Squire v. Greene

32 A.D. 258, 52 N.Y.S. 1013, 1898 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1749
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 32 A.D. 258 (Squire v. Greene) 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
Squire v. Greene, 32 A.D. 258, 52 N.Y.S. 1013, 1898 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1749 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Goodrich, P. J.:

A history of the title to certain promises in Hall street, Brooklyn,' and of the execution of three mortgages is requisite to the consideration of the rights of the respective parties to these actions. Mrs. Squire claims to be the owner of a first mortgage on the premises for $1,800, dated January 9, 1884. Mrs. Gearon claims to be the owner of a second mortgage thereon of $1,200, dated April 24, 1889, while the defendants, Greene and Dunkin, claim to be the owners of a mortgage' of $3,000, nated September 15, 1891, and which they contend, though subsequent in date to the two former mortgages, was executed for. the purpose of raising money to pay off the first two' "mortgages, and, by reason of the circumstances, is of equity superior to both.

The premises were originally owned by Curtin. He executed a mortgage for $1,800 to Roberts, dated January 9, 1884, recorded January 10, 1884. Curtin conveyed to Davenport by a deed dated January 7, 1887, recorded January 10, 1887.

■ Davenport conveyed the premises to McCann by a deed dated April 24, 1889, recorded July 3, 1889, subject to the $1,800 mortgage.

McCann executed to his grantor a consideration mortgage of $1,200, dated April.24, 1889, recorded July 3,1889. He conveyed the premises to Brown by deed dated April 20, 1891, recorded April 30, 1891, subject to the two mortgages of $1,800 and $1,200.

Brown conveyed to Kearney by deed dated September 15, 1891, recorded October 2, 1891, subject to all liens and incumbrances on the property.

After Kearney became owner of the property he retained William H. Nafis, an attorney at law, to obtain a new mortgage of $3,000, for the purpose of raising money to pay off the two mortgages already upon the property, and under Nafis’ instructions executed a mortgage to Anderson for $3,000, dated September 15, 1891, recorded November 13, 1891. With the proceeds of this mortgage Nafis paid Roberts the amount of his $1,800 mortgage, but instead of satisfying the mortgage of record, took an assignment of it from Roberts to Anderson, dated October 3, 1891, and recorded October 26, 1891.

It will be seen that on October 26, 1891, according to the record, [261]*261there were outstanding the $1,800 mortgage held by Anderson, the McCann mortgage of $1,200 held by Davenport, and the Kearney mortgage of $3,000, also held by Anderson.

In 1893 Nafis apparently conceived a scheme of fraud. He procured an assignment to himself of the $1,800 mortgage, dated April 12, 1893, but not recorded until July 16,1895. He afterwards procured an assignment of McCann’s mortgage of -$1,200, dated January 12, 1894, recorded December 22, 1896. He also procured an assignment of the Kearney mortgage of $3,000, from Anderson to himself, dated April 12, 1893, recorded April 21, 1893. Thus we have at this time the premises owned by Kearney, subject, as appeared by record, to three mortgages of all of which Nafis was the apparent owner.

The first transfer of any of the mortgages was that of the Kearney mortgage of $3,000 to the defendants, Greene and Dunkin, by assignment dated April 20, 1893, recorded April 21, 1893.

The next assignment was by Nafis to Squire of the Curtin mortgage of $1,800, by assignment dated July 3, 1895, recorded July 16, 1895.

The next assignment Was by Nafis to Gearon of the McCann mortgage of $1,200, by assignment dated September 25, 1895, recorded December 22, 1896.

There was'nothing in the assignments indicating to any of the assignees, Greene and Dunkin, or Squire, or Gearon, the relative order of priority of the mortgages. Each of the assignees became a holder, for a valuable consideration, of one of the mortgages, without notice, other than by record, of the actual priority of any one mortgage, unless there were transactions or declarations of such priority by Nafis at the time of the assignment of the several mortgages.

When Nafis assigned the $3,000 mortgage to Greene and Dunkin he represented to them that it was a first mortgage upon the premises, and if he had fulfilled the purpose for which that mortgage was executed, namely, the taking up of the $1,800 mortgage and the $1,200 mortgage, he would have obtained satisfaction thereof, instead of which, for some unexplained purpose, he kept the mortgages apparently alive by assignment of them to himself.- More than two years afterwards he assigned such mortgages to Squire and [262]*262Gearon, respectively. His representation, that the $3,000 mortgage was the first mortgage, must he attached to the assignment, and thereby its priority in the hands of its present holders, Greene and Dunlcin, is established, unless the fact of the record of the Curtin and McCann mortgages showed a clear and unassailable title to them in Nafis, which he could transfer to an innocent purchaser for value.

The two mortgages, of $1,800 and $1,200, stand on different planes, and we shall first consider the former, which is the one held by the plaintiff Squire.

The $3,000 mortgage was dated September 15,1891, and recorded November 13, 1891. It was ostensibly executed by Kearney, who. was then owner of the premises, for the purpose of raising money to enable him to pay off the two prior mortgages of $1,800 and $1,200. This $3,000 mortgage really represented the same debt, though to different persons, as the other two mortgages. So far as the land, which primarily was chargeable with the debt, was concerned, there was but one liability, and the extent of that was $3,000.

In Jones on Mortgages (Vol. 1 [5th ed.], § 356) it is said': “ When several mortgages are made of distinct parcels of land to secure one and the same debt, they constitute in effect one mortgage, and their unity is determined by the debt secured. Parol evidence is admissible for this purpose, and whether the debt be described in the same way in the different mortgages or not, it may be shown that they are only additional security for the same debt. ■ A mortgage given to secure separate debts to several persons is several in its nature, as much as if several instruments had been simultaneously executed.”

. The evidence shows that a part of the money received on the $3,000 mortgage was actually used in paying off the $1,800 mortgage ; and the holder of that, mortgage, in point of fact, received its amount in payment of it and was actually paid. That Natis took an assignment of it to Anderson instead of a satisfaction of it makes no difference. Anderson thus held at the same instant the $3,000 mortgage and the assignment of the $1,800 mortgage, but the debt represented by the $1,800 mortgage was part of the debt represented by the $3,000 mortgage. The whole indebtedness chargeable to the land did not exceed $3,000. Anderson, being the holder [263]*263of both securities, had the right to make the one or the other the prior mortgage, and when he assigned the two to Nafis he assigned whatever rights he had. These assignments to Nafis were dated on the same day, April 12, 1893, but the assignment of the $3,000 mortgage was recorded April 21, 1893, and of the $1,800 mortgage July 16, 1895.

Meantime and on April 20,1893, Nafis-assigned the $3,000 mortgage to Greene and Dnnlcin, with the representation that' it was a first mortgage. So far as the $1,800 mortgage is concerned, the $3,000 mortgage was

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Bluebook (online)
32 A.D. 258, 52 N.Y.S. 1013, 1898 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 1749, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/squire-v-greene-nyappdiv-1898.