25 N.J. Eq. 41 | New York Court of Chancery | 1874
This is a suit brought to compel Child, who is a second mortgagee, to redeem the mortgaged premises which were sold under foreclosure of the complainant’s mortgage. Child was not a party to the proceedings, neither the complainant nor his solicitor being aware of the existence of Child’s mortgage, which appears however to have been duly registered when the bill in the foreclosure suit was filed. At the sale under the execution in that suit, the complainant bought the property at the price of $9000, and took a deed from the sheriff accordingly. The execution issued to raise and pay the complainant, principal, $7000, interest? $601.88, and costs, $111.69, besides interest oh the first two of those items from the date of the master’s report, and to the Freehold National Banking Company, judgment encumbrancers, their debt of $576.28, with interest thereon from the same date. The amount due to the complainant and the bank on execution, including complainant’s costs, amounted, with the sheriff’s execution fees, to about $8600. All the other encumbrancers, except Child, were made parties to the suit. They were all judgment creditors whose lien was prior to that of the second mortgagee. None of them, except the bank, appeared in the suit, or before the master, and consequently the claims of none of them, except the bank, were reported on. The complainant’s mortgage is still uncancelled of record.
The bill seeks to compel the defendant, Child, to redeem
The decision of this cause depends on other considerations. The foreclosure was complete and effectual as far as all except Child, the second mortgagee, was concerned. As to him it was a nullity, and left his rights and equities entirely unaffected. By the sale the complainant, as purchaser, acquired the title of all the parties to the suit, and he holds it subject and subject only to the rights and equities of the second mortgagee, who was not a party. How, what are those rights and equities ? They are the right to redeem the encumbrancers prior to the second mortgage, and to an account to that end from the complainant of the rents and profits since the latter has been in possession, and to have the Holmes mortgage cancelled of record by the complainant. Equity will compel the second mortgagee to exercise his right ■of redemption within a reasonable time, under a penalty of
The complainant must account for the rents and profits during his occupation of the premises, and cancel the Holmes mortgage of record. If the second mortgagee shall elect to-
In either event, neither party will be required to pay costs to the other.