Second National Bank of New Haven v. Dyer

9 A.2d 503, 126 Conn. 101, 1939 Conn. LEXIS 246
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedNovember 16, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 9 A.2d 503 (Second National Bank of New Haven v. Dyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Second National Bank of New Haven v. Dyer, 9 A.2d 503, 126 Conn. 101, 1939 Conn. LEXIS 246 (Colo. 1939).

Opinion

Hinman, J.

This litigation originated in a complaint brought by the plaintiff to foreclose a mortgage made by the named defendant to the Thomas F. Clark Company and assigned by that company to the plaintiff. The Prudential Insurance Company was made a party defendant as claiming an interest in the mortgaged premises alleged to be subsequent to that of the plaintiff. The insurance company, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, filed, with an answer, a cross-complaint, claiming adjudication that it, instead of the plaintiff, is the owner and holder of the mortgage and the debt secured thereby, and relief appropriate thereto.

The substituted cross-complaint alleged in detail the history of the rather complicated transaction which may be summarized as follows: The Clark Company, which was engaged in the business of loaning money on mortgages, had a contract with the de *104 fendant giving' to it an exclusive right to submit to the defendant applications for loans on improved real estate in certain territory. It was the practice of the defendant not to take mortgages to secure loans for construction purposes until the improvements had been completed. To provide funds for the construction, it was the practice of the Clark Company to obtain a loan from a bank, assigning to it as security a mortgage made to the Clark Company, and to make advances therefrom to the mortgagor. Upon completion of the improvement, the defendant would purchase the mortgage from the Clark Company, which would obtain a reassignment from the bank and assign the mortgage and the note secured by it to the defendant. The defendant having approved an application submitted by the Clark Company for a loan to Dyer he executed a note and mortgage to the Clark Company, and that company made a written assignment of the mortgage to the plaintiff as collateral security for a loan. This assignment was never recorded. Subsequently the Clark Company executed and delivered to the First National Bank and Trust Company of New Haven an assignment of the same mortgage as collateral security for a loan, furnishing the bank a certificate of title showing that the company held the mortgage as of record, and also indorsed and delivered to it an instrument which purported to be, but was not in fact as Dyer’s signature thereto was forged, the note secured by the mortgage. This assignment was duly recorded. When construction of buildings on the mortgaged premises had been completed, the Clark Company furnished the defendant a certificate of title showing that the land records disclosed the Dyer mortgage to it and its assignment to the First National Bank and Trust Company, and thereafter delivered to attorneys repre *105 senting the defendant the false note, the original assignment to the First National Bank, the latter’s reassignment to the Clark Company and an assignment by that company to the defendant, whereupon the defendant’s attorneys disbursed the amount of the note and mortgage ($10,000) in the manner directed by the defendant. The reassignment from the bank and the assignment by the Clark Company to the defendant were filed for record at once. The cross-complaint further alleged that the defendant had no knowledge of the earlier assignment to the plaintiff and relied upon the condition of title as shown by the land records, and that if the plaintiff had recorded the assignment to it the defendant would not have been misled into believing that the instrument delivered to it was the genuine mortgage note and would not have paid the principal amount thereof to or for the Clark Company.

The plaintiff demurred to the cross-complaint, the trial court sustained the demurrer and, the defendant refusing to plead over, judgment was rendered for the plaintiff upon the cross-complaint. Upon the defendant’s appeal therefrom to this court (121 Conn. 263, 184 Atl. 386) the ruling on demurrer was held to be erroneous and the case was remanded for further proceedings. The question, raised by the demurrer, which was decisive of the former appeal was as to the effect of the plaintiff’s failure to record its assignment upon the rights of the defendant as a subsequent assignee. It was there recognized (p. 269) that ordinarily the indebtedness is the principal thing and a mortgage securing it incidental, so that an assignment of the debt carries with it the right and benefit of the security, though that be not assigned, but assignment of the security apart from the debt transfers the bare title, the beneficial interest *106 remaining with the owner of the debt. In the present case, however, it appeared from exhibits attached to the cross-complaint that the assignment to the First National Bank, the reassignment to the Clark Company, and the latter’s assignment to the defendant did not purport to be a bare assignment of the Dyer mortgage but specifically included also the note secured thereby. Therefore the issue was “not between one to whom an indebtedness has been assigned and another to whom the bare security for that indebtedness has been transferred, but between two parties each of whom holds an assignment of the debt and the mortgage securing it.” Idem, p. 270. In such a situation the plaintiff would be prior in right but for the effect of the recording statute (General Statutes, § 5010) the protection of which extends to “those who have given credit to one appearing upon the record to be the owner of the property although he had no beneficial right in it. . . . The basis of the protection so afforded is an equitable estoppel which arises out of the fact that the person who has failed to record the instrument under which he claims has thereby mis.led creditors into the belief that title is in the person who appears upon the record to own the property.” (P. 271). We held that under this principle of estoppel the allegations of the cross-complaint, if proved, by reason of the plaintiff’s failure to record its assignment would bar it from claiming a right to collect the indebtedness, through the enforcement of the mortgage, as against the defendant as subsequent assignee and would give to the latter a prior right as .regards such collection. (Pp. 272, 274).

After the remand following the appeal the plaintiff ■filed an answer to the cross-complaint, including allegations, in a second defense, that the defendant and its agents and attorneys “neglected to use due and *107 ordinary care” to ascertain whether the note delivered to them was genuine, in fact signed by Dyer, and the note which the mortgage referred to. It also alleged, in a third defense, that the Clark Company kept books and records which showed their transactions regarding this note and mortgage both with the plaintiff and the First National Bank, which the defendant had means and opportunity of examining and of informing itself that the plaintiff had a claim with respect thereto, but failed to avail itself of that means and opportunity. Various amendments to the pleadings were filed from time to time, and a judgment of interpleader was rendered pursuant to which the defendant Dyer paid in to the clerk of the court the principal of the note and interest; after trial on the merits judgment was rendered that this sum, less attorneys’ and other fees and disbursements, be paid over to the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
9 A.2d 503, 126 Conn. 101, 1939 Conn. LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/second-national-bank-of-new-haven-v-dyer-conn-1939.