Newton v. Kruse

161 A.D. 811, 147 N.Y.S. 1061, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6109
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 11, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 161 A.D. 811 (Newton v. Kruse) 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
Newton v. Kruse, 161 A.D. 811, 147 N.Y.S. 1061, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6109 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Foote, J.:

The principal questions presented are whether the title of defendant Julia E¡ Ferguson by deed from Blakely is subordinate to plaintiff’s mortgage and whether the defendants Kruse have been rightly held liable for .the deficiency, if any there be.

While the learned trial court has held the deed from Vellum, as committee, to Woodward to be wholly void in law, it has, nevertheless, held that the title of defendant Ferguson under her deed from Blakely is subordinate to plaintiff’s mortgage. This upon the ground:

First. That Woodward was estopped by his deed to Kinner to say that he had no interest in the land to convey, and that such estoppel binds all the subsequent grantees from Woodward to and including Mrs. Ferguson, who is thus estopped to say that Woodward had no title or that plaintiff’s mortgage is not a lien on the land for that reason. As a proposition of law, we think this goes further than can be supported by the authorities. Doubtless, Woodward and all the subsequent grantors who conveyed with covenants of warranty are so estopped, as are all who accepted conveyances containing covenants on their part to assume and pay plaintiff’s mortgage. But no such covenant was contained in the deed from Kruse and wife to Drefs and Cook, nor did Drefs and Cook take possession of the land under their deed. Under these circumstances, we think [817]*817the weight of authority is to the effect that Drefs and Cook are not estopped from questioning Kruse’s or Woodward’s title. (Sparrow v. Kingman, 1 N. Y. 242; Averill v. Wilson, 4 Barb. 180; Robertson v. Pickrell, 109 U. S. 608.)

The deed from Drefs and Cook to Mrs. Ferguson was a quitclaim, with covenants only against the acts of the grantors. Mrs. Ferguson did not take possession under this deed and there was no reference in it to plaintiff’s mortgage or the Hartman contract. We think the acceptance of this deed did not estop Mrs. Ferguson to question the title of her grantors or of Woodward or the lien of plaintiff’s mortgage.

Second. That Blakely, having received back the entire consideration for the land, was under a binding equitable obligation when he became sane to make Woodward’s title good by conveyance to him, and that Mrs. Ferguson is under the same obligation in respect to the title she received from Blakely, and that Blakely being equitably estopped to dispute plaintiff’s mortgage, Mrs. Ferguson is so estopped, having received her title from Blakely with knowledge of all the facts, and that she should be charged in equity, as trustee, to hold her title subject to the lien of plaintiff’s mortgage. We agree with the conclusion so reached by the trial court. After Blakely was restored to sanity and the possession of his property, a court of equity would hold him to be a trustee of the title for the benefit •of those ■ claiming under Woodward, unless he proceeded to disaffirm the acts of his agent and committee, Vellum, and restore and make good to the grantee of Woodward the purchase price of the land. Blakely must be presumed to have had knowledge of the transactions'of his agent, Vellum, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, and he could not equitably retain the land from Woodward and his grantees or convey to others to defeat the Woodward title, at least not until he had restored the $1,500 purchase price returned to him, through his committee, by Woodward.

The question is whether defendant Ferguson has any rights or equities in this property superior to those which Blakely would have had, had he retained the title as against plaintiff’s mortgage ? It is clear that she has not. She is not shown to [818]*818be a. purchaser for value or to have expended any money in improvements on the property since she received the Blakely deed. She, through her husband, who procured the title for her, had knowledge of all the principal facts affecting the equitable rights of the plaintiff. It is true that her husband testified upon this trial that he paid Blakely a money consideration for the deed, but he says he is not able to remember the amount so paid. This statement may be strictly true and still the amount paid may not have been more than the nominal consideration of $1 named in the deed. As against the equities established by plaintiff, it was incumbent upon defendant Ferguson to show herself a purchaser for something more than a nominal consideration, and that she was without knowledge or notice of the plaintiff’s equities at the time she paid the consideration. This, we think, she has not done. Nor does the fact that Blakely’s deed to Mrs. Ferguson bears date before, and, hence, is presumed to have been delivered before Blakely received the $500 purchase money which Woodward had paid to Vellum, as committee, alter the case, for before Blakely received back this $500 he was under an equitable duty to Woodward and his grantees, including the plaintiff, to make good the contract of his committee to transfer the title to Woodward. The committee appears to have acted in entire good faith and for the interest of his ward. The testimony in the lunacy proceedings shows that one of the grounds urged upon the court as showing Blakely’s incompetency and the need of a committee was the fact that Blakely had purchased this land at a price considered to be double its value, and that he had been imposed upon in the transaction.

Defendant Ferguson also contends that it was error for the Special Term to try the question of her rights under the Blakely deed in this action because she was in the attitude of claiming under, .that deed a title superior to the plaintiff’s mortgage, and that she was entitled to a jury trial. This question was raised by defendant Ferguson at the opening of the trial. Her counsel moved for a dismissal of the complaint as against her on the ground “that she claims by an antecedent title * * * arising before the mortgage in suit, and that she objects to having * * * her title tried out in this action, [819]*819but claims it should be tried out in an action of ejectment, and claims she should have a jury trial.” Clearly, Mrs. Ferguson was not entitled to a dismissal of the complaint for she was in possession of the property and the holder of a deed from Drefs and Cook which was recorded and which, in form at least, conveyed to her the equity of redemption. This motion was renewed at the close of plaintiff’s case and again at the close of all the evidence, but in each case it was a motion to dismiss the complaint as against Mrs. Ferguson. Plaintiff did not put in evidence the deed from Blakely to Mrs. Ferguson. That was done by Mrs. Ferguson herself for the purpose of defeating plaintiff’s mortgage altogether and procuring an adjudication that it was not a lien upon the land. She appears to have thus invited a decision of the question as to whether the title she acquired under the Blakely deed was or was not subordinate to plaintiff’s mortgage. We think the trial court committed no error in denying the motions made on behalf of Mrs. Ferguson to dismiss the complaint as to her or in determining in this action, after she had introduced in evidence her deed from Blakely, that she was estopped from claiming that it conveyed anything more than the equity of redemption. (Griswold v. Atlantic Dock Co., 21 Barb. 225; Older v. Russell, 8 App. Div. 518; Washington Trust Co. v. Morse IronWorks, 106 id. 195.).

The trial court has also found that Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
161 A.D. 811, 147 N.Y.S. 1061, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newton-v-kruse-nyappdiv-1914.