Tbe facts are simple. One Broadwell mortgaged land to plaintiff and tbe mortgage was duly recorded. Then Broadwell mortgaged the same land to one Edwards, and this second mortgage was also duly recorded and subsequently to tbe other. Afterwards Broadwell, by deceit, induced plaintiff to take a conveyance of tbe land in satisfaction and to satisfy bis mortgage. Plaintiff was then informed by Broadwell that there was no other mortgage on tbe property than bis own, and was ignorant of tbe existence of this second mortgage.
On tbe death of Edwards, in 1874, Augusta Edwards and other defendants were appointed bis executors, and seeing that plaintiff’s mortgage was satisfied on the records, and therefore, supposing that tbe mortgage of tbeir testator was tbe first lien, they neglected for some eight years to enforce that mortgage.
This second mortgage was payable in six annual installments, the first, January 1, 1874. Tbe interest was paid annually to January, 1881. Until nearly two years after tbe whole of this mortgage *235became payable, Broadwell had sufficient personal property from which to collect principal and interest falling due in any year prior to January, 1881.
The plaintiff brings this action to set aside the satisfaction and the deed, to restore the mortgage as a lien prior to defendants’ mortgage and to foreclose. This relief was granted and defendants appeal.
There is no question as to plaintiff’s right to this relief as against Broadwell. The only question is whether the equity of the executors of Edwards is superior to that of plaintiff. When Edwai’ds took this mortgage, the plaintiff’s mortgage was on record. Therefore Edwards had notice of it; and his executors cannot object to a restoration of the lien, unless on the ground of some equity which has since arisen. The plaintiff’s act, in satisfying his mortgage, did not, of itself, do Edwards any harm.
Plaintiff did not discover the existence' of the second mortgage till August, 1882, and at once, commenced this action. He does not, therefore, retain the fruits of the contract, but endeavors to vacate it altogether by a cancellation of the deed, as well as a restoring of the mortgage.
If the defendants, on examining the record and finding the plaintiff’s mortgage canceled, had parted with value and had thereupon taken a deed or mortgage on the land, they would have been protected ; because, such is the provision of the recording act (1 R. S., m. p. 756, § 1), taken in connection with the subsequent sections (m. p. 761, 762, §§ 60 [28] and 69 [37] and 70 [38]); and it is only against purchasers in good faith and for a valuable consideration (including mortgagees) that an unrecorded mortgage is invalid. An unrecorded mortgage has priority over a judgment, unless there be some facts making a superior equity. So that if plaintiff’s mortgage had never been recorded, it would have had priority over a judgment recovered against Broadwell by these executors. In that case it might be urged that the lender of the money might have trusted the borrower, because his estate appeared to be unincumbered; yet that circumstance would not give the lender preference over an unrecorded mortgage.
Now this present case is not as strong as would be the case of one who had loaned money to Broadwell. Suppose that the executors *236liad actually loaned money to Broad well; would they have bad equity superior to the plaintiff, whose mortgage had been canceled by fraud ? These executors have parted with nothing. They did not even agree to extend the time. All that can be said is that they have neglected to foreclose, in the belief that their mortgage, which was originally a second lien, had become a first, and that by this neglect they are now unable to collect it from this land or from other property of the debtor.
The case of Fassett v. Smith (23 N. Y., 252) is cited to us. In that case the point on which members of the court disagreed was whether the bank was a bona fide purchaser. But it was not claimed that any person had an equity against the plaintiff who desired to restore a canceled mortgage unless such person had obtained a subsequent lien on the property and was a bona fide purchaser for value, without notice.
And the difficulty with the executors in this case is that mere neglect to sue does not make them bona fide purchasers for value. To put themselves in that position they must have parted with value in consideration of some lien given on the premises or conveyance thereof. All which they did was to delay enforcing an old security, because they thought that old security was good.
They made no new loan and took no new security in reliance on the fact that plaintiff’s mortgage was satisfied of record. They will still have what they always had, a second mortgage. But they will not have, what they supposed they had, a first.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Bookes and Landon, JJ., concurred.Judgment affirmed, with costs.