100 N.Y. 76 | NY | 1885
The facts are simple. On the 26th of October, 1877, the insurance company owned two bonds and mortgages, one for $12,000 of principal, made by O., the other of $92,000, by K., both bearing interest and not then due. On that day, by separate instruments, it transferred them “ to
In September, 1878, the insurance company assigned its property to Ritter for the benefit of its creditors, and he in that capacity became indebted to the plaintiffs for professional services other than those connected with the mortgages. In November of that year, at his request as assignee, the bonds and mortgages were delivered by the trust company to the plaintiffs, to be enforced by foreclosure. On O.’s mortgage $1,175.82 was due at the time of sale, and the mortgaged premises produced only $1,000. On K.’s mortgage the interest amounted to $13,800, and the premises sold for $5,000. In the first case $389.13, and in the other $4,068.25 was paid to the plaintiffs as attorneys in the proceedings, and were the sums realized after payment of taxes, costs of foreclosure and referee’s fees. It is thus apparent that the money applicable upon these mortgages is, in each case, less than the interest, and with proper allegations this action was commenced to have it determined, first, whether the trust company, or Ritter as assignee of the insurance company, was entitled to it; and second, if the latter, then for an accounting with him in respect
Although the insurance company and Bitter, its assignee, acquiesce in the judgment which has gone in favor of their co-defendant, the trust company, and against themselves, the question involved must still be treated as between Bitter as assignee and the trust company. For if Bitter has no valid claim upon the money in the plaintiff’s hands, the action must fail. They are merely his creditors and claim to have through that relation a certain equity in the fund. Bitter’s position as assignee is not different from that taken by the insurance company upon the execution of the assignments. It must be assumed, therefore, that there were policy-holders to be protected, and in the absence of evidence to the contrary, that the trust, and the security for it, still continues. It is also true, as the appellants claim, that the trust embraced only the principal of the mortgages, and as they secured also such interest as might accrue. the case may be regarded in the aspect most favorable to the appellants, as one where part only of a debt has been assigned, the assignor reserving the other part to itself. In such ease it is obvious the parties,must either share jyro rata in the security, or one must have priority over the other. It seems most reasonable that in the absence of a plain declaration to the contrary, it should be applied first to the payment of that part of the debt which was assigned. (Van Rensselaer v. Stafford, Hopk. 569; Bryant v. Damon, 6 Gray, 564.) Otherwise since the mortgaged land was not sufficient to satisfy both, the assignor would gain priority over its cestuis que trust. The injustice of such a claim is manifest. It is not warranted either by the words of the assignment, or any intention which can be implied from them. One recites the mortgage as given to secure the principal sum of $12,000; not only transfers, in the most comprehensive words, the entire mortgage, but includes in terms all its right and interest in the bond and mortgage, and all moneys due or to become due for principal, and
Eeliance is placed by the learned counsel for the appellants upon the clause by which is reserved to the insurance company the right to collect and receive all interest which may become .due, and owing upon the principal. But this relates to payments • of interest by the debtor in compliance with his contract obligation. So paid it would not diminish the security, or exhaust the source from which the principal might be drawn. It would leave the interest of the "policy-holder the same as at first. It cannot relate to a payment obtained by process of law, out of the property pledged for the principal sum. That was to -be unimpaired, and so the arrangement provided that if any part of the principal should be paid or collected, the part so paid should be still held- under the original trust. Such a provision as this becomes unimportant, if by the mere accumulation of interest for the benefit of the assignor, the whole property be taken away. In Mechanics' Bank v. Bank, of Niagara (9 Wend. 410), the assignment was of a part of a mortgage debt, with a proviso that it should not be so construed as to prevent the mortgagee from receiving or disposing of the residue mortgage moneys. Upon foreclosure there was not enough to pay the assignee, and it was held the assignor could not share. The principle applies here. The land out of which the money in controversy was drawn was specifically pledged for the principal and must stand in place of the security. No doubt the general rule is that payments are to be applied first to extinguish the interest. That is the rule between debtor and creditor. It may be different between third parties, and has no application in a case like the present. The payment was not contributed by the debtor outside of the mortgage, but produced from the mortgaged premises by legal process. It should go into the hands of the trustee. The decision of the court below carried out
All concur, except Earl, J., not voting.
Judgment affirmed.