32 N.Y.S. 830 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1895
This is an appeal from an order of the special term removing Clarence D. Turney as receiver of the property of the defendant the Consolidated Gas, etc., Company, and appointing James H. Moran receiver. This action is to foreclose a mortgage of the plant and franchises of the defendant gas company executed to secure the payment of a series of bonds. A subsequent mortgage was executed on the same property by that defendant to the defendant the American Debenture Company. A foreclosure of that second mortgage was instituted before this action was commenced, and' in the earlier action Mr. Turney was appointed receiver.
There seems to be some misapprehension in the minds of the parties as to the .character of these receiverships. Mr. Turney appears to have been appointed a general receiver of the corporation, and the order made in this action removes him as such receiver, ■ and appoints as receiver in his stead Mr. Moran, who is also appointed receiver of the mortgaged premises and property. There was certainly no ground alleged in the complaint in this action for the appointment of a general receiver of the corporation, who stands in the nature of a statutory assignee. The case presented falls only within subdivision 2, § 1810, Code. The receiver whose appointment is authorized by this subdivision is only a receiver of the mortgaged property. The practice and power of the court is therefore substantially the same as it was in equity or chancery before these provisions of the Code. We judge from the papers that such should have been also the character of the earlier receiver. We have, therefore, here the simple case of an application made in the foreclosure of a paramount mortgage for the appointment of a receiver in that action for the benefit of the plaintiff therein. If there was a proper case made for a receiver, one should have been appointed in this action, notwithstanding a receiver had been previously appointed in the foreclosure of the junior mortgage; for the earlier receivership inured, not to the benefit of this plaintiff, but solely to that of the junior mortgagee. Ranney v. Peyser, 83 N. Y. 1. In that case it was held that a prior mortgagee, to reach the rents of mortgaged property, must obtain a receiver in his own action, who, when appointed, would supersede the other receiver. This was, therefore, pra'ctically an original application for a receiver, and it rested in the discretion of the court as to whom it would appoint. Mr. Turney has no better ground of complaint of the failure to appoint him than any other applicant for the position
So far as relates to the income and moneys collected by the first receiver, it seems fairly debatable whether the plaintiff in this action is entitled to receive them or not. At least, the question should not have been determined on this application; it should be left for adjudication in a proper proceeding to recover them. In this respect we think the order below was erroneous.
The order appealed from should be modified by striking out such parts thereof as appoint a receiver of other than the mortgaged property and franchises, and also so much thereof 'as directs Turney, receiver, to pay over to the new receiver the moneys in his hands, and in all other respects affirmed, without costs of this appeal to either party.