52 N.Y.S. 130 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
This action was brought upon a bond executed by John Layton, and for the foreclosure of a mortgage executed as collateral security for the payment of the bond. The complaint in the action demanded no judgment for a deficiency except against the defendant Layton. The summons and complaint were served upon the defendant Michael Sullivan, who had become the owner of the premises, subject to the lien of the mortgage. When the summons and complaint in the action were served upon Sullivan, as he had no defense to the bond and mortgage, he made default. Subsequently the plaintiff served an amended complaint, in which judgment for deficiency was demanded against the defendant Sullivan and others. The complaint was otherwise amended by averring an agreement u'pon the part of a defendant, Bruno P. H. Ahlers, to pay the principal and interest secured by the mortgage, and to keep each and every of the covenants contained therein. In this respect the amendment to the complaint was rendered necessary in order to charge Sullivan for deficiency, upon the assumption contained in the deed to him, for the reason that there were intermediate grantees of the premises from Layton, who had not assumed the payment of the mortgage, and within the case of Vrooman v. Turner (69 N. Y. 280) and other cases, such agreement was necessary to be established in order to make the covenant of the defendant Sullivan in his deed inure to the benefit of the plaintiff in the action. The amended complaint was also served upon Sullivan, but he supposed it to be a copy of the complaint already served, made no examination of the same, and did not know that it contained a demand that he be adjudged to pay any deficiency which might occur upon a sale of the premises, or that it was in other respects changed. The action proceeded to a judgment of foreclosure and sale, and the premises were sold under the direction of. the sheriff, resulting in a deficiency of $2,060.35, for which judgment was entered against the defendant Sullivan and others. After the entry of this judgment Sullivan made a motion, upon affidavits and a proposed answer, for leave to have said default opened and the judgment for the deficiency as to him vacated and set aside. The grantor of these premises to Sullivan was one Augustus 0. Parke, a defendant in the action. The moving papers, as well as the answer proposed to be served to the amended com
The motion coming on to be heard before the County Court, the same was denied. The denial proceeded upon the ground that the proposed answer did not set forth any defense. In this respect we think the learned court was in error. The answer avers, in terms, that the insertion of the assumption clause in the deed was by accident or mistake, and that the same did not conform to the actual' intention of the parties; a mutual mistake of the parties would seem to be the effect of these averments, and they are in substantial accordance with the usual and established form. (3 Daniel Ch. Pr. [6th ed.] *1973.) It has long been settled that contracts entered
We also think that the answer, in other respects, if established, constitutes a good defense in his favor against the deficiency judgment. As we have already observed, if there was an interregnum between the conveyance of the premises from the mortgagor to intermediate grantees of an assumption clause in the deed of a promise to pay the mortgage, then it would follow, within the authorities that we have already cited, that even though there was assumption of payment of the mortgage upon the part of the defendant Sullivan, yet such agreement would not inure to the benefit of the mortgagee. The averment in the answer is that such interregnum existed; but when this was sought to be supplied by the averment of the complaint setting up the agreement with Alder, the answer raises issue upon the existence of such agreement, and of its valid and enforcible character if it existed. If the averments of this part of the answer are established at the trial, it will constitute a good defense in Sullivan’s favor.
It is quite apparent, therefore, that the answer in both aspects contains a defense to the judgment, from which the defendant Sullivan seeks to be relieved. There is no question of laches in making his motion. Such does not appear to have been urged below, nor is it called to our attention here; and as the court ruled, as matter of law, that the answer was insufficient as constituting a defense, we think it was clear error, for which the order should be reversed.
It is further claimed that such order is not appealable to this
It follows that the order should' be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion granted to the extent of permitting the default to be opened and the service of the proposed answer; the judgment as entered in the meanwhile to stand as security.
All concurred.
Order reversed, with ten. dollars costs and disbursements, and motion to open default granted on payment of ten dollars costs by the appellant, and service of the proposed answer permitted, the judgment as entered in the meanwhile to stand as security.