Perry v. Fries

90 A.D. 484, 85 N.Y.S. 1064
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 90 A.D. 484 (Perry v. Fries) 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
Perry v. Fries, 90 A.D. 484, 85 N.Y.S. 1064 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Parker, P. J.:

Two grounds of error are urged by the appellant on this appeal, which in my opinion require a reversal of this judgment.

The first is that the evidence does not satisfactorily show that, the defendant Williams had notice that the mortgage which he purchased from Yan Dusen was not the first lien upon the fifty acres therein described.

Of course it is conceded on the part of the respondent that, if Williams had the right to rely upon the record and to assume that the facts were such as appeared therefrom, he would acquire the mortgage which he purchased as a lien prior to the mortgage of the plaintiff. Her mortgage appeared upon the record as having been fully paid and discharged as against all the lands described therein. And as a matter of fact it was so discharged. The discharge which was found there was in fact executed by her, and was a contract [487]*487with all parties interested in the lands therein described that her mortgage had ceased to be a lien upon such premises.

She claims, however, that, although she did so discharge such fifty acres from the lien of her mortgage, she did not intend to discharge any more than the twenty-seven acres therein described, and that her discharge, as to the fifty acres, was executed through a mistake of the scrivener. And while she does not claim that Williams was ever informed before lie purchased the Yan Dusen mortgage that there was any mistake in the execution of such discharge, yet she claims that he had notice of a fact which was sufficient to put him upon inquiry and that if he, in good faith, had made such inquiry, he would have ascertained the error through which a discharge was put on record. Such notice was to the following effect: When the discharge was recorded, Caroline Rowe had title to the fifty acres, subject to the two mortgages, and continued to hold such title down to her death, which occurred sometime in 1902. In. October, 1893, she applied to Williams to purchase this mortgage from Yan Dusen, and at that time plaintiff claims that Fanny Rowe — her sister who was the widow of Jerome Rowe and the person-who had purchased the twenty-seven acres in 1887 (when the discharge was executed and recorded) — stated to Williams that “ my sister holds the first mortgage upon her property, and it has never yet been paid.” This statement is claimed to have been made in contradiction to a statement just made by Caroline that the Yan Dusen mortgage, which she was asking Williams to purchase and carry for her, was a first lien on the fifty acres. The claim rests entirely upon the testimony of Fanny Rowe, who clearly is not a disinterested witness, since she now claims to own more than a half interest in the plaintiff’s mortgage. Williams squarely denies that any such statement was ever made to him. In the following June, after having caused a search to be made of the records in the clerk’s office of Tompkins county, and discovering that the plaintiff’s mortgage had been discharged, and that there was no lien on the fifty acres prior to the Yan Dusen mortgage, and believing, as he testified, that such was the fact, he took an assignment thereof from Yan Dusen and paid the full amount due and unpaid thereon. Williams concedes that Caroline was introduced to him by Fanny Rowe, and has evidently forgotten when that occurred. It must be [488]*488conceded that it was sometime prior to October 19,1893, and in this, respect his letter to Yan D risen of that date corroborates Fanny Rowe. But it does not corroborate her statement that on October fourth she told him that her sister held the first mortgage on the fifty acres.' As to that claim, she is not corroborated by ¡any evidence in the case. Williams- admits that at sometime Caroline and Fanny came to his office and stated to-him-that a mistake had been made-in discharging the mortgage which he had purchased'. He claims that they differed among themselves as to the right of the trans-' action, but is positive that it was sometime after he had purchased the mortgage, and that neither of them claimed that the mistake could affect his ownership. Although Williams, seems to be uncertain as to when the. conversation he alludfes to was had,, he is • not at all uncertain' as to the conversation itself. -It was a conversation about the discharge, and a concession that as 'to him it was a valid one. Fanny Rowe does not pretend that when she introduced Caroline Rowe in October before the purchase, she had any conversation whatever abouj; the discharge. Evidently the conversation-which, Williams admits' having in his mind is not the one to which Fanny testifies, nor does it in any sense corroborate her concerning the notice which she claims to have then given. It is correct, therefore, to say that the notice upon which the plaintiff relies rests entirely upon the uncorroborated evidence of Fanny Rowe.- ,

On the other hand, in the letter of October 1¡9, 1903, which Williams Wrote to Yan Dusen concerning the reqiiest of Caroline RpWe that he purchase the mortgage, he says that he undeistands-that it is a first claim on the place, which is difficult to understand if he had recently been notified that Fanny Rowe’s sister held a mortgage ahead of it. Fanny Rowe’s testimony as | to, this notice is-not altogether convincing. If she so flatly contradicted Caroline Rowe in her statement that it was a first mortgage it is hardly credible that both Caroline and Williams would have paid no attention to her statement- and allowed her to go a Way without an explanation. If she Was correct, Caroline was making a false statement either dishonestly or ignorantly, and it is unlikely that Caroline would have allowed such a contradiction to1 stand without examination. Such a notice if given under such circumstances [489]*489would have caused an immediate inquiry on Caroline’s part, and it is incredible that Williams would have complied with her request to carry the mortgage for her until she should have ascertained and explained to him what this claim on Fanny Rowe’s part amounted to. In short, all parties acted exceedingly unnaturally if the notice to which Fanny Rowe testified was then given. On the other hand, Van Dusen testified that in the following June, when the mortgage was transferred and the money paid therefor, it was done in Williams office in Ithaca and that both Caroline and Fanny Rowe were present, and that they then both stated to Williams in his presence that the mortgage being transferred was a first claim on the land. Williams does not remember this, but Van Dusen .is positive regarding it. He seems to be an entirely disinterested witness, and his evidence is entitled to great weight in the solution of this question. If his statement in this respect is true, it cannot be believed that Fanny Rowe had previously made the claim regarding her sister’s mortgage which she testified to. And there does not seem to be any chance for mistake on Van Dusen’s part. He either testified to a deliberate and, so far as he was concerned, unnecessary falsehood, or else he was telling the truth.

And, moreover, I cannot understand what influence would have induced Fanny to so antagonize Caroline Rowe in her effort to bring about the purchase of such mortgage by Williams. When Fanny Rowe purchased the first mortgage for the plaintiff both she and the plaintiff knew that Caroline owned the fifty acres described in the Yan Dusen mortgage, and, therefore, thé discharge of the twenty-seven acres in that first mortgage as to her undoubtedly operated to discharge it as a lien on the fifty acres. It is conceded that the twenty-seven acres were ample to pay it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 A.D. 484, 85 N.Y.S. 1064, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-fries-nyappdiv-1904.