100 Misc. 308 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1917
This is an action for the foreclosure of a mortgage, brought by a junior participant in the mortgage against the senior participant and the other usual parties to such an action. The defendant New York Life Insurance Company, which is the senior participant in the mortgage, and the defendants Bon
The question whether the New York Life Insurance Company, the senior participant in the mortgage, had the legal right to extend the mortgage, and whether the mortgage is now due and payable, is not before me on these pleadings. The complaint nowhere alleges any such extension. The only allegation in regard to such extension is that demand was made upon the New York Life Insurance Company to foreclose the mortgage, and “ that upon such demand the New York Life Insurance Company refused to comply therewith, stating as its reason for such refusal that it had extended said mortgage for the period of three years and had delivered the extension agreement to the present owner of the property.” This, however, is not an allegation that the mortgage was extended. It is a mere allegation of a statement by the New York Life Insurance Company of its reason for refusing to foreclose. In addition to this the complaint alleges in the
The real question in this case, which is raised by the other two grounds of demurrer, is whether the plaintiff can maintain an action to foreclose this mortgage at the present time, assuming that it is past due and payable. The answer to this question depends upon the construction to be given to the participation agreement. The bond and the mortgage, which are for $36,000, were originally made to the Title Insurance Company of New York which thereafter assigned the same to the New York Life Insurance Company, which assignment was duly recorded. Thereafter, the New York Life Insurance Company and the plaintiff executed a participation agreement, to which the mortgagor and the present owners of the property were not parties, which provided that the New York Life Insurance Company should have a senior or prior interest in said mortgage to the extent of $30,000, and that the plaintiff should have a junior or subordinate interest in said mortgage to the extent of $6,000. This participation agreement is in the usual form of such agreements, and provides, among other things, that the New York Life Insurance Company “ shall have all the rights of any holder of said bond and mortgage, and in the event of any default on said bond and mortgage, to foreclose the same and receive the proceeds of sale from the referee.” The agreement contains other provisions defining the rights of the parties, but throughout the same it seems clear that the intention of the parties was to give the New York
The plaintiff relies upon the well established rule that where a mortgage is made to a trustee for the benefit of a cestui que trust and the trustee improperly or unreasonably refuses to foreclose the mortgage, after demand duly made, or where owing to sickness or insanity it is impossible for him to dó so,'
The distinction between the rights of a cestui que trust who is, in the contemplation of the parties, a party to the agreement sought to be enforced, and the rights of a subordinate contractor with one of the parties to the agreement, to whom the other party is a complete stranger, is indicated by the Court of Appeals in O’Beirne v. Allegheny & K. R. R. Co., 151 N. Y. 372, 383: “ The bondholders are the beneficiaries of the mortgage, or the deed of trust, and that instrument contains, in effect, a contract made for their benefit through a trustee as a convenient intermediary. It is upon that principle that such an action as this is permitted. Whatever rights were vested in the trustee through the mortgage instrument, as against the mortgagors, inured to the benefit of the bondholder as the beneficiary, and are enforceable by him, in the case of refusal or neglect on the part of his trustee to act for him upon his making the proper request.”
It should also be borne in mind that these participation agreements are very common. Hundreds of them are made by title companies and other corporations investing in mortgages, and no case has been called to my attention, nor have I ever heard of any, where a junior participant has asserted the right himself to maintain an action to foreclose the mortgage. In this case there is only one junior participant, but in many cases there are several, and there might well be a very large number. Is it reasonable that any one
There is an additional reason why the complaint does not set forth a good cause of action. The plaintiff himself concedes that it was necessary as a condition precedent to his bringing this suit that a demand should be made upon the senior participant, the New York Life Insurance Company, to foreclose the mortgage and that it should refuse to do so. It seems to me, however, that the complaint does not plead such a demand. It alleges in paragraph fourteenth that the plaintiff assigned his right, title and interest in the bond and mortgage to Mary E. Clare on February 28, 191.7, and in paragraph sixteenth that this assignment to Mary E. Clare was made upon the express representation by the New York Life Insurance Company that it would give its written consent
Demurrers sustained, with ten dollars costs to the defendant New York Life Insurance Company, and ten dollars costs to the defendants Bonhag, with leave to the plaintiff to serve an amended complaint on payment of said costs.
Ordered accordingly.