23 N.Y.S. 65 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1893
Elizabeth A. Stilwell died in 1890, seised of premises No. 214 West Thirty-Fourth street in the city of New York. Her will was subsequently, in 1891, admitted to probate in this county. This property, at the time of Mrs. Stilwell’s death, was subject to a mortgage. An action to foreclose this mortgage was commenced in July, 1891, and judgment therein entered in November, 1891, and thereunder the premises were sold, and the surplus money arising therefrom was paid into the surrogate’s court, pursuant to section 2798 of the Code. An application was then made
It appears that the appellant was a party to the foreclosure suit, and that by the judgment as amended the surplus was directed to be paid into the surrogate’s court. There is nothing to show that any objection was made by the appellant to this provision of the judgment, and we fail to see, therefore, how many of the questions now sought to be raised can be presented, or how they could he presented except by an appeal from the judgment. If, however, we briefly consider the propositions so ably presented by appellant, the conclusion will be similar to that reached by the learned surrogate. That the claim of the appellant is subordinate to the lien of the mortgage, and by the sale was cut off and transferred to the surplus, is evident; and, even though a claim or right originally existing against land might be litigated in an independent action, and the party not be confined to the surplus proceeding,— which is seemingly contrary to the view of the cases referred to by the surrogate,—yet we think it clear that subsequent to the sale of the property an independent action in ejectment would not lie. The object of such an action is to put the plaintiff in possession of the land, and, where the object sought to be accomplished no longer exists, it would be requiring of the court to litigate a purely "abstract question; and, though the court should take the appellant’s view that the surplus money had been substituted for the land, we cannot imagine what judgment in an action of ejectment could be rendered which would affect such surplus. What was said in People v. Rollins, 33 Hun, 48, headnote, is here applicable:
“Where a court has acquired jurisdiction over a subject-matter and the parties in interest in the course of the exercise of its right of authority, it is its duty to proceed with the hearing until a final determination is made of the matters presented for its consideration and under its Control, unless it*68 be prevented from so doing by an injunction or some other legal process rendering such a proceeding impracticable. A mere objection, or an objection followed by an ineffectual action in another court, will not justify a delay or a refusal to exercise its own rightful authority ”
We regard it as clear that, if the surrogate had jurisdiction of the subject-matter and the parties, he was not obliged to delay exercising such jurisdiction because similar questions were pending' and under consideration in another forum. In other words, where there are concurrent remedies, which are resorted to by different parties, the judge or court called upon to determine questions then before them, in the absence of any good reason for not exercising jurisdiction, should not delay and await the result of an action or proceeding in another court. Of course, there are instances where the facts would warrant a court in waiting for the conclusion of an action or proceeding in another court, but the present is not one of those, and for the reasons which we have already pointed out. We are of opinion, therefore, .that upon the facts appearing before the surrogate he was justified in proceeding, unless he was without jurisdiction over the subject-matter and the parties.
We are thus brought to a consideration of one of the most strenuous grounds relied upon by appellant, who takes this very position, claiming that sections 2797 and 2798
These sections are as follows:
“Sec. 2797. The commencement or pendency of an action or special proceeding, having for its object the sale, either absolutely or contingently, of property liable to be disposed of as prescribed in this title, or the foreclosure by advertisement, of a: mortgage thereupon, or any proceeding to sell such property, taken pursuant to a judgment or by virtue of an execution, does not affect any of the proceedings taken as prescribed by this title, unless the surrogate so directs. After making a decree directing a mortgage, lease, or sale, the surrogate may, and, in a proper case, he must, stay the order to execute the decree with respect to the property affected by the action or special proceeding, or by the proceedings then pending, until the determination thereof, or the further order of the surrogate with respect thereto, if, in the course thereof, a sale of any of the property has been made before malting the decree in the surrogate’s court, the decree must provide for the application of the surplus proceeds belonging to • the decedent’s estate. If such a sale is made afterwards, the directions contained in the decree, relating to the property sold, are deemed to relate to those proceeds.
“Sec. 2798. Where real property, or an interest in real property, liable to be disposed of as prescribed in this title, is sold, in an action or a special proceeding specified in the last section, to satisfy a mortgage or other lien thereupon, which accrued during the decedent’s lifetime, the letters testamentary or letters of administration upon the decedent’s estate were, within four years before the sale, issued from a surrogate’s court of the state having jurisdiction to grant them, the surplus money must be paid into the surrogate’s court from which the letters issued. If the sale was made pursuant to the directions contained in a judgment or order, the surplus remaining after payment of all the liens upon the property, chargeable upon the proceeds, which existed at the time of the decedent’s death, must be so paid. If the sale was made in any other manner, the surplus exceeding the lien to satisfy which the property was sold, and the costs and expenses, must, within thirty days after the receipt of the money from which it accrues, be so paid over by the person receiving that money. The receipt of the surrogate or the clerk of the surrogate’s court or the county treasurer, as the case may be, is a sufficient discharge to the person paying the money.”