Howell v. . Leavitt

In February, 1856, Roberts became the owner of the premises in dispute, having a good title thereto, but subject to a purchase-money mortgage of $5,500 given by him to Leech. A few months later Roberts conveyed to Tasker, subject to the $5,500 mortgage, the latter executing also his own mortgage to Roberts for $1,800. Still later in the same year Tasker conveyed to Ephraim Howell, subject to the Leech mortgage of $5,500, but the deed making no reference to the $1,800 mortgage. On the 18th of September, 1857, Roberts filed a complaint for the foreclosure of the $1,800 mortgage, naming Tasker and Howell and wife as defendants, and Mrs. Howell was served November 17th of that year. In the previous month of October, Howell died, although the fact of his death was for some time after unknown. An order of publication was made, and in the end, judgment of foreclosure was rendered; the property was sold to Roberts, the mortgagee, who by the aid of a writ of assistance, put Tasker out and got into possession. At this date, and at the date of the commencement of the foreclosure action, Howell being dead, the title had descended to his five children, who were all infants, the eldest being about fourteen years of age, and the youngest only about one. The possession of Tasker after his deed to Howell, must be assumed to have been as tenant under Howell, and upon his death as the tenant of his children so that Tasker's possession was theirs. When he was expelled their possession was taken away. But the judgment of foreclosure did not affect them, for they were in no manner parties to it, and as to them it was an absolute nullity. Possession of their property was taken from them, not only without their consent, but against their will, and by a force which had no right or authority behind it, but was in all respects a trespass. After thus forcing out the true owners, Roberts paid off and discharged the $5,500 mortgage, and then sold the property, and the present defendants are his grantees and seek to defend the ejectment brought *Page 621 by the true owners, who were thus dispossessed by unlawful force, upon the alleged right of Roberts as mortgagee in possession.

In most of the cases which have upheld the right of the mortgagee, his possession was obtained with the consent, express or implied, of the owner of the land, although in some of them the mode of acquiring possession did not distinctly appear, and in many the rule is stated quite broadly and with little of restriction or limitation. (Van Duyne v. Thayre, 14 Wend. 233; Phyfe v. Riley, 15 id. 248; Fox v. Lipe, 24 id. 164;Olmsted v. Elder, 5 N.Y. 144; Mickles v. Dillaye, 17 id. 80; Mickles v. Townsend, 18 id. 575; Chase v. Peck, 21 id. 581; Waring v. Smyth, 2 Barb. Ch. 135; Pell v. Ulmar,18 N.Y. 139; Robinson v. Ryan, 25 id. 320; Winslow v.Clark, 47 id. 261; Madison Ave. Bapt. Ch. v. Ol. St. Bapt.Ch., 73 id. 82; Gross v. Welwood, 90 id. 638.)

It is scarcely necessary to review the authorities and consider them in detail, for none of them have ever gone so far as to hold that a possession of the mortgagee acquired by either force or fraud, against the will and consent of the rightful owner, and without even color of lawful authority as it respects such owner, and amounting only to a pure trespass, was sufficient to defend an action of ejectment. The possession requisite for such a defense must have about it, at least, some basis of right as against the owner evicted. Often his assent or acquiescence may be inferred from slight circumstances, but the right cannot be founded upon an absolute wrong. To hold that one who has merely a lien, and but an equitable right, can get a legal one by the commission of a trespass would be neither logical nor just. It is easy to understand how some of the very broad statements of the right of the mortgagee in possession originated. Before the Revised Statutes, and in the earlier consideration of mortgage relations, the mortgagee, after condition broken, was deemed to have the legal estate in the land. Of course his entry upon the premises would be the entry of an owner and both rightful and lawful if effected without a breach of the peace. His possession, however acquired, unless *Page 622 by actual violence, was lawful as that of an owner taking possession of his own. But when the Revised Statutes denied him an action of ejectment, and the progress of judicial decision deprived him of the least estate in the land, and left him with only a lien, it followed that after as well as before condition broken the mortgagor remained owner, and could not be lawfully deprived of his possession, except by a valid foreclosure or his own consent, express or implied. And yet the old rule, founded upon and fitted to a different state of the law, kept its hold somewhat upon the later opinions when the reason which led to it was gone.

But we need not determine its present extent beyond the exigency of the case before us. Here the infant owners, without even a suit instituted against them; so far as we know without notice or warning or the least opportunity to protect their rights; were expelled from their property against their will by a force which their tenant could not resist. The expulsion was not only unlawful as to these plaintiffs, but without the least shadow or pretense of right, since the judgment under which the writ issued was not against them and was absolutely a nullity so far as their rights were concerned. A possession thus acquired by Roberts could not be maintained against the ejectment of the owners because he was mortgagee. In this respect we think the decision of the General Term was correct.

It is further contended that the statute of limitations barred the right of Louise M. Howell. The facts were that she became of age December 31, 1864; that Roberts got possession claiming title as owner March 15, 1858; and the action was begun November 7, 1878. The appellants' construction of the Code (§ 88, Code of Civ. Pro., § 375) is in substance that where there is a disability the action must be brought within ten years after its termination; and Louise Howell, having reached full age December 31, 1864, had only until December 31, 1874, in which to sue. The effect of this contention would be to cut down the twenty years limitation to a little over sixteen years by reason of a disability of infancy. In a case where the cause of action accrued to an infant twenty years of age the *Page 623 limitation would be cut down to eleven years; and that which was intended for the relief and benefit of a person under disability is made to operate as a positive injury. We have already declined to adopt that construction. (Acker v. Acker, 16 Hun, 174;81 N.Y. 143.) The exception of the Code relates to the extension of the time limited, and puts restraint only upon that extension. It means that the disability shall not add more than ten years to the time limited after the disability has ended. Practically, in a case of infancy, it makes the extreme possible limitation a period of thirty-one years. If the cause of action accrues to an infant on the day of its birth for twenty-one years the running of the statute is suspended; then it begins to run; but the time limited — that is, the twenty years considered as a period — having in fact elapsed, it is an extension of that period which is in progress, and the exception limits that added time to not more than ten years after full age; that is until the expiration of thirty-one years. But for the exception the infant would have had forty-one years. In the present case Louise Howell had twenty years from December 31, 1864, in which to sue, because giving her the full time of twenty years after that date did not extend the whole time from the accruing of the cause of action more than ten years added after she arrived at full age. Giving her till 1884 made the whole period from the entry of Roberts less than twenty-seven years, so that her infancy extended the twenty years, the time limited, only about seven years, and so did not violate the exception. What there is of difficulty in the section lies in the phrase "after the disability ceases." That relates only to the extended time, and has no effect in any case to cut down or lessen the limitation of twenty years. To that the party is always entitled, and, in case of a disability, to as much more as the period of disability would add, except that such addition must not be longer than ten years added after the disability has ended. Any unexpended part of the period or time fixed by the general rule of limitation belongs to the party entitled to sue, after the disability has ended and so much added time as will not extend the original limit beyond ten years more after the end *Page 624 of the disability. The right of Louise M. Howell was, therefore, not barred.

The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.

All concur, except RUGER, Ch. J., not voting.

Judgment affirmed.