Warner v. Winslow

1 Sand. Ch. 430, 1844 N.Y. LEXIS 470, 1844 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 49
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedJuly 3, 1844
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Sand. Ch. 430 (Warner v. Winslow) 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
Warner v. Winslow, 1 Sand. Ch. 430, 1844 N.Y. LEXIS 470, 1844 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 49 (N.Y. 1844).

Opinion

The Assistant Vice-Chancellor.

The deed from Henry Schenck to Winslow was delivered before it was recorded, as collateral security for a loan made by Winslow to R. B, [433]*433Schenck. No writing by way of defeasance was executed, or which explained that the deed was conditional, or designed to have the eifect of a mortgage. Therefore when the deed was recorded as an absolute deed, the act of recording it was nugatory. Such was the law before the Revised Statutes. The provision incorporated in the recording, act, (1 R. S. 766, § 3,) does not in terms reach the case, for the reason that there was no written defeasance.

At that stage of the transaction, the legal title of the premises in question was vested in Winslow, subject to the mortgage to Darley. But inasmuch as the deed was intended as a security, ’ it might have been defeated by either a deed or a mortgage by H. Schenck to a purchaser in good faith without actual notice. And if the complainant’s assignment had been recorded while the loan was outstanding, Barley’s subsequent discharge of the mortgage would have been unavailing to the defendants.

The next stage of the case exhibits the loan to R. B. Schenck satisfied, and Winslow holding the legal title to the land as a naked trustee for H. Schenck. I am proceeding on the assumption, in which both parties concurred, that Schenck retained an equity of redemption, notwithstanding the absolute deed.

This was however, a mere equity, and he immediately sold it to Winslow, for a valuable consideration, which was paid in full. R. B. Schenck informed Winslow that Barley’s mortgage was paid, and procured and brought to him a discharge from Barley. Winslow was not guilty of any carelessness or inequitable omission, in receiving this as evidence of the payment of the mortgage. His assumption of the payment of the mortgage by accepting the deed from Schenck, was at an end upon the determination of the beneficial interest which he took by the deed. It was a debt which then devolved upon Schenck. Upon Barley’s satisfaction of the mortgage, Winslow proceeded to fulfil his contract of purchase, and paid the full price to Schenck, without any deduction for that mortgage, and without any notice of the rights of the complainant. He thereby united the whole benefical and equitable interest, with the legal estate which he already held by the deed; and as to strangers, at least, became clothed with the whole title.

[434]*434It was urged by the complainant’s counsel that upon the payment of the loan for which Winslow took the conveyance as security, the title was re-vested in Schenck and the deed became of no effect. But this was not its operation. At law the title passes only by deed; and after the loan was paid, Winslow, at law, could have ejected Schenck by force of the deed, and turned him out of possession. And the defeasance and actual payment of the debt would have been no defence. (Webb v. Rice, in the Court for Correction of Errors, December, 1843,

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Bluebook (online)
1 Sand. Ch. 430, 1844 N.Y. LEXIS 470, 1844 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warner-v-winslow-nychanct-1844.