Pardee v. Van Anken

3 Barb. 534
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 4, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 3 Barb. 534 (Pardee v. Van Anken) 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
Pardee v. Van Anken, 3 Barb. 534 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1848).

Opinion

By the Court,

Gridley, J.

The pressure of our various duties compels us, for want of time, to state in a very brief and informal manner, the conclusions at which we have arrived in this cause.

I. We think that the special guardian being the mortgagee, for the benefit of the infant, in a mortgage junior to. that held by the complainant in the first of the above entitled suits, was the proper party to file a bill for the redemption and assignment of the senior mortgage; not as spepiql guardian merely, but as the mortgagee, representing the interests of the infant with respect to the mortgage. A bill for a foreclosure and sale of the premises would be properly filed in his name, and so, we think, would be a bill filed for a redemption and assignment. It is true that by the general rules of the court of chancery, the mortgage executed on the sale of the infant’s interest in the premises in question should have been made to the clerk of the court; but it is equally true that by the statute (2 R. S. 195, § 185) the mode of investment of the proceeds of the sale was in the discretion of the court of chancery. And that court has the power to depart from, or dispense with, those rules, as it did in this instance. (1 Paige, 351. 9 Id. 391.) The defendant Pardee has no concern with the question whether the infant had funds of his own with which to make the redemption; whether they were advanced by the mortgagee, or whether, in that event, he will be reimbursed by order of the court of chancery. It is enough for him that the senior mortgagee tendered the money due on the mortgage held by him, and demanded its redemption for the more perfect protection of the lights of the infant under the junior mortgage.

II. We are also of the opinion that the defendant Pardee was bound, in equity, to grant the redemption and assign the mortgage. It is argued, and authorities are cited to show, that by payment and satisfaction of the mortgage, the junior in-cumbrancer would, as surety, be subrogated to all the rights of the principal creditor, so that an assignment would be, for that [537]*537reason, unnecessary. We believe, however, and shall, under a subsequent head, attempt to show, that the infant, whose interest the junior mortgagee represents, has rights which cannot be fully protected without an assignment of the mortgage. The right to an assignment of the mortgage, in our judgment, can be maintained upon several grounds.

(1.) It springs directly from the general right of redemption, which is a correspondent right to that of foreclosure. (2 Story's Eq. § 1024.) Every person who has any right to, interest in, or lien upon the lands embraced in a mortgage which is liable to be foreclosed, is entitled to a redemption. The owner of the fee of the equity of redemption redeems the land itself, and the decree in such case directs the mortgagee to convey all his right and title to the premises to the redeeming party, and to deliver over all deeds, writings, <fcc. relating to the same. The owner of a junior incumbrance redeems not the premises, strictly speaking, but the senior incumbrance ; and then he is entitled, not to a conveyance of the premises, but to an assignment of the security. The difference in the nature of the relief granted, in the two cases, depends on the difference in the nature of the interest in the premises held by the redeeming party, which confers on him the right to redeem,- It is said in 2 Story’s Equity, § 1023, “ that all persons who have acquired any interest in the lands mortgaged have a clear right to disengage the property from all incumbrances, in order to make their own claims beneficial or available.” “ Henpe,” he says, a tenant for life, &c. and indeed any other person being an incumbran-cer, or having a legal or equitable title, or lien thereon, may insist on a redemption of the mortgage in order to the due enforcement of their claims and interests respectively in the land. And when any such person does so redeem, he or she becomes substituted to the rights and interests of the original mortgagee in the land exactly as in the civil law.” The civil law required an assignment or a cession of the debt or security, on payment by the party, to be made to him even though that security were a bond only. (1 Story, § 494. Evans’ Pothier, n. 275, 280, 282, 429, 430. 1 Star. Eq. § 500.) The manner in which, by [538]*538the rules of the civil law, one party became substituted to the rights of another in a bond, mortgage, or other security, was by decreeing an assignment or “ cession,” as it was termed, of the security redeemed. (See 1 Story, §§ 494, 499, 500, 535, 6; Evans’ Pothier, n. 275, 280, 281, 428, 429, 430.) It seems, therefore, that upon this well established principle of equity, the assignment of the mortgage should have been made.

(2.) The senior mortgage should be assigned, for other and special reasons applicable to this particular case and to the particular relation which the parties to this suit bear towards each other. The conveyances, by which the fee of the lands embraced in the mortgage has been successively transmitted to the present holder, all bearing on their face the condition that they were made subject to the Fuller mortgage, it follows that those lands were the primary fund for the satisfaction of that incumbrance. (Jumel v. Jumel, 7 Paige, 591.) Again; not only was the same condition contained in the" conveyance by the special guardian of the infant’s interest in a moiety of the farm to Edward Morey, but the latter executed to the special guardian an agreement under seal, covenanting to pay off the Fuller mortgage, and to save harmless all persons interested in the premises. Now, upon this statement it is clear, that as between Yan Anken the mortgagee, who represents the infant, and Edward Morey, the moiety of the premises which originally belonged to Edward Morey, should in equity be first applied to the payment of the Fuller mortgage, and that the personal liability of Edward Morey was a fund primary even to Edward’s moiety of the land. The junior mortgagee, representing the infant’s rights, may therefore be regarded in the light of a surety, as to the lands originally owned by the infant and which were embraced in that mortgage, while the individual moiety of Edward and more especially the personal liability of Edward, constituted the principal fund for the payment of the Fuller mortgage. Such was the equitable relation existing between those parties, and all the rights growing out of this relation of principal, surety and creditor would be capable of being enforced at the suit of Yan Anken, were he, as the representative [539]*539of the interests of the infant, the assignee and holder of the senior mortgage. He would be entitled to foreclose such mortgage against Edward Morey, and to have a personal decree against him for any deficiency that might remain due after applying the proceeds of the sale of the mortgaged premises. (2 R. S. 191, §§ 152, 153, 154. 9 Paige, 436, 453.) So too he would be entitled to a decree that Edward Morey perform his covenant, and save the infant harmless by paying off the senior incumbrance. In addition to this, it would be ordered, in the decree of sale, that Edward Morey’s original moiety should be first sold. (Stor. Eq. §§ 849, 730. 6 John.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Barb. 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pardee-v-van-anken-nysupct-1848.