The following is the opinion delivered at Special Term:
Lewis, J.:The pleadings and affidavits on this motion show that plaintiff’s assignor, the defendant Andrew D. Baird, conveyed to the defendant Mann, who acted as a conduit for the purpose of transferring the title from Baird to Burns Bros., certain real property for the sum of $80,000, $30,000 payable in cash and the balance by giving *602a bond and purchase-money mortgage for $50,000, which was executed by Mann, the- principal sum of which was guaranteed by Burns Bros. This action is at law to recover the $50,000 recited in the bond which was guaranteed by the defendant Burns Bros. No judgment is sought against the defendant Mann. The defense of Bums Bros, is that after the closing of title and the delivery of a bargain and sale deed to Mann and the execution of the $50,000 bond and the accompanying mortgage and guaranty the city of New York claimed that a street known as Exterior street ran through the property and that Baird, when conveying, could not have owned that portion of the street that lay within its lines. An action was thereafter brought (Burns Bros. v. City of New York, 178 App. Div. 615; affd., 232 N. Y. 523) in which the Appellate Division stated (p. 630): “ Each of the parties hereto has rights in the property, and so far as appears in this action can continue to hold and enjoy the same, and neither one is in position to eject the other therefrom.” The defenses urged do not arise as the result of the covenants, if any, contained in the deed, but are due, as alleged, to the mutual mistake of facts which arose prior to the execution of the contract. Assuming that the facts alleged in the affidavits set forth mistake of fact and not mistake of law, the defenses are insufficient. In Johnson v. State of New York (188 App. Div. 33) the court stated: “ In the Wheeler Case [Wheeler v. State of New York, 190 N. Y. 406] the general rule was stated as follows: 'An executory contract to give " a good and sufficient conveyance of land ” requires the grantor to convey a good title, as well as to deliver a conveyance proper in form. But after the contract is executed and the conveyance accepted, the grantee must rely solely on the covenants in his deed. If his deed contains no covenants, he is without remedy either for eviction or incumbrance.’ ” (See, also, Thorp v. Keokuk Coal Co., 48 N. Y. 253.) Motion for judgment on the pleadings is granted.