119 N.Y.S. 921 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1909
In August, 1907, one Augusta Reis' died intestate seized of certain real property upon which she had given a mortgage in her lifetime, and in the September following an administrator of her estate was duly appointed. Default having been made on the mortgage a foreclosure action was thereafter .begun and on June 30, 1909, the mortgaged premises were sold pursuant to the judgment of foreclosure and sale. The heirs at law of the mortgagor were made parties to the action of foreclosure, but the administrator of the deceased mortgagor was not, and the purchaser refused to complete his purchase on the ground that three years not having elapsed since the death of the owner of the equity the title was defective because such administrator was not made a party defendant so" as to cut off whatever interest lie'had in the property and the lien of the general creditors of the mortgagor of which there were several with deficiency of personal assets to satisfy them.
A motion was made to compel him to complete his purchase and the learned Special Term denied it, holding that his contention was correct. We think this was erroneous. When Augusta Reis died intestate the real property subject to the existing mortgage passed to her heirs and they thereafter held as owners. These heirs having
Eor do the general creditors of a mortgagor who has died leaving insufficient personal assets to p.ay his debts have any such lien as makes them necessary parties to a foreclosure action. ' ,
It has long been the statutory law, now embodied in sections 2749 and 2750- of the Code of Civil Procedure, that at any time within three years after letters were first duly granted within the State,' any representative^ other than a temporary administrator, or general creditor of a deceased person upon showing insufficiency of personal assets might apply in the prescribed manner for the sale of 'the decedent’s real estate for the payment of his debts. The law giving this privilege does not state that the creditor has a lien on such real property, general or specific. On the death of the owner of real property title passes either to his devisees or to his heirs. They can convey it even within the three years, and a bona fide purchaser who has no notice of deficiency of personal assets to pay debts takes good title. (Code Civ. Proc. § 1853; Cunningham v. Parker, 146 N. Y. 29.)
Whatever confusion exists as to this right of a creditor to be paid through sale of a decedent’s real estate during the period of three
In Moser v. Cochrane (107 N. Y. 35), upon which the respondent relies, the purchaser brought action to recover back her deposit made on a contract of purchase with the heir within three years of the death of his ancestor. The court held that even in such case the purchaser could not be relieved of her contract where it was shown there was no deficiency of personalty to pay debts. That case is not an authority for saying that the administrator or the general creditors are necessary parties to a foreclosure by action, of a mortgage existing at the death of the mortgagor, even where there is insufficient personalty to pay debts. ■
It was not necessary that the administrator of the deceased mortgagor or her general creditors should be made parties defendant to
The order appealed from is reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion granted, with ten dollars costs.
Ingbaham, McLaughlin, Clarke and Scott, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granted, with ten dollars costs.