Patty v. Pease

8 Paige Ch. 277, 1840 N.Y. LEXIS 450, 1840 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 61
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedApril 7, 1840
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 8 Paige Ch. 277 (Patty v. Pease) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patty v. Pease, 8 Paige Ch. 277, 1840 N.Y. LEXIS 450, 1840 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 61 (N.Y. 1840).

Opinion

Moseley, V. C.

The bill in this cause was filed to foreclose a mortgage, under the following circumstances : On the 10th December, 1810, Erastus Pease executed the mortgage described in the bill to John Patty and Robert Patty, upon a village lot in the village of Auburn, to secure the payment of $755,75, according to the condition of a bond of even date therewith, and the interest. On the 14th day of March, 1827, Pease the mortgagor, sold a portion of the premises covered by the mortgage, to William Maxwell, who afterwards paid the whole consideration for the sale of this portion to Pease. On the 18th day of March, 1827, Pease sold the residue of the said premises to Palmer Holley, with whom an arrangement was made, in virtue of which Holley paid the whole of the consideration for this purchase to Patty ; and it was applied and endorsed upon the bond and mortgage. Patty at that time executed an instrument declaring that portion of the premises sold by Pease to Holley released and discharged from the lien created by .the mortgage from Pease to him. On the 31st day of July, 1830, Maxwell sold and conveyed that portion of the lot which was deeded to him by Pease, to James S. Seymour, the defendant in this suit, who still owns and is in possession of the same. A balance is yet claimed to be due upon the bond and mortgage. Robert Patty died in 1832, and the bill is filed by John Patty as the survivor. Pease has became insolvent.

Upon these facts, the complainant insists that he has a right to enforce the lien, originally created by the mortgage, upon that portion of the premises now held by Seymour, though it] was conveyed by the mortgagor first in the order of time, to Maxwell. The leading principle applicable to the rights between those parties undoubtedly is, that when lands incumbered by a mortgage or judgment against the owner are subdivided and conveyed to different persons at different periods of time, that portion, which is conveyed last by the incumbrancer is to be first called upon to contribute for its full value towards satisfying the incumbrance ; and thus each portion is thus.to bear its pro[279]*279portion of the burden in the reverse order of the time of its alienation. This principle is not now to be questioned. (Gouvenour v. Lynch, 2 Paige’s Rep. 300.) It has been frequently asserted in our own courts and is deemed a cherished principle of the English chancery. (5 John. Ch. Rep. 33. 9 Cowen, 403.) When Maxwell purchased of Pease the west half of the lot, on the 14th March, 1827, he had undoubtedly the right to rely upon the rule of law towards protection from incumbrance; and the only serious question in the case is, whether the transaction between Pease, Holley and Patty, on the 18th of March, only two days after, if it should be sanctioned, impeaches that rule.

It may be difficult to illustrate or define the rule in any language more explicit than that in which it is declared. But its meaning would have been understood, and no doubt was so between the parties in their application of it when they learned that Pease by his deed to Maxwell of the 14th December transferred the whole, or so much of the lien created by his mortgage, to the other portion of the lot as to require its whole value to be applied in payment of the mortgage debt. Admonished by this rule, Holley was bound to see that upon the receipt of a deed from Pease on the 16th of the same month, for the other portion of the lot, he gave the full value of it; and that all the purchase money was applied upon the bond from Pease to Patty. If this was done, Holley might well have supposed that good faith had been maintained towards Maxwell. And this is believed to be the object and ' extent of the rule. If we carry our views back to the period of the transaction, it will be sufficient to see what now should have been advised to be done by the parties. But it is contended by the counsel for the defendant Seymour, that nothing short of a judicial sale of the second half of the lot, and an application of its proceeds under the direction of a decree, could satisfy the rule, I cannot admit the force of the objection. Natural justice was all that was required; and it purely can only be necessary to resort to a court of com[280]*280petent jurisdiction to enforce it when withheld. It strikes me, therefore, that the principle of preference to the first purchase is preserved when the full value of the second sale is applied to the benefit of the first purchaser. Hence it is resolved into a question of fact, whether on the 16th of March, 1827, eight hundred dollars was the full value of that part of the premises conveyed to Holley. The release of that portion of the premises from Patty to Holley, discharging the mortgage, is dated on the 21st of March, five days after the date of the deed from Pease to Holley, and the circumstance, it is contended, shows that the release had no connection with the deed. The facts are so closely connected however in principle, and nearly related in time, as to evince that they were all dependant and constituted but one transaction. And Palmer Holley testified that the release was agreed upon before he could raise the money by a new mortgage to pay the consideration ; and that it was considered all one transaction. Besides, it is not perceived to be of any importance if Pease was not a party to the release, he must have been a party to the agreement in the appropriation of the avails of the sale. The purpose to be effected was palpable. Pease was called upon for payment, and he testified that he sold to raise money to pay the Pattys. Holley was the purchaser, and principally interested in the application of the purchase money. It behooved him to see that the release was obtained. It seems to have been quite immaterial whether the release was obtained or not; for when the avails of the sale of that part of the lot were applied on the mortgage, it had discharged its obligation to both parties. In respect to the value of the premises, I consider that the estimate must be founded upon their value at the time of alienation. Any other rule would lead to much confusion, and in its application might, from subsequent fortuitous circumstances, defeat the ends of justice. There can be found no rule which would follow the premises last sold into their present altered and vastly enhanced condition in value, which would not also make a demand upon the [281]*281premises possessed by Seymour. And in which case the rule of construction must be abandoned, and its substitute would render it quite uncertain upon which half of the lot the burden would fall. It is therefore not only necessary to estimate their value at the time of alienation ¡ but in judging of the testimony upon that point, to have due regard to impressions which may natually be made upon the minds of witnesses from extraordinary uses of real estate in consequence of unforeseen improvements.

On recurring to the testimony and comparing the estimate made by the witnesses of the value of that portion of the lot sold by Pease to Holley, on the 16th March, 1837, I cannot resist the conclusion that it was not only a fair sale and at its full value, but that it also may be deemed to have been a beneficial one at that period for the interest of the first purchaser j who stood in the character of a surety for the mortgage debt, by reason of the application of the proceeds of the sale upon that debt without any expense to him in effecting it. It was in all probability as much as Maxwell himself could at that time have made out of it if he had then the control of it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Paige Ch. 277, 1840 N.Y. LEXIS 450, 1840 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patty-v-pease-nychanct-1840.