Court Opinion

ID: 3586749
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:36:30.486925+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:48:13.369583
License: Public Domain

The plaintiff on June 6th, 1895, became the purchaser at public auction of premises known as No. 138 West 133d street, in the city of New York, for the sum of *Page 555 
$19,700. The sale was made by the receiver of the firm of Cassidy Adler under the order of the court. There was at the time of the sale a mortgage on the premises for $16,000, dated January 3d 1894, and payable January 30th, 1899, "in gold coin of the United States of America of the present standard of weight and fineness." The sale was made as stated in the conditions of sale, "subject to a mortgage of $16,000, to be at 5 per cent, three years to run," and there was no further or other statement or representation made at the time as to the terms or character of the mortgage. The conditions of sale further provided that all liens and incumbrances upon the premises would be allowed out of the purchase money. The plaintiff at the time of the purchase paid ten per cent of the purchase price and the auctioneer's and salesroom fees, as required by the terms of sale. Subsequently upon the examination of the title by his counsel, the provision in the mortgage requiring payment to be made in gold coin was discovered. The plaintiff at the time appointed for the closing of the title, stated the fact so ascertained, and refused to accept the conveyance tendered by the defendant, unless he would procure a change in the mortgage by the elimination therefrom of the provision requiring its payment in gold. The defendant refused to comply with such requirement and stood upon the validity of the title tendered and the insufficiency of the objection made to the mortgage. Thereupon the plaintiff, having first obtained the consent of the court, brought this action against the receiver to recover back the ten per cent of the purchase money and the auctioneer's and salesroom fees paid on the sale, and also the expenses incurred in the examination of title. It seems that neither the plaintiff nor the receiver at the time of the sale knew that the mortgage contained the provision in question. There was no proof that the provision for the payment of the mortgage in gold affected the salable value of the premises.
The sole question presented by this record is whether the plaintiff, by reason of the presence in the mortgage of this provision, was justified in refusing to accept the title, and *Page 556 
became entitled to maintain this action. The general rule is well settled that a vendor under an executory contract for the sale of land, unless exempted by the terms or nature of the contract, is bound to convey a good title, free from any essential defect, and the purchaser cannot be compelled to accept a conveyance of property differing from the contract in any material particular. The obligation of the vendor to convey a good title exists independently of any express undertaking in the contract. Where not expressed, it is implied from the nature of the transaction. And although the title tendered may in fact be good, yet if it is subject to reasonable doubt, depending upon the ascertainment of some material fact extrinsic to the record title, to be found by a jury when the question arises, the purchaser in general will not be required to complete the purchase, for he is entitled to a title not only good in fact, but marketable. (Burwell v.Jackson, 9 N.Y. 535; Fleming v. Burnham, 100 id. 1; Moore
v. Williams, 115 id. 586; Leake on Con. 831.) Where the vendor refuses to perform his contract, or is unable to do so by reason of some defect in the title affecting the substance of the thing contracted for, or where the contract was induced by fraud or misrepresentation, the vendee may treat the contract as rescinded and recover back any deposit made on account of the purchase money and the necessary expenses to which he has been put preliminarily to the completion of the contract on his part. (Lawrence v. Taylor, 5 Hill, 114; Graves v. White,87 N.Y. 463; Leake on Con. 107, 1070.)
The action brought by the vendee in the present case proceeds on the theory that, by the contract of sale, the mortgage subject to which he purchased was to be a mortgage payable in any lawful currency, and that the provision therein which required its payment in gold coin was not the incumbrance described in the conditions of sale, and that he was not bound to accept the conveyance tendered by the defendant, unless he procured the mortgage to be reformed in this respect. Whether this action is regarded as an action based on a rescission of the contract by the plaintiff for the default of the *Page 557 
defendant in performing the contract, or as an action for damages for its breach, it is plain that in either aspect it is a fundamental condition to its maintenance that the plaintiff should establish that there was an undertaking by the defendant, based upon contract or upon a representation equivalent to a contract, that the mortgage subject to which the plaintiff purchased was payable generally and could be discharged by payment in any legal currency. We think there was no such contract or representation. It is not claimed that there was any representation as to the terms of the mortgage, outside of the conditions of sale. The amount of the mortgage was stated, the rate of interest and the time it was to run. It made no reference to the medium of payment. Obviously, therefore, if there was any contract that it was payable generally in any lawful money, and not in gold coin only, it was an implied as distinguished from an express contract. If such implication existed in this case it was an unexpressed term which the law reads into the contract to effectuate the actual though unexpressed agreement of the parties. Implied contracts are familiar to the law. The court, as has been said, will imply such a contract whenever there is something not expressed, which it is clear to all men of ordinary intelligence and knowledge of business must either have been latent in, or palpably present to, the minds of both parties when the contract was made. (BRETT, J., Thorn v. City of London,
L.R. [10 Ex.] 123.) The case of the implication of a contract to give a good title in contracts for the sale of land is an illustration of the application of this principle. So, on principles of natural justice or to overreach covin or fraud, courts often force upon a wrongdoer the implication of a contract, although none existed in fact.
In this case the land was the subject of sale, and not the mortgage. The purchaser was notified of the existence of the mortgage and its amount. He made no inquiry as to whether it contained any special terms. He purchased subject to this incumbrance, entering into no personal obligation for its payment. The provision in this mortgage that it should be *Page 558 
paid in gold coin, although not present in most mortgages, was not unusual or infrequent. Such a provision is found in many corporate mortgages and in mortgages taken by savings and other institutions. It was an important provision at a time when treasury notes or legal tenders were not convertible into coin. (Law of United States, February 25, 1862; Bronson v. Rodes, 7 Wall. 229.) Now, under the laws of the United States, the paper currency of the government and silver coins are exchangeable at the treasury for gold coin at their nominal amount, and, as shown in the opinion of Judge INGRAHAM, the faith of the government of the United States is pledged by solemn and repeated declarations by Congress and the various departments of government to maintain the parity of all the currency issued by the government. The only hazard which the plaintiff would assume in taking the premises subject to the mortgage in question, beyond what would exist if the mortgage was payable without specification of the medium of payment, is the contingency that the United States government would violate its plighted faith, and within the three years which the mortgage has to run, refuse to redeem its obligations in gold. We think this possibility is quite too remote to justify the assumption that the contract was made in reference to the mortgage being payable generally in lawful currency and not in a particular kind of lawful money. Special clauses in mortgages are not infrequent. They sometimes contain what is known as the insurance clause, or a clause making the whole mortgage due after a specified default, and other special terms are sometimes inserted. It would not, we conceive, be a valid ground of objection on the part of a purchaser of land subject to a specific mortgage, wherein the contract did not set out such special clauses, that they were not disclosed at the time the contract was made, if there was no deceit or misrepresentation. The contract here is sought to be avoided, not by reason of any fraud or misrepresentation, nor by reason of any variation in the subject of the sale from the description in the contract, but by reason of an incident connected with an incumbrance on the property, *Page 559 
as to which the contract was silent, which, so far as appears, did not affect the value of the property or influence the purchaser in making his bid, and which we cannot assume, in view of the fact that the government is pledged to maintain the parity and the equal exchangeable value of treasury notes and silver and gold coin, will impose upon the plaintiff, in case the contract is completed, any additional burden. The law will not imply a contract under such circumstances, that the mortgage was payable generally in any lawful currency, since whether it was or not cannot be supposed to have been a material circumstance entering into the substance of the transaction or an efficient element in inducing the contract.
The judgment should, therefore, be affirmed.