148 Misc. 324 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1933
The action is to foreclose a mortgage on real estate. The answer admits the allegations of the complaint. It raises a defense and equitable counterclaim, the substance of which is that the premises are now occupied under a lease which was made April 1,1933; the rent will amount to a sum greater than is necessary to pay the charges of interest and taxes against the property; the defendant offered, and still offers, to assign those rents to plaintiff and promises to keep the premises in good repair and properly insured.
This defense further points out that there is a worldwide economic stagnation in the real estate mortgage lending markets and that money cannot be obtained on bond and mortgage secured by real estate. Defendant demands judgment enjoining plaintiff from proceeding and directing him to accept an assignment of the rents and extend the bond and mortgage to May 15, 1935.
In his brief defendant urges the court to take judicial notice of the economic depression through which we are passing. He cites the passage by Congress of the so-called “ Federal Home Owners’ Loan Act,” which was signed by the President of the United States on June 13, 1933, the object of which is to relieve the very distress among home owners complained of by this defendant.
The default urged in the complaint is the non-payment of $105, interest due on November 1, 1932.
Defendant delivers himself at the door of the merciful court of equity and begs succor of that tribunal lest his possessions be taken from him because of happenings not occasioned by his hand and so engulfing that no matter what he, exerting all his powers and strength, may do the situation will be changed not at all. It is a severe test to which equity is put by this challenge and that great branch of our jurisprudence must not turn a deaf ear because of any rigid rules or precedents when justice cries for relief.
Equity, however, must be just to him who holds the bond as well as to him who is distressed because of its terms. The bondholder, too, may be in dire need for the same reasons as have financially paralyzed plaintiff.
The court knows judicially of the depression. Likewise it knows judicially that loans on real estate are not being made through agencies where formerly they were to be had, such as title, mortgage or loan companies and banks, and that no lending agencies have replaced them. The State authorities in many instances have ordered a discontinuance of loan making by the foregoing agencies.
There exists a line over which a court of equity should not pass, no matter how much it is tempted, lest it trespass upon the jurisdiction reserved for the legislative branch of the government. Only months ago the legislative representatives of the people were in session. They could have exercised what powers they had and enacted legislation to relieve this defendant and others similarly situated. Their failure to act is a direct answer to part of the appeal made by this defendant. Their silence is a command to courts of equity and law not to interfere with the obligations of contract. To permit this entire answer to stand would be to annul the rights of one party to a valid agreement. No court can require plaintiff to accept a rent assignment in lieu of bis interest or make him extend the loan.
That part of the answer which refers to the assistance that the United States government is extending to home owners may furnish at least temporary relief to distressed mortgagors. That is a statutory enactment by the Federal government. Little is known