Plаintiff Raymond Jemzura instituted this action to foreclose a mortgage in the face amount of $10,000 on a hundred-acre farm in Madison County. The mortgage was executed on August 17, 1954 by John Jemzura in favor of defendant George Jemzura, who assigned it on June 17, 1964 to plaintiff. On May 1, 1963, $500 was pаid by John Jemzura on account of the mortgage indebtedness. Later that month, John died intestate so that his children, the plaintiff and defendants Gorton, Griffin and George Jemzura, all became tenants in common of the farm, apparently decedent’s only asset. Defendant Gorton deeded her interest in the premises to
Except for a period when in the service, Raymond lived on thе farm practically all his life. Since the father’s death, he alone resided on the property, where he kept a vegetable garden for his own use, cut some hay, collected a small amount of maple syrup and stored some stove wood in a fаrm building.
Trial Term stated that plaintiff at all times herein had exclusively retained possession of the premises; that there was no claim or evidence that rent was ever paid by or demanded of plaintiff; that beginning in 1964 plaintiff paid the taxes ($2,128.69) on the premises, excеpt for two years which were due and owing at the time of trial; and that plaintiff never requested contribution from the cotenants for their share of the taxes, mortgage principal or interest. It found, discernible to equity on the acts and conduct of the partiеs, an implied agreement by the parties that plaintiff was to pay the taxes, maintain the premises and waive interest on the net mortgage debt in return for his possession, use and occupancy of the premises. It held that the mortgage was valid and enforceable and found that the principal balance due thereon, after deducting the $500 payment, three $100 payments barred by the Statute of Limitations and plaintiff’s own share of the mortgage debt (as a co tenant in common and found to be waived by him) was in the sum of $6,600. The Appellate Division affirmed without opinion.
The judgment entered decrees "that the plaintiff herein have judgment against all of the defendants for the sum of $6,600.00 with interest thereon from the date of entry of this judgment,” and orders that the first, second and fourth defenses and counterсlaims of defendant Griffin’s answer be dismissed. The third counterclaim, seeking an accounting of the amount to be credited on the mortgage debt by virtue of plaintiff’s use of the premises, was not dismissed. Briefly and among other things, the judgment contains customary clauses in regard to sаle of the premises by a named referee, payments of taxes which may become liens at the time of sale, the deposit of the balance of the proceeds of sale and the payment of the referee’s fees, expenses of sale and $425.45 costs and disbursements to plaintiff or his attorney and "also the sum of $6,600.00, the amount so reported due as aforesaid
EPTL 3-3.6 entitled "Encumbrances on property of decedent or on proceeds of insurance policy on life of decedent not chargeable against assets of decedent’s estate”, as it presently reads, became effective on September 1, 1967 (L 1967, ch 472, § 2; as amd by L 1967, ch 686, § 21; see L 1966, ch 952). Said section provides in part:
"(a) Where any property, subject, at the time of decedent’s death, to any lien, security interest or other charge * * * passes to a distributee * * * the personal representative is not responsible for the satisfaction of such encumbrance out of the property of the decedent’s estate, except as provided in SCPA 1811 * * * .
"(b) Any such encumbrance is chargeable against the property of the decedent * * * subject thereto. Nothing in this section imposes upon a * * * distributee * * * any personal liability for the payment of the debt secured by such encumbrance.
"(c) Where any lien, security interest or other charge encumbers:
"(1) Property passing to two or more persons, the interest of each such person shall, only as between such persons, bear its proportionate share of the total encumbrance.”
Thus, at the present time under said section, a distributee, not having executed the bond and mortgage nоr having assumed or agreed in some fashion to pay the indebtedness (see Schwartz v Cahill,
EPTL 3-3.6 re-enacts, without substantive change, section 20 of the Decedent Estate Law (see NY Legis Doc, 1965, No. 19, Report No. 8.2.3A, pp 390-422; Prаctice Commentary by Samuel Hoffman, McKinney’s Cons. Laws of NY, Book 17B, pp 350-351, under EPTL 3-3.6), the latter of which was completely revamped in 1965, effective September 1, 1974 (L 1965, ch 588), and, in the process, section 250 of the Real Property Law was repealed and its generаl content embraced (1965 McKinney’s Session Laws of New York, p 838). Said section 250, as amended by chapter 265 of the Laws of 1946, effective
The effect of EPTL 3-3.6, as well as that of said precursor sectiоns, upon real property subject to a mortgage executed by an ancestor or testator and which descends to a distributee or passes to a testamentary beneficiary, is to make the mortgaged premises, as between the distributee or testamentary beneficiary and in the absence of a different testamentary direction, the primary source for payment of the mortgage debt (Matter of Burrows,
Entry of a judgment of foreclosure and sale results in extinguishing the title or interest of the distributee or testa
The doctrine of merger has never been especially favored in equity (Dunkum v Maceck Bldg. Corp.,
Ordinarily, it would be inequitable to permit one cotenant, without the consent of the others, to purchase and retain exclusively for himself any outstanding adverse title to or
A tenancy in common exists when there is a unity of possession (Taylor v Millard,
Here, we have findings by the Trial Term, undisturbed by the Appellate Division, that plaintiff, at all times herein, exclusively retained possession of the premises, and that there was an implied agreement among the parties that plaintiff was to pay the taxes, maintain the рremises and waive interest on the net mortgage debt, in return for his possession, use and occupancy of the premises. A contract implied in fact may
Since there was no merger, and сonsequently no extinguishment of principal of the mortgage debt or part thereof, proceedings towards the foreclosure sale should continue. In the event of a deficiency, plaintiff may be advised to secure a deficiency judgment against the еstate of the deceased mortgagor and, should there be insufficient assets available in the hands of the personal representative, if any, to satisfy the deficiency, then recourse may be taken against decedent’s distributees, except for plaintiff (see Olmstead v Latimer,
The order appealed from should be modified by striking so much of the first decretal paragraph of the judgment as is in favor of plaintiff against defendants personally in the amount of $6,600 and by substituting therefor an adjudication for the amount of $9,200 as being due on the bond and mortgage, as well as by substituting the amount of $9,200 for the amount of $6,600 as set forth in the third numbered provision of the
Chief Judge Breitel and Judges Jasen, Gabrielli, Jones, Wachtler and Fuchsberg concur.
Order modified, with costs to appellant, in accordance with the opinion herein and, as so modified, affirmed.
