111 N.Y.S. 602 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
This action is to compel the defendant to deliver to plaintiff the bond and mortgage above mentioned and a certificate of satisfaction thereof.
The learned Special Term found that the plaintiff did not insure the property in a company approved by the defendant and did not assign the. policy to the defendant, and that because of his failure so to do the defendant had the right to insure the property and obligate the'plaintiff for .the payment of the'premiums; that the tender was not.sufficient because of its not including the amount of the. premium so paid and the plaintiff was not entitled to recover.
This finding seems to have been based upon the provisions of the R,eal Property Law (Laws of 1896, chap. 547, § 219, subd. 3). The trouble with this is that the subdivision of the section referred to has not been in operation since the amendment by chapter 338, of the Laws of 1898, which added to the Real Property Law three new • sections, 235, 236 and 237. Subdivision 2 of section 235 is as fol- - lows: “ Mortgagor to keep buildings insured. , A covenant ‘ that the mortgagor Will keep the-buildings on the said premises insured
While by this enactment the Legislature did not in express terms repeal section 219 of the original act, yet such was its legal effect. Subdivision 2 of the amendment fully covers the subject-matter of subdivision 3 of section 219 of the original statute (except that it omits the provision that the company shall be one approved by the mortgagee) and there can be no doubt that it was the intention of the Legislature to supersede the former by the latter enactment which thereafter furnished the only general statutory rule governing the subject-matter. (Hankins v. Mayor, 64 N. Y. 18; People ex rel. Ross v. City of Brooklyn, 69 id. 605 ; Heckmann v. Pinkney, 81 id. 211; Anderson v. Anderson, 112 id. 104.) All of the requirements of the law in force at the time the loan was made were complied with so far as the requirements of the Real Property Law are concerned. The learned counsel for defendant, however, suggests that it has the same rights by reason of the provisions of section 121 of the Banking Law (Laws of 1892, chap. 689), which provides (as to savings banks) that “ whenever buildings are included in the valuation of any real property upon which a loan shall be made by any such corporation, they shall be insured by the mortgagor in such company or companies as the directors shall direct, and the policy of insurance shall be duly assigned, or the loss made payable as its interest may appear, to such corporation,’’ in default of which the bank may procure insurance satisfactory to it at thé expense of the mortgagor.
The only requirement of this statute not met by the plaintiff
Ho contract was created by the letter of the plaintiff stating that upon the return of the existing policies he would cause a policy satisfactory to the company to be issued by an agent residing in
The delivery of the money tendered by the plaintiff to his attorney and its special deposit by the latter in a trust company where it was kept intact and at all times subject to defendant’s demand, until paid into court, kept the tender good ( Wright v. Robinson & Co., 84 Hun, 178; Hunt Tender, §§ 356-358) and entitled the plaintiff to such affirmative relief as he was entitled to. The tender having been made and kept good, its legal effect was to stop interest from its date and the plaintiff was not required to pay ■ into court, in addition to the money tendered, interest thereon from the day of the tender. The findings of fact upon which the judgment rests are without satisfactory evidence to sustain them; the exceptions thereto, as well as to the conclusions of law found thereon, must be sustained, the judgment reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
Jenks, Hooker, G-aynor and Miller, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.