69 A.D.2d 668 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1979
OPINION OF THE COURT
In this case, the assignee of a mortgage obtained a judgment of foreclosure upon the default of the mortgagors, but before a foreclosure sale could be held the property was destroyed by fire. The assignee was the named beneficiary of a policy of fire insurance covering the premisés and he therefore made a claim to the insurer for payment in the amount of the judgment of foreclosure. The insurer agreed to pay only the amount of the outstanding principal of the mortgage debt plus the interest due thereon as of the date of the fire. On this appeal we are called upon to decide whether the interest of the mortgagee’s assignee under the New York standard mortgagee clause should be measured by the judgment of foreclo
On October 18, 1972 the defendants Dominick and Josephine Di Martino executed and delivered a bond and mortgage to one Louis A. Droesch. The bond acknowledged an indebtedness of $26,500 to be amortized over a period of 20 years, bearing interest at the rate of 1Vi% per annum. The mortgage granted a lien on real property owned by the De Martinos as tenants by the entirety in Richmond Hill, Queens County, as collateral security for payment of the loan.
The bond contained the usual acceleration clause which provided that: "the said principal sum shall at the option of the obligee become due on the happening of any default or event by which, under the terms of the mortgage securing this bond, said principal sum may or shall become due and payable; also, that all of the covenants, conditions and agreements contained in said mortgage are hereby made part of this instrument.”
The mortgage provided, inter alia:
"4. That the whole of said principal sum and interest shall become due at the option of the mortgagee: after default in the payment of any instalment of principal or of interest for fifteen days; or after default in the payment of any tax, water rate, sewer rent or assessment for thirty days after notice and demand; * * *
"6. That the mortgagor will pay all taxes, assessments, sewer rents or water rates, and in default thereof the mortgagee may pay the same. * * *
"12. * * * In any action or proceeding to foreclose this mortgage, or to recover or collect the debt secured thereby, the provisions of law respecting the recovering of costs, disbursements and allowances shall prevail”.
On March 15, 1975 Droesch assigned the bond and mortgage to plaintiff James Grady, as trustee. The assignment was recorded on May 15,1975.
The defendant Utica Mutual Insurance Company (hereinafter Utica Mutual) issued its homeowner’s policy which, among other coverages, insured the dwelling on the premises for $40,000 for the period from October 18, 1975 to October 18, 1978. As initially drawn the named beneficiaries of the policy were the Di Martinos as owners, and Droesch as mortgagee. On October 3, 1975 Utica Mutual issued an indorsement to
The Di Martinos made monthly payments totaling $3,842.82 against principal and interest, but upon their default in making the monthly payment due on December 1, 1976, the plaintiff exercised his right under the acceleration clause to declare the unpaid balance due and owing. On January 31, 1977 plaintiff instituted an action to foreclose the mortgage by causing the Di Martinos to be personally served with a summons and verified complaint. The Di Martinos defaulted in appearing and answering and on March 16, 1977 the matter was referred to a referee to compute the amount due to the plaintiff and report. The referee’s report, dated April 4, 1977, found that the amount due the plaintiff was $34,036.48, representing outstanding principal and interest, and real estate taxes and assessments paid by the mortgagee to protect his security.
Plaintiff moved for entry of a judgment of foreclosure and sale against the defendants. The clerk taxed costs in the sum of $225 and disbursements in the sum of $207.98. The judgment as entered granted an additional award of $300 costs to plaintiff, apparently under authority of CPLR 8303 (subd [a],
On May 1, 1977 before the foreclosure sale could be held, the dwelling on the property was damaged by fire. Plaintiff asserts that the building was a total loss, whereas defendant Utica Mutual claims that the loss was $33,600.
After the fire plaintiff demanded that Utica Mutual pay the sum of $34,969.46 awarded in the judgment of foreclosure. By letter dated September 26, 1977, Utica Mutual’s attorney responded: "according to our calculations the original amount of the mortgage was $26,500. There were payments on account of $3,842.82 for amortization and interest. The net amount therefore was $22,657.18. My clients are prepared to pay to your client the sum of $22,657.18 with interest from the date of the last payment to the date of the loss, which was May 1st, 1977.”
Plaintiff found Utica Mutual’s offer unacceptable and on or about September 29, 1977 he instituted this action against Utica Mutual and the Di Martinos to recover the sum of $34,969.46 on the policy. In its answer Utica Mutual asserted that plaintiff’s interest under the mortgage was merely the outstanding principal of the mortgage loan plus interest thereon to the date of the fire, which sum it calculated to be $22,657.18.
