Stuyvesant v. Hone

1 Sand. Ch. 419, 1844 N.Y. LEXIS 487, 1844 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 86
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedJune 29, 1844
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1 Sand. Ch. 419 (Stuyvesant v. Hone) 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
Stuyvesant v. Hone, 1 Sand. Ch. 419, 1844 N.Y. LEXIS 487, 1844 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 86 (N.Y. 1844).

Opinion

The Assistant Vice-Chancellor.

Where a mortgagee whose mortgage is a lien on several parcels of land, which were subsequently conveyed to different purchasers, releases from the lien of his mortgage,- the parcel last conveyed, without any notice either actual or constructive, that the other parcels had been previously sold by the mortgagor; he does not thereby discharge the parcels not released. (Patty v. Pease, 8 Paige’s R. 277.) The right to have the lands which have been sold by the mortgagor charged in the inverse order of their alienation, is not a legal, but an equitable right, and is governed by the principles applicable to the relation of sureties. And the conscience of the mortgagee is not affected, unless he is informed of the existence of the facts upon which this equitable right depends, or has sufficient notice of the probable existence of the right to make it his duty to inquire in order to ascertain whether it exists. (Guion v. Knapp, 6 Paige’s R. 42-3, per Walworth, Chancellor.)

The same principle was held by Chancellor Kent in Cheesebrough v. Millard, (1 J. C. R. 414.) And see Neimcewicz v. Gahn, (3 Paige, 614; S. C. on appeal, 11 Wend. 312.)

To apply these principles to the case under consideration.

First, So far as Nicholas W. Stuyvesant, the first mortgagee, or his executors, had actual notice of the rights and interests of the parties, there was certainly nothing to prevent the [424]*424executors from releasing any portion of the mortgaged premises which they should deem proper.

In the first instance, the mortgagor owned the whole.

It appears by the proceedings in this court instituted by N. W. Stuyvesant in May, 1829, to foreclose his mortgage, that he had then been informed of the conveyance of the whole mortgaged premises by the mortgagor to Thomas H. Smith, and by the latter to Mr. Anthon in trust for the security of John Hone & Sons; and that George W. Bruen was a party with T. H. Smith in the execution of the trust deed.

G. W. Bruen was made a defendant in Mr. Stuyvesant’s bill in 1829, as having an interest in the premises; and it appears by some of the documents read in evidence, that he was the executor of Thomas H.- Smith.

The release executed by S'tuyvesant’s executors, was given at the request of George W. Bruen, who had paid the interest in 1837.

Therefore upon the facts known to the mortgagee and his representatives, or of which they, or either of them, had information, at or before the time of executing the release; they had a right to suppose that the whole mortgaged premises were at that time vested in Mr. Anthon for the benefit of the Hone’s, or that they had reverted to the estate of Thomas H. Smith. The request of Bruen to release to Thorne was consistent with the latter.

On either supposition, their release of a part of the lots mortgaged could work no injury or injustice to'any one.

If they had foreclosed their mortgage under the statute, they •could have sold first, from the east end of the block, the west end, or the middle, as their own judgment or fancy dictated. And on the state of the case as actually disclosed to them, they could in like manner, release any portion of the lots, from the lien of their mortgage.

Second. The next inquiry is, had the executors of Stuyvesant any constructive notice of the rights of John Hone’s executors, which rendered their release inequitable, or which subjects them to account for the value of the lots discharged from the mortgage.

[425]*4251. There is no notice alleged by reason of the possession of the property. The lots were vacant and unoccupied.

2. The bill filed by Mr. Anthon to subject the premises to the payment of the debt of John Hone &. Sons, did not affect Stuyvesant’s executors. They were not parties to the suit, and no notice of the pendency of the suit was filed in pursuance of the statute. Whether such a notice would have affected the executors, if it had been filed, I do not determine here. The force of the lis pendens, aside from the statute, will be discussed in another place.

3. The next point in the order of time, is the effect of the recording of the deed from the master to William H. Thorne, and the mortgage of the 24 lots executed to the executors of John Hone by Thorne, on his purchase at the sale under Mr. Anthon’s decree.

The defendants insist that after the mortgage of Thorne was recorded, it was not competent for him to shift the Stuyvesant mortgage from the whole block, to the fourteen lots in question. The mortgagee has nothing to do with this proposition, unless the record was constructive notice to him.

Notice by the recording or registry of conveyances is created by the statutes, and its effect is to be learned from their provisions, and the adjudications thereon. The statute in force in 1837, (1 R. S. 756, § 1,) enacts that every conveyance not recorded shall be void as against any subsequent purchaser in good faith, <fcc., whose conveyance shall first be recorded.

Neither the provision itself, or the objects of a registry law, have any reference to prior incumbrances already recorded. The effect of recording a conveyance is not retrospective, nor was it designed to change rights already vested and secured by a recorded deed or mortgage. It simply protects a purchaser who takes the precaution to search the records, and record his own conveyance, against prior unrecorded conveyances of which he had no notice. A mortgage is not made more effectual as a lien by being recorded; nor is its record any more notice to subsequent purchasers, than is the docket of a judgment regularly entered, so as to become a lien upon real estate. And there is no reason for holding that the recording of a subsequent [426]*426mortgage is constructive notice to the holder of a prior valid mortgage, that does not equally apply to make the docketing of a subsequent judgment notice to a prior mortgagee, or elder judgment creditor. Yet .Chancellor Kent held expressly in Cheesebrough v. Millard, ubi supra, that the record of the judgment in that case, was not constructive notice to the prior mortgagees ; that they were not bound to search for the judgment ; and that as they did no.t know of its existence when they discharged the first mortgage, the judgment creditor who had omitted to give them notice of his equity, had no just cause of complaint.

An expression of the Chancellor’s in the case of Guion v. Knapp, (6 Paige’s R. 42,) was relied upon to establish that the recording the mortgagor’s subsequent deed would be notice to the mortgagee. The Chancellor there alludes to the omission of the grantees to record their deeds, but he does not say that the mere recording of them would have constituted notice. I defended Guion v. Knapp, for Burdick, one of the defendants, and I remember that the deed from the mortgagors to Crandall which was read at the hearing, was recorded about the time it was executed. This fact is not mentioned in the report of the case, and the Chancellor does not refer to it in his opinion, although he exonerated from the mortgage the lands held under the deed to Crandall. I am confident therefore that he did not mean to express an opinion that the recording of the deed would per se be notice of its execution to the prior mortgagees.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Sand. Ch. 419, 1844 N.Y. LEXIS 487, 1844 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stuyvesant-v-hone-nychanct-1844.