Spring v. . Short

90 N.Y. 538, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 420
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 90 N.Y. 538 (Spring v. . Short) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spring v. . Short, 90 N.Y. 538, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 420 (N.Y. 1882).

Opinion

Miller, J.

Upon the trial the court found that the consideration of the bond and mortgage, which are the subject of this action, was the purchase-price of the mortgaged premises which were conveyed by the plaintiff to his son George M. Spring, by deed dated April 11, 1872, and that the same were made and executed in pursuance of an agreement made at the date of said deed that the same should be executed and delivered to secure the purchase-price of said real estate, and held that the mortgage was a valid .lien upon the premises against the mortgagor and the 'appellants in this action. There was evidence on the trial to sustain this finding, although there are circumstances and facts which tend to show that such was not the consideration of the mortgage. It is proved that there was no such agreement in writing; that this understanding was not communicated by the plaintiff to any person outside of his own immediate family; that the mortgagor had occupied the premises for a number of years prior to the execution of the deed; that he continued to occupy them and use them as his own until after the mortgage had been executed, with the *542 consent and approval of the plaintiff; and that the appellants had no notice or knowledge of the agreement or of plaintiff’s claim, and that they trusted the mortgagor under a belief that the premises were owned by him and were free from incumbrance. It also appears that when the mortgage was executed to the plaintiff he had knowledge of the fact that his son was embarrassed and that he took the mortgage with a view of having it recorded before the judgments of the appellants should be docketed against his son, and become liens on the land. There was also evidence of declarations made by the plaintiff to different persons to the effect that he had made a gift of the premises to his son and that his son was responsible, but this testimony was contradicted by the plaintiff.

The testimony to which we have referred as well as the circumstances surrounding the case present a question of fact as to whether the mortgage was executed in good faith for a valid consideration or was fraudulent. This it was the province of the court upon the trial to decide, and the court having found that the consideration was a valid one and in fact that the bond and mortgage were made to secure a lawful demand as herein-before stated, it cannot, we think, be fairly claimed that it was fraudulent and void by reason of a failure of consideration. It is insisted, however, by the counsel for the appellants that even although the court has found an agreement which would uphold the mortgage, as between the parties to the same, yet the court should not have sanctioned the right of the vendor to hold for an unlimited length of time a secret lien and allow the plaintiff to set it up to the exclusion of Tiorba fide creditors. The question as to the extent to which a secret, equitable and unrecorded lien of a vendor, for unpaid purchase-money of lands sold and conveyed by him, exists as against a judgment creditor after the lien is recorded, or other parties than the vendee, must depend upon the facts and circumstances of the particular case. Such .lien cannot exist generally against purchasers in good faith, under a conveyance of the legal estate, without notice, when the purchase-money has been paid. (See Fisk v. Potter, 2 Keyes, 64.)

*543 The general rule stated applies more particularly to cases where it is sought to enforce an equitable lien for the purchase-money, which has never been put on record as against subsequent mortgagees or purchasers in good faith and for a valuable consideration. In such a case it is too clear to admit of any question that the rights of the person claiming such equitable lien should yield, by reason of his neglect, to the claims of subsequent incumbrancers or purchasers, and it may well be asserted that a prior claimant for the purchase-money under such circumstances has, by his silence or neglect, yielded his right. In the case at bar the appellants’ judgments were not recorded prior to the making, execution and recording of the plaintiff’s mortgage, and they, therefore, occupied entirely a different position. A distinction also exists as to a judgment creditor who advances his money upon the faith of an unincumbered title upon the record, without notice, who is entitled to the lien acquired thereby in preference to the secret unrecorded lien of a vendor for part of the purchase-money, and he is to be regarded as a quasi purchaser for a valuable consideration without notice. (See Hulett v. Whipple, 58 Barb. 224.) The appellants are clearly not within this rule. In the first place their judgments are on record subsequent to the record of the mortgage of the plaintiff, and besides they are not in the position of judgment creditors who have advanced money without notice on the faith of a good title; they are merely ordinary creditors who have contracted a debt with another, supposing that he was the owner of property unincumbered and had ability to pay. That they were mistaken in this respect does not entitle them to the rights of a party who advances money, within the rule stated. In relying upon the responsibility of the mortgagor it must be assumed that, as in the case with ordinary creditors, they took the chances of being mistaken, and unless a fraud has been committed by means of which the mortgagor’s liability was created and the appellants defrauded, they occupy no other or no different position than ordinary creditors. The question as to the good faith of the mortgagor and the mortgagee in the transaction was the *544 subject of consideration upon the trial, and the court, in view of the fact that the mortgage was not executed and recorded until long after the execution and recording of the deed and all of the circumstances, having found that it was executed in pursuance of the previous agreement made at the date of the deed to secure the purchase-money, we think the appellants have no ground for claiming that it could be regarded as a secret lien which entitled their judgments to a priority. Considering the finding referred to there is no principle laid down in the reported cases which authorizes the appellants to take precedence over the mortgage of the plaintiff.

The opinion of the General Term in this case holds that the appellants are not in a position to attack the validity of the mortgage which is the subject of this action, for the reason that the mortgagor had, subsequently to the execution of the mortgage and before the appellants had docketed their judgments, being insolvent, executed a general assignment of all his property, including the mortgaged premises, in trust for the benefit of all his creditors; that the good faith of the assignment not being questioned by the appellants as to them or between the parties thereto, it must be regarded as a valid conveyance of the premises so far as this action is concerned, and that the assignee, or the creditors he represents, are the only persons who have any right to question the validity of the mortgage. Upon this ground the judgment of the trial-court was affirmed.

We are unable to perceive how this position can be overcome. The appellants had no Hen upon the premises, the assignment stands in their way and presents an insuperable difficulty to maintaining the defense sought to be interposed.

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Bluebook (online)
90 N.Y. 538, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spring-v-short-ny-1882.