Olmstead v. Latimer

9 A.D. 163, 41 N.Y.S. 44
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 9 A.D. 163 (Olmstead v. Latimer) 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
Olmstead v. Latimer, 9 A.D. 163, 41 N.Y.S. 44 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Cullen, J.:

In August, 1878, one John G. Latimer executed his bond with mortgage on a lot and building on Atlantic street, Brooklyn, to secure the sum of $18,000 borrowed by him. The plaintiff subsequently acquired that bond and mortgage. In 1884 Latimer died intestate, seized of the mortgaged premises, leaving ' a widow and four brothers (the three defendants and one James D. Latimer) his only heirs at law. Letters of administration were issued on the estate of John G. Latimer, and upon the settlement of the estate it appeared that the personal estate was exhausted by the payment of the debts and expenses of administration, leaving a deficiency in the amount due for administrator’s fees. The deceased left real estate of considerable value. During 1888 and 1889 three of the brothers conveyed to the fourth, the defendant Frederick B. Latimer, all their interest in the mortgaged premises. On October 15,1891, the plaintiff and the defendant Frederick B. Latimer executed the following agreement:

“We agree that the time for the payment of the bond and mortgage for $18,000 on 201 and 203 Atlantic avenue, Brooklyn, made by John G. Latimer to the executors of Moah T. Pike and recorded in the register’s office of Kings county in liber 1425 of Mortgages, page 17, August 24, 1878, being the date thereof, shall be and hereby is extended to May 1, 1895, subject to the same terms and conditions, including tax, insurance and interest clauses as at present.

“Dated Mew York, October 15, 1891.

“DWIGHT H. OLMSTEAD,

Executor and Trustee under Will of Noah T. Pike.

“F. B.'LATIMER.”

In April, 1892, a fire occurred in the buildings on the mortgaged premises, by which they were partially injured. In an attempt to restore the buildings they collapsed and became a total loss. By this accident the value of the mortgaged premises fell below the amount of the mortgage. Thereafter the plaintiff instituted this action to foreclose the mortgage and hold the defendants, as heirs at law of the original bondsman and mortgagor, liable for any deficiency. The trial court held the defendant Frederick liable for sixteen-seventy-fifths of any deficiency and the.other defendants not [166]*166liable. From this decree the plaintiff and the defendant Frederick appeal, the former seeking to hold all the defendants, the latter to be relieved from liability.

' -It is not disputed that the defendants are liable on the obligation of their ancestor, unless either the conduct or dealing of the plaintiff with the bond and mortgage in suit has discharged them, nor is any point raised against the right to enforce such liability in this action. The claim of the defendants,, that they have been discharged from liability, is based on the fact that the plaintiff failed to present any claim to the administrator before the settlement of the estate. Under our statute (1 R. S. 749, § 4),. upon thé decease of the mortgagor, the 'mortgaged property became primarily liable for the debt. After that, and for any deficiency, the personal estate was next liable. Then, and only in case the personal estate was insufficient, the heirs at law were liable to the extent of their inheritance. . Before the creditor can resort to the personal-estate of the testator he must first exhaust his remedy against the land, and look to the general estate of the bondsman only for the deficiency. (Johnson v. Corbett, 11 Paige, 265 ; Hauselt v. Patterson, 124 N. Y. 349.)

This, we think, is also true of an attempt to proceed against the next of kin ..or heirs at law, although there is authority to the contrary. (Roosevelt v. Carpenter, 28 Barb. 426.) On these premises the defendants contend that as plaintiff could have no claim against the administrator until he foreclosed' the mortgage, it was his duty to have foreclosed it during the period prescribed by law for the presentation of claims against the' estate; that, had the mortgage been then foreclosed, there would have been no deficiency, as during that time the property was ample to satisfy the mortgage, and that by his failure so to act the plaintiff discharged the estate of the bondsman from any claim. The fault of this argument lies in the assumption that a claim against a deceased person must be presented to the administrator during the advertised period, or otherwise is barred. . Such is not the statute. If the creditor fails to present his claim in time the administrator is not chargeable with assets he may have paid in satisfaction of debts or may have distributed. (§ 2718, Code Civ. Proc.) This is the only effect of such a failure. (Id. § 1837.) The creditor may wait as long as he pleases, provided he [167]*167keeps within the Statute of Limitation, and then proceed against the next of kin or heirs at law, if there be a deficiency in personalty. The case of Selover v. Coe (63 N. Y. 438) is not in point. , There the creditor did present his claim to the administrators. It was rejected by them, and the claimant failed to bring his action within six months, as prescribed by the statute. This short Statute of Limitations was held to bar all actions to collect the claim, and such rule is now expressly enacted by the Code. (§ 1822.) But to a claim not presented to the administrator this rule has no application. We-think it clear, therefore, that before the defendants transferred the title to the mortgaged premises they all remained liable proportionately for any - deficiency that might arise on the mortgage debt.

Before we discuss the effect of the agreement between the plaintiff and the defendant Frederick, there must be first determined the effect" of the conveyances to Frederick from his co-defendants. These conveyances are not recited in full in the record. It is there-stated : “ These deeds were for the consideration of $1 each, and there is no reference in any way therein to the mortgage.” From this we" assume that the deeds were grants without covenants. The plaintiff contends that by such conveyances, they being not subject to the - mortgage, the grantors became or remained primarily liable for the mortgage debt, and that the land stood only as a srn’ety. In support of this claim the plaintiff relies on Wadsworth v. Lyon (93 N. Y. 201). In that case Louisa Lyon executed her bond and mortgage on certain lands for the sum of $4,000. She afterwards conveyed the land, by quit-claim deed, for $10,000, its full value, to Mrs. O’Day. The deed in no way referred to the mortgage. It was held that Mrs. Lyon remained primarily liable on her bond, and the land was only security for the debt. It will be seen that in this case, before the conveyance and while the lands were held by Mrs. Lyon, her bond was the primary liability,, and the mortgage was only a collateral security. As the grantee neither took, subject to the mortgage, nor agreed to pay it, it was held that the conveyance worked no alteration in the original relation in which the bond and the mortgage stood towards each other. This is the ground on which the decision proceeded. But that rule does not apply where the grantor is not primarily liable personally. In Matter of Wilbur v. Warren (104 N. Y. 192) Warren acquired directly from a mort[168]*168gagor ninety acres of land subject to a mortgage of $2,400, which Warren covenanted to pay as a part of the consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
9 A.D. 163, 41 N.Y.S. 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olmstead-v-latimer-nyappdiv-1896.