Plaintiff then moved for summary judgment. Special Term adopted the reasoning of defendant Utica Mutual and held that plaintiff’s mortgage interest in the property was the outstanding mortgage debt with interest. Plaintiff has appealed.
We turn first to an examination of the contract of insurance. By that contract, Utica Mutual agreed, among
Thus, a homeowner’s insurance policy containing a New York standard mortgagee clause requires the insurer to make but one payment for any loss, up to the face amount of the policy. The effect of the standard mortgagee clause is simply to require that payment of the loss be first made to the mortgagee up to the extent of his interest and that the balance be remitted to the mortgagor. Where the insurer is not entitled to subrogation under the terms of the policy, payment to the mortgagee works a pro tanto reduction of the mortgage lien (see Kernochan v New York Bowery Fire Ins. Co., 17 NY 428). In this sense, the standard mortgagee clause
With these principles in mind, we now turn to the problem of defining the extent of the interest of the mortgagee in the property. Couch states that the phrase "as interest may appear” has reference to debts (11 Couch, Insurance 2d, § 42:662). Since a mortgage may be defined as a lien on real property given as security for a debt (38 NY Jur, Mortgages and Deeds of Trust, § 1), the defendant Utica Mutual argues that its liability to plaintiff is limited to the amount of the outstanding mortgage debt with interest thereon to the date of the fire. We hold that the phrase in the instant policy insuring the plaintiff mortgagee "as interest may appear” means that defendant Utica Mutual undertook to pay plaintiff "to the extent of his lien or charge upon the premises” as it existed on the date of the fire (Sias v Roger Williams Ins. Co., 8 F 187, 188; Eagle Star & British Dominions v Tadlock, 22 F Supp 545, 547, affd sub nom. Walsh v Tadlock, 104 F2d 131; cf. Kernochan v New York Bowery Fire Ins. Co., 17 NY 428, 436, supra). The lien of the mortgage is comprised of the oustanding principal of the debt with interest due thereon to the date of computation. In addition to this sum, the mortgage lien secures the amount of any moneys paid by the mortgagee to protect his security on account of overdue taxes and assessments which the mortgagor has neglected or refused to pay (Sidenberg v Ely, 90 NY 257; 38 NY Jur, Mortgages and Deeds of Trusts, § 146). When the mortgagor is in default and the mortgagee brings an action to foreclose the mortgage, the mortgage lien is also security for the costs and disbursements of the action (Eaton v Wells, 82 NY 576, 579; Clark v Levy, 130 App Div 389; Quaremba v Nassau Suffolk Lbr. & Supply Corp., 21 Misc 2d 645; Wood v Kroll, 43 Hun 328; Byrnes v Labagh, 12 NY Civ Pro Rep 417; Benedict v Warriner, 14 How
In New York there is a conflict of authority as to whether payments of taxes and assessments by the mortgagee as well as the costs and disbursements awarded in a foreclosure action are actually added to and become an integral part of the mortgage debt (Sidenberg v Ely, 90 NY 257, 262, supra), or whether they are merely tacked on to the debt as an "incident” thereof (Eaton v Wells, 82 NY 576, 579, supra). Suffice it to say that under either theory such additional sums are debts owed by the mortgagor to the mortgagee which come within the security of the lien and are collectible by the mortgagee upon foreclosure. Utica Mutual’s argument overlooks the fact that the standard mortgagee clause in its policy constituted an indemnity against loss to the mortgagee by fire damage to the property mortgaged (cf. Excelsior Fire Ins. Co. v Royal Ins. Co. of Liverpool, 55 NY 343, 355) and that the manifest purpose of the phrase "as interest may appear” was to make certain that in the event of loss the mortgagee would be protected up to the sum for which the property stood as security, namely, the amount of his lien.
