25 A.2d 652 | Conn. | 1942
In this action of foreclosure the court, on April 25, 1941, rendered judgment for the plaintiffs for $45,845.89 against the named defendant as mortgagor, and, upon the motion of the defendant Sarah Crawford, second mortgagee, for a foreclosure by sale. Pursuant to the judgment the mortgaged premises, consisting of real estate in New London, were appraised at $57,000 on June 2, 1941, and were sold to the plaintiffs for $45,000 on June 18, 1941. On September 26, 1941, the court accepted the committee's report of the sale, and the plaintiffs claimed a deficiency judgment. On September 30, 1941, the court by its supplemental judgment approved the reports of the appraisers and of the committee, found the total debt as of that date to be $47,275.90, and disallowed the plaintiffs' claim for a deficiency judgment in the amount of $2275.90. On October 3, 1941, the court *690 ordered the receiver of rents to pay to the named defendant $865.03, the net balance in his hands as of June 18, 1941, and to the plaintiffs $770.93, the net amount collected by him subsequent to that date. The plaintiffs have appealed from the denial of their claim for a deficiency judgment, and from this order directing the distribution of the net rentals other than on account of a deficiency judgment in their favor.
Counsel for both parties have devoted their arguments primarily, both orally and upon their briefs, to the question of the effect of 5116 of the General Statutes, printed in the footnote,1 upon the plaintiffs' right to a deficiency judgment. It is the plaintiffs' claim that on this record the $45,000 sale price must be taken as the value of the property in determining the amount of the deficiency under the statute, and that since the motion for foreclosure by sale was not made by them, but by the second mortgagee, the amount *691 of the appraisal has no bearing whatever. The named defendant claims, on the contrary, that the court in rendering the deficiency judgment under the statute is conclusively bound by the value as fixed by the appraisal. The record contains no finding. The vital provision of the judgment is simply "that the plaintiffs' claim for a deficiency judgment in the amount of $2275.90 is disallowed." Interpreting this in the light of the memorandum of decision, it is apparent that what the court actually decided was that the appraisal determined the value of the property and that the plaintiffs had therefore failed to sustain the burden of proving that any deficiency existed.
The question is whether when a plaintiff, not having asked for a sale, as in the present case, has bought in the property at the foreclosure sale for less than the appraisal, the amount of the appraisal is conclusive upon him as to the property's value in the determination by the court of the amount of the deficiency. Section 5113 requires the court in its decree of foreclosure by sale to provide for an appraisal. Section 5116, after providing generally for a deficiency judgment when the proceeds of sale will not pay in full, goes on to deal with the specific situation of a sale for less than the appraisal provided for in 5113. Under such circumstances it expressly requires that "the party or parties upon whose motion the sale was ordered" shall obtain no judgment for the unpaid portion of the debt and shall in no way collect it from other than the proceeds of the sale "until one-half of the difference between such appraised value and such selling price shall have been credited upon such debt . . . as of the date of sale." By the express words of the statute the provision last quoted applies only to those parties upon whose motion the sale was made. Staples v. Hendrick,
This raises the further question upon this record as to the effect of the price realized at the sale as fixing the amount for which a deficiency judgment may be entered. While this is governed by statute in a number of states, there is no such provision in Connecticut. There is, however, ample authority that in the absence of statute the price realized upon a sale which has been duly approved by the court affords the basis for the determination of the amount of the deficiency. Whites Estate,
The named defendant, in support of its contention that the appraisal instead of the sale price should be conclusive as to the value of the property, has argued that under the policy of our law established from earliest times the mortgagee is entitled to no more than a satisfaction of his debt, either by payment or by appropriation of the mortgaged property through foreclosure; that accordingly General Statutes, Cum. *694
Sup. 1939, 1313e, formerly 5083, provided for an appraisal which is conclusive as to the value of the property where a deficiency judgment is sought by the plaintiff upon a strict foreclosure (Equitable Life Assurance Society v. Slade,
It may well be further pointed out in this connection, however, that the provisions of 1313e having to do with a deficiency judgment in a strict foreclosure do not furnish an exclusive remedy, but, if the procedure there set up is not invoked, the mortgagee may recover the difference between the debt and the actual value of the property. Acampora v. Warner,
The remaining question for determination is whether the court erred in ordering the receiver of rents to pay to the named defendant instead of to the plaintiffs $865.03, the net balance in his hands as of June 18, 1941, the date of the sale. The rents being in the court's possession in the hands of the receiver *696
as its agent, it "has the power by its orders to make such application of them as justice and equity require and it may order their disposition in such a way as to aid in discharging the obligations." Desiderio v. Iadonisi,
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the case is remanded to the Superior Court with direction to enter judgment as on file except as to the deficiency judgment and the distribution of rents in the hands of the receiver, and, as to these matters, that the plaintiffs recover a deficiency judgment of $2275.90, with interest from September 30, 1941, that the receiver of