216 A.D. 619 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1926
James G. Dillon, the owner of real property in the city of Cortland, N. Y., executed, at various times, four separate mortgages upon the same. The first of these mortgages was assigned by the mortgagee to the appellant, Louise B. Dillon, the sister of James G. Dillon. The second and third mortgages were given directly to Louise B. Dillon. The fourth mortgage-was given to the respondent, Elijah B. Ryan. Thereafter James: G. Dillon sold the real property to Phoebe A. Brown, from, whom he received a purchase-money mortgage. Shortly after this sale, Louise Dillon commenced an action to foreclose the-first mortgage, there being then due $850 of principal and some interest. Ryan, the holder of the fourth mortgage, was not named as a defendant. About two weeks later Louise Dillon caused a,
The principle is well established in this State that when the owner of a senior mortgage is seeking to enforce collection by foreclosure, the holder of a junior mortgage is entitled to redeem and to be subrogated to the rights of the holder of the senior mortgage and may, upon tender of the amount due, with interest and costs, compel an assignment of the mortgage to him. (Twombly v. Cassidy, 82 N. Y. 155; Frost v. Yonkers Savings Bank, 70 id. 553; Pardee v. Van Anken, 3 Barb. 534; Jenkins v. Continental Insurance Co., 12 How. Pr. 66.) “ Such a right may not exist when the senior mortgagee desires to hold his mortgage as an investment, and does not seek or threaten to enforce its collection. In such case the junior mortgagee may be in no danger of loss or embarrassment, and thus may not have any equitable right to disturb or interfere with the senior mortgage to which he is not a party, and for the payment of which he is in no Way liable.” (Frost v. Yonkers Savings Bank, supra, 557.) On the other hand, if the senior mortgage is being foreclosed, the junior mortgagee
The confusion which has given rise to this appeal is more apparent than real. Louise Dillon, the holder of the three senior mortgages, took an assignment of the fifth mortgage after starting her foreclosures, and now raises the objection that she will be prejudiced if compelled to assign her senior mortgages to Ryan, the holder of the fourth mortgage, for the reason that she is now the holder of a subsequent mortgage. She does not show, however, that the assignment to Ryan leaves her in danger of loss or embarrassment by reason of her ownership of the fifth mortgage. Ryan apparently does not seek or threaten the foreclosure of his own mortgage or the mortgages which he asks to have assigned to him. The orders appealed from provide for the discontinuance of the pending, foreclosures. Louise Dillon, under such circumstances, has no right in equity to redeem as the holder of the fifth mortgage and if she had such a right it would be necessary for her to tender payment of the Ryan mortgage in order to defeat the rights of Ryan as a junior mortgagee. An opportunity to take an assignment of the Ryan mortgage was afforded to her and she failed to embrace it.
The orders appealed from should be sustained under settled principles of the common law relating to the rights of a junior incumbrancer, unless section 275 of the Real Property Law (added by Laws of 1914, chap. 408, as amd. by Laws of 1915, chap. 493) requires a different determination. That section reads as follows: "Whenever a mortgage upon real property shall be due and payable the mortgagee or the owner and holder of the mortgage shall execute and deliver to any person or persons, or corporation, named by the owner of the land upon which the same is a lien, an assignment of the mortgage duly executed which may by its terms be without recourse to the assignor in any event and discharge such assignor from any liability thereunder to the assignee; provided a demand has been made of the holder of the mortgage by the owner of the land upon which the same is a lien for such assignment in lieu of a certificate of discharge of the same, and the full amount of principal and interest due on the mortgage and the usual fee for drawing the assignment is tendered or paid. But nothing in this section contained .shall require such execution and delivery of an assignment of the mortgage in lieu of a certificate of discharge
The section quoted relates to the right of the owner of the land to make the demand. It does not abrogate the common-law rule as to the right of a junior incumbrancer to make a similar demand for assignment of a senior mortgage to himself or another in a proper case. The restriction contained in the last sentence of that section cannot be construed to enlarge the purport of the main provision and application of the section. The main provision has no relation to a junior incumbrancer. While Phoebe A. Brown, the owner of the land in question, made a demand upon Louise Dillon, just prior to the granting of the second order, for an assignment of the three senior mortgages to Ryan and made a tender of proper payment to her, the restriction of the last sentence of the said section applies by reason of the ownership of a subsequent mortgage by Louise Dillon. Thus the demand of Brown was unavailing to sustain the orders appealed from but the application of Ryan as junior incumbrancer was properly granted in the exercise of the equitable and discretionary powers of the court. The order of January 4, 1926, is misleading in that it recites the making of a tender of payment by Ryan pursuant to section 275 of the Real Property Law. This recital does not conform to the fact nor to the opinion written by the court which correctly concludes that Ryan is entitled to have the mortgages assigned to him upon his own demand as junior incumbrancer pursuant to the rules of the common law, rather than the statute. The orders correctly disposed of the matter and should be affirmed.
The orders appealed from should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.
Orders unanimously affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.