75 N.Y.S. 817 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
This action was. brought April 1, 1901, to foreclose, a mortgage executed and delivered about May 5,1894, which was duly recorded
The plaintiffs in this case, so far as Luft is concerned, have been defeated in their right to the rents which accrued from the subtenants in occupation of the premises after the appointment of the receiver and after Luft had been made a party to the action and served with notice of the existence of the receivership. Under and by virtue of the recording acts, plaintiffs’ mortgage, having been duly recorded, was constructive notice to everybody dealing with-these premises of the existence thereof, and all subsequent purchasers or incumbrancers were chargeable with notice thereof, and whatever estate such purchaser took in the premises was subject thereto. Such is an ancient rule of law (Parkist v. Alexander, 1 Johns. Ch. 394), and such is the express construction of the statute. (Tarbell v. West, 86 N. Y. 280.)
The mortgagee becomes, by virtue of his mortgage, in a qualified sense, a purchaser, and in such sense the mortgage is deemed a com veyance, and when the equity of redemption is foreclosed the pur
Where, however, there has been a forfeiture of the conditions of the mortgage, which entitles the mortgagee to foreclose the same, a. different condition is at once produced. As some time must necessarily elapse in order to procure judgment, and'as all. parties sought to be charged with the decree in foreclosure are necessary parties-, and entitled to notice, it must always be that during this period rents may accrue which by reason of the forfeiture of the provisions of the mortgage equitably entitle the mortgagee to receive the same for application upon his mortgage debt. Under such circumstances, a court of equity has general equitable power to appoint a receiver of the rents, issues and profits and thereby make the decree of foreclosure, which shall be finally entered, relate back, to the time when the foreclosure was begun; and rents accruing subsequent to the appointment of the receiver may be taken and held for application upon the mortgage debt. (Hollenbeck v. Donnell, 94 N. Y. 342.) Host mortgages at the present day provide for the appointment of a receiver pending the foreclosure of the mortgage ;;. such a provision is contained in the present mortgage; and while a, receivership, even under such circumstances, will be. denied- when-the mortgaged property is clearly more than sufficient to pay the mortgage debt, yet in all cases where there is doubt upon such a question, the courts will protect the rights of the mortgagee thereunder, and in the absence of such provision, if it appear .that .the property is-inadequate to secure, payment of the mortgage debt, equity will impound the rents for the benefit of the mortgagee. (Ross v. Vernam, 6 App. Div. 246.) These principles of the law have become so well settled and are now so frequently applied that their .soundness cannot be questioned.
The court below based its decision upon Wyckoff v. Scofield (98 N. Y. 475) and Rider v. Bagley (84 id. 461). In the first of these cases the question arose between the owner of the equity of redemption and the mortgagee. Such owner at the time of the commencement of foreclosure was served with an order restraining him from collecting rents, and also a notice of motion for the appointment of a receiver. " The injunction was subsequently modified by, agreement between the parties so as to permit the defendants’ agents to collect the rents and retain tliem to abide the order of the court. Upon the hearing of the motion .the court vacated the- injunction and. denied-the application for the appointment of a receiver. It was held that the stipulation of the parties as to the collection of the rents was -not an agreement for any further claim thereon than such as was given by the mortgage, and as the injunction and receivership were both denied, the defendant was held entitled to the rents. This decision was clearly right, for the reason that until there was a judgment of foreclosure, the owner of the equity of redemption was entitled to the rents, unless there was the intervention of a receiver, and that never occurred; but the court recognizes the doctrine announced in Hollenbeck v. Donnell and cites the same in its opinion with approval. The. doctrine of that' case manifestly has no application to the facts of the present. In the second, the- question arose between an assignee in bankruptcy of the owner of the premises and the mortgagee. Of course the assignee stood in the place of the prior owner. It was held that Bagley as the owner of the equity of redemption was entitled to the rents prior to the appointment of-a receiver, but the case states, “by the appointment of the receiver the plaintiff obtained an equitable lien upon the unpaid rents, and upon them only.” Bagley, after notice- of the pendency of a motion for the- appointment of a receiver, col
It follows that the order should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements; as, however, an injunction would now be futile to protect any right of the plaintiff, it should not be granted, but the- plaintiff may resort to such remedy as he is advised without prejudice by reason of the determinations had upon the former applications.
Van Betjnt, P.- J., O’Brien, McLaughlin and Laugiilin, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, with leave to the plaintiff to resort to such remedy as he is advised, without being prejudiced by the determinations had upon the former applications.