The action was by an assignee of the vendors in an ex-ecutory contract for the sale of lands, to foreclose the equity of redemption of the purchaser for nonpayment of the purchase price. The vendors were the defendants Lewis; the purchaser was the defendant Pierce; and the contract was entered into in October, 1889, at which time Pierce went into possession, and so continued until October, 1890. In June, 1890, the Lewises assigned all their interest in the contract to the Exchange Rational Bank of Olean. In August, 1890, the Lewises gave to the defendant Mrs. Strong a mortgage on the same premises to secure the payment of money at that time loaned to them by her. Before taking the mortgage, Mrs. Strong, by her agent, making inquiries of her mortgagors in respect to the possession of Pierce, learned of the existence of the contract, but not of its assignment to the bank, and was informed by the Lewises that it had been abandoned by Pierce; and. she took her mortgage in the belief that the mortgagor’s title was clear of incumbrance. The contract was in fact abandoned by Pierce in October, before any rights of the plaintiff had intervened; and no inquiry of Pierce would have elicited information of the assignment of the contract, because he was .himself ignorant of the fact. The Lewises resumed possession of the property in October, and have ever since held it by their tenants. Two months later the bank assigned its interest in the contract to the plaintiff, the defendants Weston having in the mean time recovered and docketed a judgment in the proper county against the Lewises. The facts above stated are taken from the findings of the referee, and upon them he bases a conclusion of law to the effect that the lien of the plaintiff under his assignment' of the contract of sale, is superior, to that ..of Mrs. Strong under her mortgage, as well as to that of the Westons under their judgment. The former branch of this conclusion was clearly error. It is based, as appears from the opinion of the referee, upon the proposition, not found as a conclusion of law, that the possession of the purchaser in the contract at the time the mortgage was given was notice to Mrs. Strong of the existence of the contract not only, but also of its assignment to the bank, and of its rights thereunder. We regard the proposition as entirely untenable. The possession of Pierce was notice of the contract under which he held, and of. all his rights thereunder. It was not notice of the assignment of the contract, nor of the rights of . any party who was not in possession. The rule is that the possession in a third party is notice to the grantee of all the rights of the party in possession, so far as diligent inquiry suggested by such possession would disclose them. There was nothing in the possession by the purchaser in the contract to suggest that the contract
Judgment reversed, and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the final award of costs. All concur.