Greenley v. Greenley

Spring, J.:

On the 26th day of June, 1884, the defendant Mary E. Greenley conveyed by warranty deed to the defendant Shelmidine two farms owned by her in the county of Jefferson for the expressed consideration of $10,000. Said premises were incumbered by a mortgage on which there was unpaid, including accrued interest, about the sum of $10,000, and the said lands were worth about $16,000. The said Mary E. Greenley was unable to meet the interest due on said mortgage indebtedness-, and was owing other debts for which she had given her promissory notes, and her only property consisted of said farms.

The court has found, upon evidence to sustain the finding, that there was a prior oral agreement between her and the defendant Shelmidine, to the effect “ that if the said Mary E. Greenley would deed the said property to the said Shelmidine he-would manage and *642dispose of it, and after reimbursing himself for the moneys he had paid out and for his services would, with the balance, provide for the debts hereinbefore mentioned and pay the balance then remaining to the said Mary E. Greenley. That said deed was given in pursuance of such agreement, and was 'at the solicitation of the defendant Shelmidine and Albert Greenley, the husband of said Mary E. Greenley.”

At the time of such conveyance the said Mary E. Greenley was indebted to Oren Greenley, the plaintiff’s testator, in the sum of $800, evidenced by two promissory notes, dated May 1, 1882, and due respectively eight months thereafter, and these notes were specifically mentioned to Shelmidine as two of the outstanding obligations he was to pay. By this agreement Shelmidine became primarily liable for this indebtedness. He voluntarily indemnified the maker of the notes against these obligations. (Wager v. Link, 134 N. Y. 122, 126; Howard v. Robbins, 67 App. Div. 245 ; affd., 170 N. Y. 498; Wilt. Mtg. Forec. § 223.)

But if the payee of the notes attempted to enforce their payment on the assumption by Shelmidine it must be done pursuant to the terms of the agreement by which his liability was created. He did not agree to pay these debts immediately or at any definite time. He was to manage and dispose of the farm, reimburse himself for the expenses, pay the interest on the large mortgage lien and be compensated for his services before these obligations were to be paid. They were well down in the list as the disposition of the avails was marshaled by the oral agreement.

The statement, therefore, is not correct that the plaintiff’s testator could have enforced these notes at any time against Shelmidine. They could not have been enforced until the contingencies had arisen necessary to enable him to obtain money with which to meet them; and the sale of the farms was the first in order of these transactions.

Conditions may be attached to an agreement which delay its performance and the Statute of Limitations is held in abeyance in the meantime. (Tebo v. Robinson, 100 N. Y. 27.)

Shelmidine assumed possession and control of the farms by virtue of the conveyance and agreement, carried them on as his own, and in 1895 sold one of them for $6,500, including some personal, property accompanying the transfer. He made no accounting whatever *643to his grantor and paid none of her debts. In 1898 he disavowed to her the oral agreement and she thereupon commenced an action to enforce it and succeeded at Special Term, and the judgment was affirmed by this court. (Greenly v. Shelmidine, 83 App. Div. 559.) The Statute of Limitations was held to be inoperative because no time was fixed for the performance of the agreement, and there was no refusal by the ' defendant to carry it out until about the time the action was commenced. (P. 564.)

We start, therefore, with a valid agreement established in the former action and found anew in the present one.

Shelmidine claims that the notes are barred by the Statute of Limitations. He is correct so far as the maintenance of an action on the notes is concerned." The plaintiff or Oren Greenley could never have sustained a direct action on the notes against Shelmidine. The action must have been based on the oral agreement to establish the notes as a valid demand against the premises, dr else to reach the fund if the premises were sold.

The Statute of Limitations does not create the presumption of payment. It merely is the bar of the statute to the remedy. (Hulbert v. Clark, 128 N. Y. 295, 298; Nehasane Park Assn. v. Lloyd, 167 id. 431, 438.)

Consequently the fact that the notes may not be enforcible by an action at law, pure and simple, does not prevent the plaintiff from taking advantage of any other remedy available to her. (Hulbert v. Clark, supra ; Dinniny v. Gavin, 4 App. Div. 298 ; affd., 159 N. Y. 556; 19 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law [2d ed.], 177.)

