The complaint was dismissed on the opening of counsel for the plaintiff, on the ground that there was no contract in writing signed by the defendant.
From the allegations of the complaint and the statement of what the plaintiff proposed to prove thereunder, it appears that the plaintiff is a religious corporation and that the defendant, a business corporation, is composed wholly of members thereof; that the defendant held a mortgage on property owned by the plaintiff in process of foreclosure; that an ineffectual attempt was made to pay the plaintiff’s debts, including the claim of defendant, and prevent the foreclosure sale; that on such attempt failing the defendant agreed in consideration of permitting it to retain $1,934, which had been paid to it on an unexecuted agreement and the refraining of plaintiff or any one in its behalf from attending the foreclosure sale or bidding upon the property, to hid in the property in its own name for the benefit of the plaintiff and to convey it to the plaintiff and take back a mortgage for the amount of its claim payable in a certain manner; that the plaintiff refrained from attending the sale and kept persons from bidding in pursuance of such agreement, and *370that the defendant bid it off, took title in its own name and repudiated its part of the agreement and refused either to convey or to repay the $1,934.
I think such facts make a prima facie case and show that the defendant obtained title fraudulently, and that it holds the property as trustee ex maleficio for the plaintiff, and that it cannot shield itself behind the Statute of Frauds on the ground that its agreement was not in writing.
The managers and stockholders of the defendant corporation were all members of the plaintiff, a religious corporation, and in dealing with it they occupied a confidential relation. The agreement whereby the defendant received $1,934 from the plaintiff was not carried out and it was the duty of the defendant to return that sum of money to the plaintiff. Instead of doing that it was agreed that such sum should be retained by defendant as consideration for its promise to bid in the property and hold it for tlie plaintiff. In addition, the plaintiff agreed not to attend the sale or to bid and relied wholly upon the defendant carrying out its agreement: It was a fraud upon the plaintiff for the defendant to procure title to the plaintiff’s premises in this manner, more easily practiced because of the fact that everybody who was interested in the defendant was a part of the congregation of the plaintiff. Whether the defendant obtained the property at a price much below its value does not appear; but a considerable sum was paid for the agreement and the plaintiff kept its promise not to attend the sale or bid.
I understand the rule to be that where the owner of property about to be sold at judicial sale enters into an agreement with his mortgagee for a valuable -consideration and a promise not to bid or procure bidders, that the mortgagee shall bid off the property and hold it for Mm, the mortgagee, in an action in equity to compel performance, cannot take advantage of the Statute of Frauds and escape because his contract was not in writing. Such is the distinct holding in Ryan v. Dox (34 N. Y. 307). While that decision has been subject to some attack it has never been overthrown and was recognized in Canda v. Totten (157 N. Y. 281) and in Mackall v. Olcott (93 App. Div. 282) as still good law. It is based upon the proposition that the party obtaining title obtained it through fraud and that equity will not permit the Statute of Frauds to be made a *371shield for fraudulent acts. Of course the fraud must exist in the obtaining of the title and not arise after the title has been procured. Nor can the principle be invoked in favor of one who has no interest in the land to be sold, for that would be a mere agreement to buy and convey without any element of fraud entering intp it.
If the plaintiff can prove what its counsel stated in his opening he expected to prove, in view of the confidential relations existing between plaintiff and defendant, and the advantage which the defendant was in a position to take and apparently did take, I think the fair inference would be that the procuring of the title which the defendant did procure was in pursuance of a fraudulent scheme so to do. In that case the defendant would be deemed to hold the property as trustee in its own wrong for the plaintiff.
It may be that the plaintiff will not be able to prove the facts which were enumerated in the opening of its counsel. They, however, must be deemed to be taken as proved, and so treating them I think the dismissal of the complaint was error, and that the judgment should be reversed.
Patterson, P. J., Laughlin and Clarke, JJ., concurred; Ingraham, J., dissented.