144 N.Y. 237 | NY | 1894
The plaintiff and the defendant Guilford each had a mortgage upon real estate in Warren county, her mortgage being prior to his. He commenced an action to foreclose *239 his mortgage in July, 1891, making her a defendant therein. The complaint in that action alleged her mortgage, and that it was prior to his mortgage, and, among other things, demanded that the amount due upon her mortgage should be ascertained and paid before the amount due upon his. She suffered default in the action and judgment was rendered therein which provided that out of the proceeds of the sale of the premises her mortgage should be first paid. In September, 1891, she commenced this action to foreclose her mortgage, making him a defendant, and by a supplemental answer served by him in Nov., 1892, he alleged, as a defense to the action, that, before the commencement thereof, he commenced the action for the foreclosure of his mortgage, making her one of the defendants therein as the holder of the prior mortgage, and that that action had been prosecuted to judgment, and that final judgment of foreclosure and sale had been rendered therein providing for the prior payment of her mortgage.
The court below held that the prior action and judgment therein were a bar to the maintenance of this action, and dismissed the complaint; and the sole question for our determination is whether the judgment of foreclosure and sale in the junior mortgagee's action is a bar to the maintenance of the action brought by the plaintiff as prior mortgagee.
It is undoubtedly the general rule that the only proper parties to an action of mortgage foreclosure are the mortgagee and mortgagor and those who have acquired rights under them subsequent to the mortgage. It has been held that where the prior incumbrancer has been made a party defendant in the foreclosure action, under a complaint in the usual form, alleging that such incumbrancer's interest is subordinate to the mortgage, and containing the usual prayer for judgment, and the usual judgment in foreclosure is rendered, the interest of the incumbrancer is not cut off by the sale under such a judgment. (McReynolds v.Munns, 2 Keyes, 214; Lewis v. Smith,
If Mrs. Jacobie did not desire to have her rights, as prior mortgagee, adjudicated in the action brought by Guilford, she should have appeared and demurred or answered in that action, and thus have raised the question that she was not a proper party thereto, and had it adjudicated therein. But having, by her default, consented that judgment comprehended within the prayer for relief might be rendered against her, she cannot attack that judgment collaterally, or successfully object that it does not conclude her as to everything therein contained and adjudicated. If she omitted, by any inadvertence or excusable neglect, to answer or demur in that action, her only relief was by an application to the court to open her default and to permit her to come in and defend the action. If she is now in anywise embarrassed by that adjudication in consequence of something that has happened since it was made, her relief must be obtained from the court in which the judgment was rendered. A prior mortgagee may be prejudiced by being made a party defendant in an action commenced by the junior mortgagee. Some person made a party defendant in such an action may defend against the junior mortgage, and thus there may be prolonged litigation, and the prior mortgagee may be delayed in the enforcement of his mortgage, or in other ways embarrassed; but his relief in all such cases must be by application to the court in which the action is pending, and it has ample power to mould its relief to the exigencies of the case so as to protect *241 the prior incumbrancer from all unnecessary loss and damage.
We are, therefore, of opinion that this judgment was right, and should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.