82 A.D. 480 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
This action is brought in the usual form for the foreclosure and sale of certain real property located oh the boundary line between this State and the State of Connecticut and mortgaged by three of the defendants jointly to the plaintiff. All the parties are residents of this State, and the defendants have been duly personally served with process. The decree provides that the referee.shall sell all the mortgaged property, and that the defendant mortgagors shall convey the Connecticut property to the purchaser.
Union Trust Co. of New York v. Olmsted (supra) was an action to foreclose a mortgage on a railroad, a part of which was in the State of ■Pennsylvania. The judgment of foreclosure and sale was in the ordinary form and the.mortgaged property was sold under it, but in connection with the motion to confirm the sale motion was made to amend the judgment by inserting a provision requiring the mortgagor to execute a deed to the purchaser. This motion was denied at the Special Term, but the G-eneral Term reversed the order and granted the motion. (Union Trust Co. of New York v. Rochester & Pittsburg R. R. Co., 40 Hun, 633.) An appeal to the Court .of Appeals was dismissed, that court saying (102 N. Y. 729): The Supreme Court had jurisdiction over the cause of action and the parties, and its decree is valid although part of the premises covered by it are in another,State. Its writ may not be operative there, nor its judgment capable of execution as against that portion of the property, and for that reason the court might have required the mortgagor to execute a conveyance to the purchaser in order that the whole security offered by the mortgage should so far as possible be made effective. (Muller v. Dows, 94 U. S. 444, 450.) This was not done, but the power of the court was not exhausted, and what it might have ordered in the first instance it could still require by amendment.” (See, also, Harrison v. U. T. Co., 144 N. Y. 326, 332.)
Chase v,. Knickerbocker Phosphate Co. (32 App. Div. 400) was an action to redeem from a forfeiture under a lease of lands in another State, and this court held that such an action was cognizable here. Hr. Justice Cullen said (p. 403) : “It is settled law that a court of equity will make a decree against parties of whose persons it has obtained jurisdiction, not the indirect, but the direct result of which is to transfer the title to land beyond the jurisdiction of the" "court, provided the parties comply with the decree of the court. .This -rule is applicable in one class of cases but not in other classes. The class in which the rule obtains is defined by Chief" Justice Marshall in Massie v. Watts (6 Cranch, 148), where he says: ‘ Dpón the authority of these cases, and of others which are to be found in the books, as well as upon general principles, this court is.
The jurisdiction invoked in this case was always exercised in cases of mortgage foreclosure in England. In Toller v. Carteret (2 Vern. 494) a bill was filed in the Court' of Chancery in England requiring the defendant to redeem a mortgage executed by him covering the Isle of Sarke, or be foreclosed. The defendant pleaded to the jurisdiction of the court that'the island was part of the Duchy of Normandy and under the jurisdiction of the courts of Guernsey. The" lord keeper overruled the plea, one ground assigned for the ruling being “ that the Court of Chancery had also a jurisdiction, the defendant being served with the process here, et esquitas agit in personam.” (See, also, Arglasse v. Muschamp, 1 Vern. 75.)
The doctrine underlying the judgment appealed from herein is applied, says Story (Eq. Juris. § 1293), “to cases of mortgages of lands in foreign countries. And a bill to foreclose or redeem such a mortgage may be brought in any Court of Equity in any other country where the proper parties are resident. It was aptly said by
In House v. Lockwood (40 Hun, 532) it was held by the General Term in the first department that an action of strict foreclosure of a mortgage could be maintained in .this "State where the lands mortgaged were situated in the State of Illinois. The case of Farmer s’ L. & T. Co. v. Bankers', etc., Tel. Co. (44 Hun, 400) was a case of foreclosure by advertisement, the statute-.in relation to which remedy (Code Civ. Proc. § 2387 et seq.) relates solely to mortgages .of property situated within the State, and’the decision turned upon the'peculiar language of the mortgage. But as to foreclosure by action, section 982 of the Code of Civil Procedure assumes that such an action may be maintained, notwithstanding the property covered by the mortgage is in another State.
The case at bar appears to be a proper one for the exercise of the power of the court to compel the defendants to assure to the plaintiff the full security which they have pledged to him. This can only be done by directing a conveyance, inasmuch as the decree of sale is of necessity inoperative upon the real property beyond this State. Ho constitutional right is infringed. .The judgment, so far as appealed from, operates upon the parties only and is essential to the granting of the full relief to which the plaintiff is equitably entitled. . '
The judgment, in so far as appealed from, should be affirmed.
Goodrich, P. J., Woodward and Hooker, J J., concurred.
■ Judgment, in so far as appealed from, .affirmed, with costs.