149 Misc. 747 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1933
To the extent that this motion seeks to dismiss the amended complaint as insufficient the affidavits filed by the moving party must be disregarded. The plaintiff is the owner of an undivided interest in the bond and mortgage held by Title Guarantee and Trust Company “ as depositary and agent ” and may, therefore, sue in equity as a partial assignee of the bond and mortgage, joining the owners of the balance of the mortgage as parties defendant. The proper remedy for failure to join necessary parties is, however, not a motion to dismiss the complaint but rather an application to correct the complaint under rule 102 of the Rules of Civil Practice. (Mc Knight v. Bank of New York & Trust Co., 254 N. Y. 417, 422.) In so far as the dismissal of the amended complaint for insufficiency is applied for, the motion must, therefore, be denied. The affidavits filed by the movant may, however, be considered in support of tha,t branch of the motion which seeks to vacate the order appointing temporary receivers. They establish without contradiction that prior to the time that the plaintiff purchased an undivided interest in the bond and mortgage from Title Guarantee and Trust Com,
Opinion on reargument, December 11, 1933.
By a previous decision of the court a motion to vacate an order appointing receivers in foreclosure was
In the Central Hanover Bank Case (supra) the court granted a motion by that institution for permission to take over and control the administration and enforcement of a bond and mortgage owned by it and guaranteed by New York Title and Mortgage Company. The court also held that the bank would not, by the mere act of availing itself of the permission thus given, forfeit such rights as it might otherwise possess upon the guaranty. The rationale of the decision was that the irrevocability of the agency to control and enforce the bond and mortgage to the exclusion of the bank which owned them, conferred upon the guarantor by the provisions of the guaranty, was to continue only as long as the guarantor continued to perform its guaranty. Accordingly, the court decided that defaults upon the guaranty terminated the irrevocability of the exclusive agency and entitled the principal, the owner of the bond and mortgage, to revoke said exclusive agency. There was no holding that the exclusive agency itself expired automatically upon the guarantor’s default, as by conditional limitation. The effect of non-performance by the guarantor is merely to make revocable that which was previously irrevocable. Until the right to revoke is exercised, however, the guarantor remains the exclusive agent of the mortgagee with the sole right to enforce the bond and mortgage. In the case cited the option to revoke was actually sought to be availed of by the Central Hanover Bank, as owner of the entire bond and mortgage. In the instant case, on the contrary, no attempt has been made to revoke the exclusive agency of the Bond and Mortgage Guarantee Company which issued the guaranty here involved. The plaintiff brought the present action in complete disregard of the fact that said company, under the terms of the guaranty to which his undivided interest is subject, had the exclusive right to maintain an action in foreclosure. (See first paragraph of guaranty after caption “ premium and terms of guarantee ” and paragraphs 1 and 4 of “ conditions ” following the words “ the insured is bound.”) Even the provision in the certificate issued to plaintiff by Title Guarantee and Trust Company, which empowers the latter to take any action it might deem necessary or desirable in order to enforce the bond and mortgage and to protect the mortgage security is rendered ineffectual by the agreement entered into between that company and Bond and Mortgage Guarantee Company, pursuant to which the latter issued its guaranty.
It is unnecessary to consider at this time the extent and limits of the court’s power to grant relief to owners of part of a bond and mortgage where owners of the balance resist and oppose the same. Nor is there any present need to determine whether the provisions of section 195 of the Civil Practice Act, permitting representative actions, apply to cases coming within the scope of section 164 of the Civil Practice Act and thus dispense with the necessity of joining as parties to the action all the owners of undivided interests in the bond and mortgage. Suffice it for the present to state that one owning less than two per cent of the mortgage indebtedness may not, by himself and without judicial sanction, revoke or treat as revoked the exclusive agency vested in the guarantor of the bond and mortgage and commence a foreclosure action in which the guarantor is not made a party and in which the complaint does not even mention the existence of the agency, much less seek its revocation. It is well to note that in the instant case the foreclosure action was instituted at a time when a tentative plan of reorganization had been adopted and a meeting of certificate holders called by New York Guaranteed Mortgage Protection Corporation for the purpose of obtaining their views. At the meeting holders of certificates in the principal amount of $795,000 voted in favor of a resolution that the appointment of receivers be vacated and the foreclosure action stayed pending the negotiations loolting toward reorganization. The only dissenting vote was cast on behalf of the plaintiff in this action. It is easy to see the chaos and the irreparable damage to plans of reorganization which would result if the owner of part of a bond and mortgage, however small, were to be allowed all the rights of the owner of an entire bond and mortgage and if the procedure adopted by the plaintiff here were to receive judicial approval.
A few words may be added in connection with the decision in the Central Hanover Bank Case (supra), though perhaps'not strictly pertinent to the present motion. All that was held in the Central Hanover case as to the survival of the guaranty was that the revocation of the guarantor’s exclusive agency and the enforcement of the bond and mortgage by the mortgagee would not,
The motion for reargument is granted but the original disposition is adhered to.