Thomas v. Harmon

53 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 75, 11 N.Y. St. Rep. 79
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1887
StatusPublished

This text of 53 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 75 (Thomas v. Harmon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas v. Harmon, 53 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 75, 11 N.Y. St. Rep. 79 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1887).

Opinions

Corlett, J.:

On the 14th day of March, 1881, the defendant, Harriet E. Haimond, executed to Jerome Guiteau, treasurer of Genesee county, his successors in office and assigns, a bond to secure the payment of $350 in two years from date, with semi-annual interest, and a mortgage on the undivided one-half of Lot 21 in the village of Batavia as security. The complaint alleged that a mistake was [76]*76made in drawing the mortgage; that it should have included the whole of Lot 21 instead of tho undivided one-half, and that such was the agreement before the execution of the mortgage.

Tho action was brought to foreclose the mortgage, also to correct the mistake and obtain judgment for the sale of the whole. The mortgagor put in issue the allegations of mistake. A trial was had in the Genesee County Court, which resulted in a finding for the plaintiff on that question,- and a decree of foreclosure including the omitted one-half. Judgment was entered accordingly. The evidence was sufficient to warrant the County Court in finding in favor of the plaintiff on the above issue. The defendant appealed from that portion of the judgment correcting the mistake and adjudging a decree of foreclosure of the part not covered by the mortgage. Section. 15 of article 5 of the Constitution adopted in January, 1881, continues the powers and jurisdiction of the County Courts as before existing, and confers original jurisdiction in all cases where the defendants reside in the county not exceeding $1,000, also such other original jurisdiction as the legislature should confer.

Section 340 of the Code gives County Courts, among other things, jurisdiction “for the foreclosure, redemption or satisfaction of a mortgage upon real property, or to procure a judgment requiring the specific performance of a contract relating to real property, where the real property to which the action relates is situated within the county.”

Section 348 provides that “ where a County Court has jurisdiction of an action or a civil proceding, it possesses the same jurisdiction, power and authority in and over the same, and in the course of proceedings therein, which the Supreme Court possesses in a like case, and it may render any judgment or grant either party any relief which the Supreme Court may render or grant in a like case, and may enforce its mandates in like manner as the Supreme Court.”

It is a familiar rule that County Courts have no jurisdiction except that conferred by the Constitution and statutes. (Frees v. Ford, 6 N. Y., 176.) The power to foreclose a mortgage cannot be extended so as to include equitable liens like a proceeding to enforce the payment of the purchase moneys of lands. Reference is had to a mortgage in the ordinary sense of the term, one in writing describing the premises sought to be foreclosed. There is no dispute [77]*77or controversy in this case as to the lands covered by the mortgage. They embrace the undivided one-half of village Lot 21. No question is made but that the County Court had jurisdiction to foreclose that mortgage. The only point here is whether it also had jurisdiction to correct a mistake, and include in the decree of foreclosure lands not covered by it. If the correction was an incident, jurisdiction existed, otherwise not. So that the whole controversy is narrowed down to the question whether that portion of the decree correcting the mutual mistake and adjudging the mortgage a lien upon the whole lot is within the jurisdiction of the County Court, as am, incident. It had power to foreclose the lands actually covered. Burrs Law Dictionary defines incident as “ belonging or appertaining to, following, depending upon another thing as more worthy or principal.” “ A thing may be necessarily or inseparable incident to another, or usually so.”

To every estate in lands the law has annexed certain peculiar incidents which appertain to it, as of course, without being “expressly enumerated.” Webster defines it thus: “In law, something necessarily appertaining to and depending on another, which is termed the principal.” It is difficult to see how lands not covered by the mortgage are incident to those which are. No importance can be attached to the fact that the mortgage only covers an undivided part or portion of a lot or farm. The balance is no more incidental than a separate lot or farm. If, in this case, the agreement covered a separate lot or a number of separate lots, all of which were omitted by mistake, the corrections could be adjudged and a foreclosure ordered the same as in this case. If the original agreement provided for the mortgage of a number of pieces of land to secure a loan, and by mutual mistake some of them were omitted in the mortgage, all could be included in an action to foreclose the lands covered in case an undivided portion can. It is true that the only change would be to increase the relief. But if such a result is produced by including other property, it cannot be said to be only an incident. Within the definitions incidents are attached to the principal, but other lands distinct from those mortgaged occupy no such position and sustain no such relation. Otherwise under claim of relief, property might be included of many times the value of that covered by the mortgage.

[78]*78Avery v. Willis (24 Hun, 548), decided in the third department, in 1881, differs from this in that there was nothing to foreclose without a previous correction. The same is true here in reference to that portion not covered by the mortgage. It was first necessary to ascertain and adjudge the mistake, which was done, then the foreclosure was ordered. The only distinction claimed is that there was some land covered by the mortgage of which the County Court had jurisdiction, and that this fact conferred power to include other lands as incidents. The reasoning in the above case is decisive of this. The court say “ undoubtedly a court of general equity jurisdiction might entertain an action for the double purpose of declaring a lien and enforcing it by foreclosure. Such actions have been frequently maintained in the Supreme Court. * * * Still, the remedies sought areindependezzt z-emedies, and might be obtained by separate actions, and each would be open to separate and indepezzdent defences. The proceeding to obtain a reformation of the mortgage is in no z’espect secondary or ancillary to the proceedings to foreclose the mortgage; on the contrary, it is primary in pzzrpose and importance, as no relief by foreclosure cozzld be had until the reformation of the moz’tgage should be decreed. The right to foreclose was dependant on this relief, and this relief could only be obtained by an action in equity. It follows that the County Court had no jurisdiction of this leading, independant azzd controlling branch of the case.”

In that case the complaint was dismissed because no lazzds were embraced within it which could be foreclosed. The same is true in this case of the undivided one-half, which could not be foreclosed until the mistake was corrected. That was a condition precedent. It follows, therefore, that the case izz Hun is decisive of this case, in principle, uizless the fact that it has jurisdiction to foreclose a portion of lands embraced in the complaint also confers the right to correct mistakes, as an izzeident, by including in the decree lands outside of the mortgage. If this view obtains, there would be no limit to its applicatiozz. All lands embraced in the original agreement, although most of them were left out of the mortgage, could be included in the decree of foreclosure.

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Bluebook (online)
53 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 75, 11 N.Y. St. Rep. 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-harmon-nysupct-1887.