A standard mortgagee clause in a contract of fire insurance contemplates the possibility of foreclosure of the mortgage (National Fire Ins. Co. of Hartford, Conn. v Finerty Inv. Co., 170 Okla 44; see, also, 11 Couch, Insurance 2d, § 42:712). Thus, it follows that the defendant Utica Mutual must be charged with knowledge that in the event of foreclosure, the "interest” of the mortgagee would include not only unpaid principal and interest but also any payments made by the mortgagee to protect his security as well as the costs and disbursements of the foreclosure action. The contract of insurance in the instant case clearly contemplates that the mortgagee’s interest might eventually exceed the amount of the original loan since another part of the standard mortgagee clause states in relevant part: "Loss or damage, if any, under this policy shall be payable to the aforesaid mortgagee (or trustee) as interest may appear under all present or future mortgages * * * it being understood that no notice of increase or decrease in any mortgagee’s interest is required” (emphasis added).
Having decided that under the "as interest may appear” provision of the standard mortgagee clause Utica Mutual must pay plaintiff the amount of his mortgage lien on the date of the fire, it becomes necessary to decide what weight to give the judgment of foreclosure as evidence of the amount of plaintiff’s lien. The rule in New York is that as between the parties to the mortgage and their assigns, a judgment of foreclosure is conclusive as to the amount of the mortgagee’s lien on the premises (Clark v Levy, 130 App Div 389, 392, supra; see, also, Dewey v Brownell, 54 Vt 441; Burlington Bldg. & Loan Assn. v Cummings, 112 Vt 122, 125) but it is not conclusive as to persons who are not parties to the proceedings (Smith v Pacific Improvement Co., 104 Misc 481; Wacht v Erskine, 61 Misc 96). Since it was not a party to the foreclosure action, Utica Mutual was free to mount a collateral attack upon the amount of the judgment of foreclosure. However it has never contended that the referee’s computation of the amount due or the clerk’s taxation of costs and disbursements was incorrect. It has simply claimed that as a matter of law the mortgagee’s "interest” under the policy does not include moneys advanced by the mortgagee for outstanding taxes or the costs and disbursements of the foreclosure action. Under its interpretation, the mortgagee’s "interest” is limited solely to the outstanding principal of the debt with
Plaintiff has made a claim against defendant under the policy for $34,969.46. Apparently this figure includes the sum of $200 which the court authorized to be deducted from the proceeds under CPLR 8003 (subd [b]) as the maximum fee of the referee for conducting the sale. The sale was never held and thus the fee was not earned, and since this fee was not payable to the plaintiff in any event, it should be excluded from the calculation of the value of plaintiff’s unforeclosed mortgage lien. Accordingly, we find the value of that lien to be $34,769.46 with interest.
The final issue presented is the calculation of the amount for which defendant Utica Mutual is liable. The policy only obligates Utica Mutual to pay plaintiff the amount of any loss up to the value of his interest in the premises. The papers raise an issue of fact as to the extent of the loss. Plaintiff claimed that it was total whereas the defendant contended in its papers submitted in opposition to the motion for summary judgment that the dwelling sustained only $33,600 damage. Accordingly, the order appealed from should be reversed and the matter remitted for an immediate trial of the issue of damages under CPLR 3212 (subd [c]). If the damage to the premises exceeded the value of plaintiff’s lien, Utica Mutual should be directed to make payment in the amount of the lien together with applicable interest thereon. If, on the other hand the value of plaintiff’s lien exceeded the damage, the insurer should be directed to pay plaintiff only the amount of the loss and he may then seek to recover the balance of his lien by foreclosing against the damaged premises.
Suozzi, Lazer and Rabin, JJ., concur.
Order of the Supreme Court, Nassau County, dated August 9, 1978, reversed insofar as appealed from, on the law, with $50 costs and disbursements, and action remitted to the Supreme Court, Nassau County, for further proceedings in accordance with the opinion herein.
. We have examined the papers in the foreclosure action currently on file in the office of the County Clerk of Queens County bearing Index No. 2067/77 and we take judicial notice of the contents thereof (see Richardson, Evidence [10th ed], §§ 14, 30). The report of the referee contains the following computation of the amount owing:
Principal of bond and mortgage as of March 31, 1977 $25,537.56
Plus unpaid interest to March 31,1977 at 7 1/2% 5,598.00
Advance for back real estate tax and interest 2,710.47
Current real estate tax (in arrears) 171.50
Interest through March 31,1977 2.93
Current sewer rent (in arrears) 15.62
Interest through March 31, 1977 .40
Total due as of March 31, 1977 $34,036.48
. It appears that this retroactive award of legal interest was erroneous because the referee computed interest at the mortgage rate up to March 31, 1977. Accordingly, interest on the referee’s award should have been computed at the legal rate from April 1, 1977.