Court Opinion

ID: 5455115
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-09 19:16:15.403366+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:32:36.400155
License: Public Domain

By the Court.
Weight, J.
The case is this. The plaintiffs held a mortgage, given in February, 1856, for five thousand five hundred dollars, on two building lots in the city of New York. In March, 1857, certain parties who had become the owners in fee of the mortgaged premises, contracted to sell the lots to the defendant Howell, he agreeing to erect a dwelling-house on each lot, of a definite description, and complete the same by March 1, 1858. Howell was to be entitled to a deed of the premises, when the houses were inclosed, on paying the purchase money, less the plaintiffs’ mortgage; and the deed was to contain a clause subjecting and binding him to the payment of the incumbrance. Howell commenced forthwith to build the houses under the agreement. In August, 1857, while the houses were being built, and were inclosed, by a fraud of Howell or bad faith on his part, the plaintiffs lost the lien of their mortgage on one of the lots, and the other may or may not he ample security for the sum of five thousand five hundred dollars. It certainly is not, without the building on. it. But whether it is or not, is of no consequence whatever. Howell paid nothing for the release of the lien of the plaintiffs’ mortgage, and never had any right to it, except upon his performing in good faith the contract in pursuance of which the delivery of the release was anticipated. In August, 1857, representing himself to the plaintiffs to be the owner of both lots, when in fact, he had the title to neither, he applied to *301them to release the mortgage lien on one of the lots, and lend him an additional sum on the remaining lot. It. was agreed to release the lien on one lot and loan him the further sum of one thousand dollars, which was afterward extended to fifteen hundred dollars, on the other lot. Of course the release and the additional loan were- intended to be simultaneous transactions; and the agreement for-both was manifestly based on the supposition that Howell was the owner of the whole mortgaged premises. Otherwise the release of one-half of the premises from the operation of the mortgage was without any consideration whatever, and. the plain tiffs were placed in jeopardy of a loss of one-half their mortgage debt.
The agreement was not immediately consummated, and in the meanwhile, under the pretense that he would carry it out, and the plaintiffs relying- on his good faith, Howell obtained the release,, and afterward persistently declined to perform on his part, although there, was no. difficulty in his. doing so. It turned out that he had but an equitable interest in the lot not released, but was entitled to a deed of the same on the payment of fifteen hundred dollars—the exact amount which the new loan would have extinguished had the agreement been carried out; and the party holding the fee was ready and will- • ing to execute such conveyance to him on receiving that sum. After procuring the release, however, and having it recorded, he refused to proceed any further in consummating the agreement ; giving as the reason for non-performance on his part, that the money was not forthcoming from the plaintiffs when he wanted it; that the time had gone by for selling the houses on the lots, and he-would have-to pay-the interest and taxes, on the lot not released from the lien of1 the mortgage, which, as between him and the person holding the title, the latter ought to pay.
It seems to me to. require but a- simple statement of the case to show the correctness of the- judgment of the court below. The defendant, Howell, having obtained the release, if not under false pretenses and misrepresentations or concealment of the truth, yet without any. consideration, and without carrying out the arrangement into which he had expressly entered, should be- compelled to restore the. plaintiffs to- their former *302conditions as to the security. It is no answer whatever for him, that, as that part of the mortgaged premises with the building thereon is worth double the sum secured by the plaintiffs’ mortgage, no damage could result to them by his surreptitiously obtaining a release of one-half the mortgaged premises. The value of their security is lessened one-half, and to that extent by the defendant’s fraud or bad faith they are put in jeopardy of loss. As the release could not be recalled, and that part of the mortgaged premises released was of equal value with what remains subject to the lien, the only equitable mode of restoring the plaintiffs to their original condition, as their security, was that adopted.
The judgment should be affirmed.
A majority of the judges concurred.
Hogeboom, J., delivered an opinion in favor of modifying the judgment, so as to make it a judgment against Howell for deficiency only.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.