99 N.Y.S. 708 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1906
Lead Opinion
The defendants gave a bond to accompany a mortgage executed by them upon lands in the State of Hew Jersey. The mortgage was foreclosed and on a sale of the premises a deficiency arose, to recover which this action is brought upon the bond alone.
The plaintiff insists that the bond is a mere common-law obligation, and that if any deficiency has arisen by foreclosure of the mortgage which accompanied it, such deficiency can be recovered according to the practice of any jurisdiction in which the obligors may be found, irrespective of the special provisions of the statute of the State where the bond was given and the mortgage accompanying it executed, regulating the foreclosure of the mortgage and the collection of any deficiency thereon, and the trial court substantially so found.
This court considered this same statute in the case of Stumpf v. Hallahan (101 App. Div. 383). While the precise question involved in the present case was not there jiresented, the princijiles laid down are controlling against jilaintiff’s contention, for we there held that no action could be brought after the six months provided by the statute had expired, irrespective of any statute of limitation which might apply to the bond itself as a common-law obligation. This in effect was a holding that the bond was not a common-law obligation to be enforced in this State as such, but that its enforcement was regulated by the statute law of the foreign State existing at the time it was given. Many embarrassing features of that case do not ajipear in the present one, for here the mortgagors and obligors and the mortgagee and obligee were all residents of the State of Hew Jersey at the time the bond was given and the mortgage executed upon lands there situated.
It would hardly be contended that the plaintiff’s assignor could have foreclosed his mortgage in any other manner than that provided by the statute. He having followed the statute in his foreclosure, and a deficiency having arisen, we think he was bound to pursue the remedy provided by the statute for its collection, and that he could not come into a foreign State, having sold the property under the statute, and, ignoring the statute, sue upon the bond as a common-law obligation. By the Hew Jersey statute, in case action is brought upon the bond to recover the deficiency arising upon sale, the mortgagor may redeem at any time within six months after entry ,of judgment therefor. Of course, the statute means entry of judgment in that State. The mortgagee took his mortgage subject to the existing laws respecting its collection, and subject also to this peculiar and wholesome right of his mortgagor. Entry of judgment on the bond in this State would not give the mortgagor the right to redeem, and if this action were permitted to be maintained he would be compelled to pay the deficiency and be deprived of the right to redeem the mortgaged property. The extent of loss which might be thus occasioned is well illustrated by the fact that the present deficiency is more than four-fifths of the amount of the original mortgage.
Where the right asserted and the remedy provided are of such a nature that they cannot be given any practical effect in this State without injustice to our own citizens our courts will not permit an action to be maintained, but will remit the parties to the forum creating the peculiar right and the particular remedy. (Marshall v. Sherman, 148 N. Y. 9.)
We do not concur in the appellants’ contention that there was a
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellants to abide the event.
O’Brien, P. J., and McLaughlin, J., concurred; Ingraham, J.? dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
I think that this judgment should be affirmed. In Stumpf v. Hallahan (101 App. Div. 383) it was held that the short statute of limitation provided for there in the Hew Jersey statute can be a defense interposed in this State that the other provisions of this statute are not available as a defense. We are not concerned with the recovery of the balance of the mortgage debt under the provisions of section 2 of the amendatory act of March 23, 1881, of the State of Hew Jersey,
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event. Order filed.
See Laws of X. J. of 1880, chap. 170, as amd. by Laws of X. J, of 1881, chap. 147; Gen. Stat. X. J. 2112, § 48.— [Rep.