In re the City of New York

Putnam, J.:

In conveyances, defined bounds and courses should control, and generally not be enlarged or diminished because the" description may conclude with a reference to prior deeds. Where the prior deed referred to is a conveyance wholly distinct and independent, such reference is taken to point out the chain of title, and not to cut down or extend the area which the later deed had precisely described. However, when a deed goes with a purchase-money mortgage, the two instruments in effect make up one transaction. (De Garmo v. Phelps, 176 N. Y. 455.) There is a necessary intent to mortgage back the identical lands conveyed to the mortgagor. To keep back from the grantor’s security any part, or appurtenances, is a breach of the buyer’s obligation and denies his" own recitals in such a mortgage. The difficulty here is not a wrong course or a confused statement of location, or of quantity. It is rather a careless, though natural omission by the scrivener, who by force of habit stops short in copying from the older deed at the finishing words to the point or *741place of beginning.” The separate paragraph here omitted from the descriptions of each of the two parcels was: Together with all the right, title and interest of the parties of the first part of, in and to East 15th Street and White Street lying in front of and adjoining said premises to the : centre fine thereof.”

The effect of construing together the deed and a purchase- ■ money mortgage goes so far as to correct the name of the mortgagor where the initials raised a doubt, since every f presumption is in favor of the identity of the mortgagor with the grantee. (McDuffie v. Clark, 9 N. Y. Supp. 826.) What motive would the buyer of such lots have to hold back from i the security such isolated strips? That same public policy which favors keeping them with the abutting lots, to which they naturally pertain, sustains the construction that includes them in this mortgage. If left out, the part of the street bed remains a naked, unproductive fee, without pecuniary advantage. (Matter of City of N. Y. [Decatur Street], 196 N. Y. 286, 289; 2 Devlin Deeds [3d ed.] § 1028a; Pitney v. Huested, 8 App. Div. 105.) Assuming an honest purpose to return to the grantor a security upon all the property granted, and thus reading together the deed and mortgage, we give effect to the mutual intent by holding that the purchaser of these parcels mortgaged back its entire right, title and interest in the adjoining streets.

I advise to reverse the order on reargument, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and to grant petitioner’s motion.

Jenks, P. J., and Kelly, J., concurred; Rich and Black-mar, JJ., voted to affirm.

Order reversed on reargument, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and petitioner’s motion granted.