64 N.Y.S. 71 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
The action was brought to foreclose a $6,000 mortgage given by the testator of the defendant Garrett P. Wright, executor. The-property is real estate situated in the borough of Richmond. Letters testamentary were issued to the executor March 24, 1896, and from that time until March, 1899, the attorney for the estate was Forrest L. G. fright, the executor’s son. In March, 1899, the executor alleges that he placed the law affairs of the estate in the keeping of the firm of Parker & Aaron, lawyers, of No. 15 Wall street, borough of Manhattan; but that he told them they need not appear in this.
This action was begun March 21, 1899. It proceeded to judgment June 8, 1899, and thereafter a sale of the mortgaged premises was duly and regularly advertised to take place July 3, 1899. The defendant saw the advertisement on the thirtieth day of June, and personally attended the sale. He does not appear to have consulted any of his lawyers in the meantime nor, as has been said, to have even spoken on the subject of the sale to his son, who he claims to have believed was representing him. At the sale the property was struck down to the plaintiff for §2,500, that being the only bid, the defendant, though importuned, refusing to raise the bid. He did not ask for any postponement of the sale, uor claim to have been taken by surprise or at a disadvantage in any way. The sale resulted in the entry of a deficiency judgment against the estate July 5, 1899, for §4,860.40, a transcript of which judgment was served on the defendant July thirteenth. On August 18, 1899, the plaintiff sold the valuable part of the property in question to one Adam Gleckner for §1,800, and executed and delivered the deed on September 2, 1899. On the 9th of September, 1899, the defendant moved to vacate the sale and for an order setting aside the deficiency judgment and decreeing a resale, which motion was thereafter granted. No proof was offered at the hearing tending to show that the property would bring more at a resale, nor was any bond given or offered, conditioned to secure a higher bid than §2,500, nor did the defendant assert that he believed, or had aiiy reason to believe, that the property on resale would bring any higher price than the sum at which it was struck down on the sale of July third.
The sole question presented on the appeal is whether inadequacy in price coupled with the negligence of the party in interest are sufficient grounds for the vacation of a judicial sale. As to the defendant’s negligence, the statement of the facts in itself refutes any suggestion that this was an adequate cause for requiring a resale.
Here there was no irregularity in the proceedings; all the notice and advertisement required by law was given; the defendant who makes the application for a resale was personally present at the sale, but refused to bid and failed to ask for an adjournment; no claim is made that any higher price can be secured at a resale; no offer to bid higher is made and no bond is tendered to guarantee a higher bid; more than two months are allowed to elapse after the sale before application is made for a resale, during which time a portion of the property is sold by the purchaser to a bona fide vendee; and the only pretext offered by the applicant for a resale is the statement that he was mistaken in the belief that his own son, who lives with him, was attending to the suit in his behalf, although the son had not been asked to do so, and had been actually discharged as the attorney of the defendant before the suit was instituted. If, under such circumstances, sales could be set aside at the mere request of the negligent debtor, legal sales would, in the language of the court in Coudert v. de Logerot (30 N. Y. Supp. 114, 115), “ become a farce, and, instead of encouraging persons wishing to purchase real estate at such sales, it would have the effect of preventing any property from being sold under the judgment of the courts.”
The order should be reversed.
All concurred, except Woodward, J'., absent.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs.