23 Barb. 201 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1856
The plaintiff in this action seeks to redeem.'
Previously to February, 1842, the mortgage debt had been reduced to $32,000, and some portions of the land had been released from the lien of the mortgage. In that month the mortgagees instituted a suit in the then Court of Chancery against McKibben, Strong and others, to foreclose the mortgage ; and a notice in the usual form of filing their bill, and of the pendency of the suit, was duly filed on March 7, 1842.
McKibben and Strong were, upon their respective petitions, declared and decreed to be bankrupts under the Act of Congress of August 19, 1841,
• A decree of foreclosure and sale was entered (according to
Waddell, the assignee, conyeyed to the plaintiff, McKibben’s interest in the mortgaged premises, by a deed bearing date on November 24, 1845, for fifty cents, and Strong’s interest in said premises, by two deeds, dated respectively on March 5 and 18, 1846, each for the consideration of one dollar. In February, 1846, the plaintiff tendered to Abraham and Henry Boerum the amount of the unpaid principal and interest of the mortgage, with such taxes and assessments on the mortgaged premises as they had paid, which tender was refused by them. The plaintiff now asks and demands that it may be ordered and adjudged that he is entitled to, and may redeem the said premises from the said mortgage; that an account may be taken of what is now due, the interest to be calculated up to the time of his tender, and no longer; and that upon the payment of what may be found to be due within a period to be prescribed by the court, the defendants may be decreed to surrender to the plaintiff possession of the premises held by them, with their title deeds, and to re-convey and re-assign such premises to him, free from all charges and incumbrances.
It is quite apparent, from the facts which I have stated, that if the plaintiff has acquired any interest in the premises in •dispute, it is as a prowling assignee. Waddell, the assignee in bankruptcy, although apprised by the inventory annexed to McKibben’s petition, that he and his co-tenant were entitled to the equity of redemption in the mortgaged premises, and that proceedings to foreclose the mortgage had been instituted, made no effort to be substituted as a party. Although the act gave him the right, and if the interest of creditors required it, made it his duty to do so, he, without any attempt to interfere, suffered the foreclosure suit to proceed to judgment, sales to be made to innocent purchasers, the lands to be held and
The plaintiff contends that the decree in the foreclosure suit did not bar the equity of redemption, as the right of the owners, who were two of the original defendants, had during its progress become vested in their assignee in bankruptcy, who had not been made a party. This is his main position, and if he fails in establishing that, he must fail altogether.
There can be no doubt as to the existence or soundness of the rule, that in an equitable action in rem relative to real estate, the interest of a purchaser from one of the defendants during the dependency of the suit, is barred by the decree, although such purchaser may not have been made a party. Lord Bacon, in the fourth volume of his works {p. 515) says, that “ no decree bindeth any that cometh in bona fide by conveyance from the defendant before the bill exhibited, and is made no party neither by bill or order; but when he cometh in pendente lite, and while the suit is in full prosecution, and without any order of allowance or privity by the court, then regularly the decree bindeth.” In the case of the Bishop of Winchester v. Paine, (11 Ves. R., 194), Sir William Grant says, that “ he who purchases during the pendency of the suit is bound by the decree that may be made against the person
The rule is generally laid down without any exception or modification. Its terms are sufficiently broad to include the assignees of a bankrupt or insolvent debtor, who are technically purchasers of the real estate. Chancellor Walworth seems to think that such assignees are exempt from the rule. The reason given by him (Sedgwick v. Cleveland, 7 Paige, 291), is, that the assignee upon whom the interest of the defendant has been cast by operation of law for the benefit of others, has a right to be heard for the protection of that interest. So indeed he has, and it would be erroneous to refuse him the exercise of it if he should claim it. But where would be the injury, if it should be left to his option to claim it or not ? If the right should be of any probable value, it would be the duty of the assignee to take affirmative action to sustain it, and make it available for the benefit of the creditors. If it should be worthless, there would seem to be no reason why the plaintiff, whose proceedings had been originally correct, should be put to a useless additional expense by reason of the conduct of an opponent, in which he had no participation. There would seem to be no good reason for infringing a useful general rule, merely because an assignee might abuse or neglect his trust.
Possibly, it might be a violent presumption, that an assignee would ordinarily have actual notice of the pendency of a suit against the bankrupt, particularly where the initiatory proceedings in bankruptcy had been instituted against him without his concurrence. But since the passage of our first statute, relative to filing notices of lispendens, (Laws of 1823,213, § 11), a knowledge of the pendency of suits in equity relative to real estate is
Chancellor Walworth cites but one (and that American) authority for his position, that the assignee of a bankrupt, constituted during the pendency of a suit, must be made a party, in order that the judgment should bind any part of the-assigned property. It seems to be the rule in England, that bankruptcy in either party, does not abate the suit, whether in equity or at law. (1 Cooke's B. L., 621, 4; Hewitt v, Mantell, 2 Wils. R., 372, by Bathurst, J.) The assignee may undoubtedly be let in to prosecute or defend the suit, but it should be at his own option, and not at the instance of the other party, and if he should not elect to interfere, the judgment should nevertheless be valid. If the action should be-against the bankrupt, and for a claim which would be barred by his certificate, he might avail himself of the defence even-after judgment. But surely no proceeding in bankruptcy could preclude the holder of a mortgage from instituting or maintaining an action to coerce the sale of the mortgaged property for the satisfaction of his debt. The case cited by the chancellor, (Deas v. Thorn, 3 Johns. R., 537,) is certainly a strong one, to show that the assignee must be made a party, if the objection is raised during the progress of the suit; but it was not decided in that case that if the action is suffered to ' proceed without the addition or substitution of the assignee as a party, a judgment would be ineffectual as to the assigned interest. The ordinary effect of a judgment in rem, as to-
Upon the whole, I am satisfied that the equity of redemption of McKibben and Strong, and all claiming under them as purchasers, whose title accrued after the notice of lispendens in the foreclosure suit was' filed, including their assignee in bankruptcy, was effectually barred by the decree in that suit. It is therefore unnecessary that I should consider the other questions discussed at the bar.
The complaint must be dismissed with costs.
The “ Act to establish a uniform system of bankruptcy throughout the United States,” passed August 19, 1841, was repealed March 3, 1843. There was a prior act for the same purpose, passed in 1800, and repealed in 1803. The difficulty of defining precisely what classes of debtors can constitutionally be embraced by a national bankrupt act,—the intolerable litigation, expense and delay, which proceedings in bankruptcy have always been found to occasion,—and the frauds and abuses to which the system has invariably led,—are reasons which will probably deter the present generation at least from renewing the experiment of a Federal bankrupt law.
Assignees in bankruptcy under the act of 1841 are therefore a small and diminising number, so that the case reported above has but little prospective importance, so far as it determines only the right of such assignees to redeem. But the reasoning of the case is equally applicable to the cases of voluntary assignees for the benefit of creditors and assignees under State insolvent and bankrupt .acts; which gives it a general importance.
The case cited was a bill by a prowling assignee to redeem mortgaged premises. The chancellor after expressing regret under the circumstances that he could not grant redemption in favor of the original borrowers of the money, said:—
But though they have conveyed away all their right, yet even in the case of the assignee of the equity of redemption, if there are circumstances which would induce the court to decree a redemption in favor of the representative of the mortgagor, the assignee who stands in his place will have the benefit of it.