In the Hulbert Case {supra) a mortgage had been given as collateral security to the payment of certain notes. In an action to foreclose the mortgage the six-year Statute of Limitations was pleaded in bar and the defense would have been effectual in an action to enforce the notes. The court, in considering this question, said (at p. 298): “ The notes being valid in their inception, the only answer to the foreclosure of the mortgage is payment. The mortgage was given to secure payment of the notes, and until they are paid the mortgage is a subsisting security and can be foreclosed. The mortgage being under seal, can be foreclosed by action at any time within twenty years. * * * It is only an action upon the notes that is barred after six years. * * *

*644“ It is a general rule recognized in this country and in England that when the security for a debt is a lien on property, personal or real, the lien is not impaired because the remedy at law for the recovery of the debt is barred.”

Mrs. Greenley was the maker of these notes and was liable for their payment at any time. The fact that no immediate enforcement of the indebtedness could be had against Shelmidine did not operate to extend her date of payment. If she had paid the notes shortly after the conveyance, as she had a right to do, she could have recovered against Shelmidine on the oral agreement if upon the final adjustment the fund was' not exhausted before this list of claims was reached. The Statute of Limitations would not be a bar for the liability of Shelmidine has been continuous during all the timé of his occupancy of the premises, although not enforcible. (Greenly v. Shelmidine, supra.)

Oren Greenley knew of this oral agreement and it inured to his benefit. He could not compel its performance until the contingency arrived when payment was to be made. . Shelmidine’s attitude in repudiating the contract, and the fact that no accounting has been had of the avails received from the sale of one farm, are sufficient to permit a court of equity to determine the rights of the parties, and especially as he.claims to be the unqualified owner of the remaining farm, and is not disposed to sell the same pursuant to the agreement.

The court has found, and in accordance with the evidence, “that in 1885 or 1886 said Shelmidine repudiated said agreement to the knowledge of said Oren Greenley, and refused to pay said notes and informed said Oren Greenley that he had purchased the farms and that they belonged to him, and that lie had nothing to do with Mrs. Greenley’s debts.” It is contended that by reason of this disavowal the right to sue accrued at once, and the Statute of Limitations was thereupon set in motion. His disclaimer of -the contract did not annul it. He was in error in his attempted denial. The court has determined that he had made a valid agreement, whereby he did not own the farms, and was liable for Mrs. Greenley’s debts. If there had been a written agreement by which he had agreed to carry on the 'farms for twenty years, then sell them and pay these debts, his ipse dixit to the creditors whose debts were to be paid *645that lie was not liable for their payment would not relieve Mm from liability, and he could not invoke that declaration in order to interpose the defense of the Statute of Limitations. If he made the agreement as the court has found, it .fastens certain obligations upon him, and they are not added to or lessened by his renunciation. The oral agreement is just as effective and binding upon him as 'if it had been reduced to writing, and we are to determine by that contract whether the Statute of Limitations is a defense.

In the previous action the court directed an accounting before a referee, and the counsel for Shelmidine insists that the plaintiff should intervene in that action. She is seeking to establish the validity of her agreement. She cannot participate in the accounting until her demand has been determined. Whatever defense Shelmidine has, by virtue of his agreement with Mrs. Greenley, against her is equally available against the plaintiff. He has not seen fit to interpose the defense that the payments on the mortgage, his expenses and the sum due for his services have consumed the income and the value of the premises, so that there is nothing due in any event. He has contented himself with disavowing the agreement and insisting upon the Statute of Limitations.

The defense of the Statute of Frauds is not available to the defendant Shelmidine. He undertook to pay these notes as part of the consideration moving to him. He went into possession of the farms, has managed them, receiving the benefits therefrom and earning compensation for 1ns services upon his explicit promise to pay these obligations in certain contingencies out of the moneys coming to him from the deal and transfer, and that promise is an inseparable part of the agreement. He cannot adopt the agreement so far as beneficial to him and repudiate the burdens imposed by it.

The plaintiff is not seeking a personal judgment against the defendant Mary E. Greenley upon the notes. If she was sued in an action at law, possibly the bar of the statute might be successfully urged in her behalf. The present action is in equity to establish the validity of the oral agreement in favor of the plaintiff, and to compel its performance. The maker of the notes as the grantor of Shelmidine, a party to the agreement with him and necessarily interested in its consummation, is at least a proper party defendant. *646She cannot set up the bar of the six years’ statute, which might be availed of by her in an action on the notes, to defeat the continuous agreement with Shelmidine. That agreement created a separate, distinct liability, and its terms are controlling when the application of the statute to its performance is to be determined.

The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.

All concurred.

Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.