delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an action begun in 1944 to foreclose a mortgage on real property in the City of New York for non
*231
payment of principal that had become due in 1924. The trial court held that the foreclosure proceeding was barred by the applicable New York Moratorium Law.
Since
Home Bldg. & L.
Assn. v.
Blaisdell,
The formal mode of reasoning by means of which this “protective power of the State,”
Applying these considerations to the immediate situation brings us to a quick conclusion. In 1933, New York began a series of moratory enactments to counteract the virulent effects of the depression upon New York realty which have been spread too often upon the records of this Court to require even a summary. Chapter 793 of the Laws of 1933 gave a year’s grace against foreclosures of mortgages, but it obligated the mortgagor to pay taxes, insurance, and interest. The validity of the statute was sustained in
Klinke
v.
Samuels,
Appellant asks us to reject the judgment of the joint legislative committee, of the Governor, and of the Legislature, that the public welfare, in the circumstances of New York conditions, requires the suspension of mortgage foreclosures for another year. On the basis of expert opinion, documentary evidence, and economic arguments of which we are to take judicial notice, it urges such a change in economic and financial affairs in New York as to deprive of all justification the determination of New York’s Legislature of what New York’s welfare requires. We are invited to assess not only the range and incidence of what are claimed to be determining economic conditions insofar as they affect the mortgage market — bank deposits and war savings bonds; increased payrolls and store sales; available mortgage money and rise in real estate values— but also to resolve controversy as to the causes and continuity of such improvements, namely the effect of the war and of its termination, and similar matters. Merely to enumerate the elements that have to be considered shows that the place for determining their weight and their significance is the legislature not the judiciary. Unlike
Worthen Co.
v.
Kavanaugh,
It only remains to say that in
Chastleton Corp.
v.
Sinclair,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The 1943 Moratorium Law made the payment of interest, taxes, insurance, and amortization charges a prerequisite to suspension of foreclosure. These conditions concededly were met and the only default here was in unpaid principal.
For Mr. Justice Johnson’s constitutional views regarding the scope and limits of the Contract Clause, see Morgan, Mr. Justice William *232 Johnson and the Constitution (1944) 57 Harv. L. Rev. 328, 352 et seq., and Hale, The Supreme Court and the Contract Clause: III (1944) 57 Harv. L. Rev. 852,872 et seq. See also Levin, Mr. Justice William Johnson and the Unenviable Dilemma (1944) 42 Mich. L. Rev. 803; Mr. Justice William Johnson, Creative Dissenter (1944) 43 Mich. L. Rev. 497; Mr. Justice William Johnson and the Common Incidents of Life (1945) 44 Mich. L. Rev. 59.
