199 N.E. 23 | NY | 1935
This action was brought for the foreclosure of a mortgage given by defendant, Virginia M. *113
Van Bokkelen, to secure her debt to the plaintiff bank. Judgment of foreclosure and sale was regularly entered April 26, 1933, on default of all the defendants. Payment of a probable residue of the debt was thereby awarded in this form: "That the plaintiff, The Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank, upon confirmation of the referee's report of sale, have judgment against the defendant, Virginia M. Van Bokkelen, for the amount of any deficiency remaining after the sale of the mortgaged premises and the application of the proceeds as hereinabove directed." This provision was not touched by the limitation attached to deficiency judgments in foreclosure by section 1083-a of the Civil Practice Act. (Feiber Realty Corp. v. Abel,
It was determined by the judgment that principal and interest were due in the sum of $8,018.11. The referee's report of sale showed a deficiency of $8,537.38 on a purchase by the plaintiff bank for $1,000.
Though the defendant, Virginia M. Van Bokkelen, had theretofore defaulted, she then appeared in the action as was her right. (Martine v. Lowenstein,
On July 3, 1934, the Appellate Division decided Monaghan v.May (
We think this order was unauthorized and without effect.
A decree of foreclosure and sale entered in the usual form prior to August 28, 1933 (See Civ. Prac. Act, § 1083-a), was a final determination of the liability for a resulting deficiency of any defendant over whom jurisdiction was obtained when that relief was asked and awarded against him in the action. (Civ. Prac. Act, §§ 1082, 1083; Feiber Realty Corp. v. Abel, supra,
pp. 98, 99.) This judgment of foreclosure and sale was regularly entered April 26, 1933. True it provided, as we have noticed, that the plaintiff bank, "upon confirmation of the referee'sreport of sale, have judgment against *115
the defendant, Virginia M. Van Bokkelen, for the amount of any deficiency," and so perhaps no deficiency was to be payable or enforceable before the report of sale was confirmed. (Bank ofRochester v. Emerson, 10 Paige, 115. Cf. Moore v. Shaw, 15 Hun, 428; appeal dismissed,
What ultimately happened at the Special Term was that the defendant, Virginia M. Van Bokkelen, was credited upon the confirmed report of sale with the amount of the deficit therein recorded; the docket of the deficiency judgment against her was expunged; and any recovery against her personally was interdicted. In the court of original jurisdiction the unchallenged final judgment of foreclosure and sale was in effect revised so as to delete the award of payment of a residue of the debt ascertained as that judgment directed; and the order *116
unconditionally confirming the report of sale in effect was reversed for asserted judicial error. The Special Term was without power to dictate such a procedure. (Herpe v. Herpe,
Much of the argument before us was addressed to the question whether in an action to foreclose a mortgage the final judgment may order a sale without the award of any personal liability, when in conscience that course is compelled by extraordinary hardship that otherwise must inevitably result in times of widespread economic prostration. As to this we express no opinion, since upon the foregoing statement it is plain that no such issue was here presented for determination by the courts below. Perhaps it should be said that we do not approve the decision in Monaghan v. May (supra).
The order of the Appellate Division and that of the Special Term should be reversed and the original order of confirmation reinstated, with costs to the appellant in all courts.
CRANE, Ch. J., LEHMAN, O'BRIEN, HUBBS, CROUCH and FINCH, JJ., concur.
Orders reversed, etc. *117