found as a fact that he then resided at that place ; but on the final decision of the case he disregarded this evidence and refused to consider it, on the gronnd that oral evidence of the residence of the mortgagor was not admissible to establish the regularity of the foreclosure or to supply the defect in the affidavit of service; and judgment was'given for the defendant, which was affirmed by the General Term, and is now before us for review.

The principal question in the case is the one already suggested, viz., was evidence admissible to prove that the mortgagor resided at Sandy Hill when the notice was mailed ? or, the question involved is still more comprehensive, viz., when title is claimed under the foreclosure of a mortgage, by advertisement, may the fact of the service of notice of sale, upon the mortgagor or other persons affected by the proceedings, be shown in support of the title, by any competent common-law evidence, in the absence of an affidavit showing such service ? The right of a mortgagee to extinguish the equity of redemption by a sale of the land without judicial proceedings or the *160 decree of the court, depends upon the existence of a power of sale in the mortgage or other instrument executed "by the mortgagor. If a power of sale is not given, the mortgagee must resort to a court of equity to enforce the mortgage. This principle of the common law has been retained in the statute for the foreclosure of mortgages, by advertisement, which only authorizes this proceeding in cases where the mortgage contains a power of sale. (2 R. S., 545, § 1.) .

In the absence of a statute regulating the mode of executing the power the mortgagee may sell the land at public or private sale, unless the particular manner of sale is prescribed by the instrument creating the power (Davey v. Durant, 1 De Gex and J., 535; 2 Wash, on Real Prop., 77), in which case the mortgagee must, in executing- the power, conform to the conditions imposed. The mortgagee could not at common law become the purchaser on a, sale made by himself under the power, or at least such a sale was voidable at the election of the mortgagor. He could not at the same time be a trustee of the power of sale, and a purchaser under it. (1 Sug. on Vend., 94; 3 id., 229; Wash, on Real Prop., 77.) And, where a sale was made under tiie power a deed from the mortgagee to the purchaser was necessary to pass the title. (Arnot v. MeClure, 4. Den., 44.)

The mortgagee under the law of England has the legal title to the mortgaged premises, and i and< u our law it remains in the mortgagor until foreclosure, b ut r u either case a deed is necessary to satisfy the statute of frauds, and to vest the title in the purchaser, unless the legis lature has interfered and created an exception, or has f jubstiti ated some other evidence of title in place of a common-law conveyance.

When a power of sale is given to be executed under certain conditions, or its execution is made "by the terms of the power to depend upon the performance • of precedent acts, and the validity of a conveyance, made in at mimed execution of the power is in question, oral evidence oH a compliance "with the conditions, is admissf 0l6j unless such proof is excluded by the nature of the conditions imposed, or the terms of the power. *161 In Hawley v. Bennett, (5 Paige 104), entries in the register of an attorney, who conducted a foreclosure by advertisement, were admitted after his death in support of the title under a deed given on the foreclosure, to show a compliance with the statute, and the circumstances of the sale. The foreclosure was before the statute of 1808, which made affidavits of the parties, etc., prima facie evidence, and in Arnot v. McClure, Bronson, Ch. J., says : “ Before we had any such statute the regularity of the proceedings could only be established by common-law evidence ; and any kind of common-law evidence was admissible.” When, title to real estate is claimed under a conveyance purporting to be made in execution of a power, which by its terms is to be exercised in a certain event or after notice to the grantor or third person, or the doing of any other act by the grantee of the power, oral evidence of the happening of the event or of the performance of the condition precedent, does not add to, vary, or contradict the deed, but is consistent with it, and is admissible to show that the grantee of the power acted within his authority.

The statute for the foreclosure of mortgages by advertisement was passed to regulate the mode of executing the power of sale, when given in the mortgage. The statute as originally enacted, provided for notice of the sale to be given by publication and posting (1 R. L., 376), and in 1844, the statute was amended by requiring in addition, that the notice should be served personally or by mail on the mortgagor (chap. 346, Laws of 1844, § 5), and in 1857 the statute was further amended providing that a copy of the notice should be delivered to the county clerk, to be affixed in a book in his office, and that an entry of the time of receiving and affixing it should be made. (Chap.

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Bluebook (online)
68 N.Y. 153, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mowry-v-sanborn-ny-1877.