Opinion
Argued October 23, 1905
Decided November 21, 1905
George T. Hogg and Ansley Wilcox for appellant. W.W. Waring for respondents.
From the record before us it appears that in 1890 Wilson Hogg and his wife, Agnes Hogg, were each the owners of certain lands in Cattaraugus county. The lands owned by Wilson comprised what was known as the "upper farm" and another tract which was used and cultivated with the lands owned by Agnes as a single farm called the "lower farm." On the lands of Agnes there was a mortgage for the sum of $1,400. At that time Wilson Hogg, being financially embarrassed, conveyed by quitclaim deed to the plaintiffs all the lands owned by him under a trust or agreement the details of which it is unnecessary to recite further than to say that in substance the grantees were to advance moneys to discharge Wilson Hogg's debts and to pay certain annuities to Wilson during his life and to his wife, if she survived him, and that for such advances and payments the lands were to stand as security. In 1895 Wilson Hogg died devising all his property to his wife Agnes. In 1902 Agnes died, leaving a will by which she devised all her property, which included both the farms, to her children, the defendants in this action. Thereafter the plaintiffs instituted this action praying that the amount due to them for their advances should be ascertained and the lands conveyed to them by Wilson Hogg should be sold and out of the proceeds of the sale the plaintiffs should be paid the amount found due. At the time of the conveyance to the plaintiffs, Wilson and Agnes Hogg had arranged with the Buffalo Savings Bank to obtain a loan on the "lower farm" of $2,800, the existing mortgage on Agnes' land to be paid out of the loan so that the new mortgage might be a first lien on the farm. The mortgage to the Buffalo bank had been executed and recorded but the money not yet advanced by the mortgagee. The agreement between Wilson Hogg and the plaintiffs provided that out of the money to be received from the Buffalo Savings Bank there should be paid the mortgage on the lands of Agnes and that the surplus should be applied on Wilson Hogg's debts. Subsequently this agreement was carried out and $1,456 paid to satisfy the Agnes Hogg mortgage. The plaintiffs asked as further relief that the amount due on the savings bank mortgage be apportioned between the two tracts of land. The appellant answered alleging that the lands embraced in the lower farm had always been used as a single farm, and that a separate sale of that part of the farm owned by Wilson Hogg in his lifetime would greatly prejudice the interest of the parties to the action. He prayed as relief that the farm be sold as an entirety and the proceeds of the sale apportioned between the parties. The action was tried and proceeded to a judgment which, having determined the amount due the plaintiffs, directed a sale of both farms. There is no dispute as to the amount due the plaintiffs, and complaint is made of the judgment rendered only in two particulars, which we will now consider.
The decree charged on Agnes Hogg's separate lands that portion of the mortgage to the savings bank which had been applied to the satisfaction of the prior mortgage on those lands. The remainder was charged on the lands conveyed by Wilson to the plaintiffs. The appellant contends that the whole mortgage should have been charged on the lands of Wilson Hogg under the general rule in equity that where several pieces of property are subject to a single and common lien, and are conveyed to different persons, such parcels are liable for the satisfaction of the lien in the inverse order of their alienation. That rule, however, has no application to a case like the present, where the separate parcels of the mortgaged premises are owned by different persons. ( Commissioners v. Woodward, 40 N.J. Eq. 23.) Indeed, the rule is not of universal application even where the grantor owns the whole premises. Which piece of property should be sold first to satisfy the lien of a mortgage depends entirely on the agreement of the parties at the time of the conveyance. If a grantor conveys a portion of the premises with warranty, or receives the whole purchase money, then the lands conveyed are not to be sold until after the lands retained by the grantor have been first applied in satisfaction of the mortgage. So, on the other hand, the grantor may by his conveyance charge the whole or any portion of the mortgage debt primarily on the lands conveyed. In the present case Wilson Hogg, by his conveyance to the plaintiffs, did not charge or assume to charge any part of the mortgage debt on the lands conveyed by him. Those lands were subject to the mortgage of the savings bank, and necessarily so, because no acts of the owners of the equity of redemption could discharge or impair the mortgagee's lien on any of the mortgaged premises, but between the plaintiffs and Agnes Hogg or her devisees the lands were subject to the lien of the mortgage to the same extent and in the same proportion as they would have been in the hands of Wilson Hogg and said Agnes. In the hands of those parties their respective lands were liable in the proportions in which the loan had been received by the parties or appropriated to their use. The trial court, therefore, properly held that the lands of Agnes were primarily liable for the amount applied in satisfaction of the old mortgage thereon.
During the pendency of this action the appellant acquired the mortgage of the Buffalo Savings Bank. He contends that the trial court could not, as against the mortgagee, apportion the lien of the mortgage between the two parcels of land. Doubtless, in this position he is correct, for a mortgage of a thousand dollars on two pieces of land cannot by any action on the part of the owner of the equity of redemption be transmuted into two mortgages for the sum of five hundred dollars each on the separate parcels. But we do not understand the decree as having any such effect. The Buffalo Savings Bank, the original mortgagee, was not a party to the action and the plaintiffs did not seek any relief against it, but asked solely for an adjustment of the primary liabilities of the owners of the equity of redemption as between themselves. In our opinion this is all the decree effects. The question, however, is now of no importance, for the "lower farm" was cold as an entirety and the appellant's mortgage has been acquired by one of the plaintiffs.
The second objection is to the apportionment which the judgment directed to be made of the proceeds of the sale of the lower farm in case it was sold as a whole. This objection is well founded. The judgment directed that the farm be first offered for sale in two parcels, 1, that previously owned by Wilson Hogg; 2, that previously owned by Agnes Hogg, and that then it be offered for sale as an entirety, and that whichever manner of sale produced the largest offer for the whole tract should be accepted and stand. The judgment then directed that in case the farm was sold as an entirety the proceeds of sale should be apportioned between the two parcels according to their acreage which is specified in the decree. Of course, the plaintiffs had no right to a sale of the lands of Agnes, no matter how desirable it might have been to have the lands on which they held a lien sold in connection with hers. But they did not ask for any such sale; that was directed at the request of the appellant made in his answer. Therefore he cannot now complain that the lands of Agnes were sold in an action brought solely to foreclose a lien on the lands of Wilson. But as to the provision for the apportionment of the proceeds of the sale he is in no way concluded. The direction made by the court that the apportionment should be made according to area seems to us entirely arbitrary. There is no finding as to the value of the land or that the value was in proportion to its acreage, and there is no presumption to that effect. On the contrary, such a presumption seems to us violent and unnatural. Even if the mere land was of uniform value for agricultural purposes, it would seem that the parcel which had the house and farm buildings upon it would be more valuable than the other. It also appears that the part which belonged to Wilson Hogg is back land cut off from the highway. This fact would or, at least, might affect its value. We need not, however, speculate on these matters. It is sufficient to say that apportionment should have been directed according to values and there is no finding as to what those values are. This error does not render it necessary to reverse the judgment (under which we are informed a sale has already been had) and to direct a new trial. The rights of the parties will be sufficiently protected by modifying the judgments of the Appellate Division and of the Special Term so as to direct that a reference be had to ascertain and determine the relative values of the land of Wilson Hogg and of Agnes Hogg, and that upon the coming in and confirmation of the report of the referee the proceeds of sale be apportioned according to such value. The appellant should recover his costs in this court.
GRAY, BARTLETT, HAIGHT, VANN and WERNER, JJ., concur; O'BRIEN, J., absent.
Judgment accordingly.