Union Trust Co. v. Allen

239 A.D. 661, 268 N.Y.S. 437, 1934 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10912
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 17, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 239 A.D. 661 (Union Trust Co. v. Allen) 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
Union Trust Co. v. Allen, 239 A.D. 661, 268 N.Y.S. 437, 1934 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10912 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Sears, P. J.

On October 15, 1926, the defendants Frank Bonnano and Mary Bonnano, his wife, and Ralph Pelligra and Petrina Pelligra, Ms wife, being the owners of a certain property in Rochester, mortgaged it to Oscar Feyder for $9,220. The mortgage was collateral to a bond executed by the four owners of the property. The mortgage was inferior to a first mortgage given to secure the payment of $16,000. On March 17, 1927, the four owners of the property just mentioned entered into a written contract of exchange with the defendant Joseph Bevacqua according to wMch Bonnano and Pelligra and their wives were to convey to Bevacqua the property already referred to and Bevacqua was to convey to Bonnano and Pelligra and their wives a certain other parcel of land. Both pieces of property were mortgaged and the written contract provided that Bonnano and Pelligra and their wives were to assume the payment of the mortgages on the property to be conveyed to them by Bevacqua, but the contract provided that Bevacqua was to take the property to be conveyed to Mm subject to the two mortgages already mentioned. No provision for the assumption of the payment of these mortgages by Bevacqua was contained in the contract. The defendant Don C. Allen acted as Bevacqua’s attorney in closing tMs transaction. The deed delivered by Bonnano and Pelligra and their wives contained a clause to the effect not only that the property was subject to the two mortgages already referred to but that the grantee (Bevacqua) assumed their payment. TMs deviation from the contract is the source of tMs lawsuit. The presence of the clause was not observed by Allen when the deed was delivered, nor did he learn of its presence in the deed until it was later discovered by Bevacqua. The defendant Bevacqua did not Mmself see the deed until about July 22, 1927, when he discovered the mistake. In the meantime, on May twenty-sixth or twenty-seventh, the plaintiff Black became the owner of the second mortgage through mesne assignments from Feyder, [663]*663the original mortgagee. On May 27, 1927, Bevacqua, at the request of Black, executed and delivered to Black a certificate to the effect that there were no defenses to the bond and mortgage and that the mortgage was a valid lien on the property. When Bevacqua discovered the assumption clause on July twenty-second, he at once stated to Allen that he repudiated it and directed Allen to have the error corrected. Bevacqua caused his grantors to be notified of the mistake and requested rectification. Bonnano and Pelligra and their wives, however, refused to make the correction. Allen did not wish his mistake in this matter to become known, and Bevacqua and Allen entered into an agreement that Bevacqua should convey the property to Allen, who would assume the payment of the mortgages and also pay Bevacqua a substantial consideration. This arrangement followed a conversation between Bevacqua and Allen, in which Allen said: “ Will it be all right if I take it [the property] over myself and assume the mortgages?” Bevacqua replied: “It is all right with me, but I will never be responsible for them.” Bevacqua conveyed the property to Allen July 26, 1927, by a deed which contained a clause to the effect that the grantee assumed the payment of the second mortgage. On March 27, 1928, Allen conveyed the property to defendants Gaspara and Frank- Marasco by a deed which contained a similar clause to the effect that the grantees assumed the payment of the second mortgage. The defendant Helen C. Allen, the wife of Don C. Allen, afterwards acquired title to the property. On November 4, 1931, Black assigned the second mortgage to the plaintiff trust company as collateral security for a pre-existing indebtedness upon the surrender by the trust company to Black of other valuable security. At the time of this assignment Don C. Allen, although he was not then the owner of the mortgaged property, title being in his wife, gave the trust company a certificate similar to the one given by Bevacqua to Black when the mortgage was assigned to Black. Neither certificate contained any statement as to any assumption of the mortgage indebtedness by any grantee of the property. It also appears that when Black took the assignment he knew of the assumption clause in the deed to Bevacqua and made inquiries as to Bevacqua’s credit and relied on his assumption. He, however, made no inquiries as to the assumption or Bevacqua’s credit of Bevacqua himself. Before Black assigned the mortgage to the trust company, Allen had informed Black of the true situation in respect to the assumption by Bevacqua. When the trust company took the assignment from Black its officers similarly had knowledge of the assumptions of the mortgage indebtedness as the clauses appeared in the records of the deeds [664]*664to Bevacqua and to Allen, and the trust company in talcing the assignment from Black relied on the credit of Bevacqua and Allen. Black did not, so far as appears, disclose to the trust company what Allen had told him. This action was brought to foreclose the second mortgage, and a deficiency judgment was demanded against Bevacqua and Don C. Allen. Bevacqua by answer demanded a reformation of the Bonnano-Pelligra deed by striking out his, assumption. A sale of the mortgaged premises has been had pursuant to a judgment in this action and a deficiency resulted amounting to $6,744.70 on the date of sale, February 28, 1933. The court at Special Term denied the plaintiffs’ demand for a judgment against Bevacqua and Allen for the deficiency and granted Bevacqua a judgment reforming the deed to him by striking out the assumption clause. The plaintiff trust company alone has appealed.

The assumption clause in a deed is, properly speaking, no part of the grant. It is a collateral undertaking, personal in its nature, not relating to the land.” Like any contract to be enforcible, there must be a meeting of the minds of the contracting parties, here the grantor and grantee. (Blass v. Terry, 156 N. Y. 122.) As between Bonnano and the other grantors and Bevacqua, there was no meeting of the minds upon the assumption of the mortgage. The form of the preceding contract is proof of this. The assumption clause inserted in the deed was wholly ineffective as between the parties to the instrument. The then owner of the mortgage had no greater right to enforce the assumption than had the grantors. (Drury v. Hayden, 111 U. S. 223; Arnstein v. Bernstein, 127 App. Div. 550.) In general, one who takes an assignment of a chose in action, non-negotiable, takes it subject to all equities good against the assignor at the time of the assignment. (Bush v. Lathrop, 22 N. Y. 535; Merchants’ Bank v. Weill, 163 id. 486; Kommel v. Herb-Gner Const. Co., 256 id. 333.) The general rule is subject to exception where the person attempting to assert the equity has intentionally or negligently so acted as to justify reliance on a situation inconsistent with the assertion of the equity. (Hulburt v. Walker, 258 N. Y. 8.) As to Black, no personal conduct of Bevacqua caused him to rely upon the assumption clause in the deed to Bevacqua. At the time Bevacqua executed the estoppel certificate he was ignorant of the inclusion of the assumption clause in the deed to him. As to Bevacqua’s attorney, Allen, there was, perhaps, originally, negligence in his acceptance of the deed to Bevacqua without discovering the assumption clause. As to such negligence, Allen would be responsible only to Bevacqua.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
239 A.D. 661, 268 N.Y.S. 437, 1934 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10912, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-trust-co-v-allen-nyappdiv-1934.