Appeal from an order of the Supreme Court (Kramer, J.), entered August 24, 2000 in Schenectady County, which denied a motion by defendant Cinelli Enterprises, Inc., to dismiss the complaint against it as barred by the Statute of Limitations.
Plaintiffs commenced this foreclosure action against defendant Cinelli Enterprises, Inc. (hereinafter defendant) and others on October 6, 1999 seeking to recover on a note executed by defendant on February 5, 1979 evidencing a loan of $225,000 secured by a mortgage in the same amount on property located in the Town of Rotterdam, Schenectady County. Plaintiffs are the assignees of the note and mortgage. A previous foreclosure action (hereinafter the first action) commenced by plaintiffs’ predecessor in interest had been dismissed by order of Supreme Court (Viscardi, J.) dated January 5, 1997, on consent of all parties. Defendant moved to dismiss the complaint in this action asserting* among other defenses, that it is barred by the six-year Statute of Limitations applicable to mortgage foreclosure actions as set forth in CPLR 213 (4), which began to run on the date that plaintiffs’ predecessor in interest commenced the first action in 1990.
Supreme Court denied defendant’s motion, orally ruling that the Statute of Limitations had been renewed or extended by
The Statute of Limitations in a mortgage foreclosure action begins to run six years from the due date for each unpaid installment or the time the mortgagee is entitled to demand full payment, or when the mortgage has been accelerated by a demand or an action is brought (see, Serapilio v Staszak,
Here, the two payments to plaintiffs’ predecessor were made by the receiver in 1993 and 1994 during the pendency of the first action; they were not made by defendant or its authorized agent (see, Security Bank v Finkelstein,
Likewise, the payment by the receiver of $51,841.53 to plaintiffs’ predecessor pursuant to the order of Supreme Court dated November 15, 1997 which discontinued the first action did not constitute a partial payment by defendant or its authorized agent that had the effect of renewing or extending the Statute of Limitations (see, General Obligations Law § 17-1707). The 1997 court order discontinuing the first action directed the receiver to pay the balance of the proceeds collected to the holder of the mortgage at that time. While defendant consented to this provision of the discontinuance, thereby acknowledging that the mortgagee and not defendant was entitled to the rents collected, this consent was not “accompanied by circumstances amounting to an absolute and unqualified acknowledgment by the debtor of more being due, from which a promise may be inferred to pay the remainder” (Morris Demolition Co. v Board of Educ.,
With regard to the claimed effect of defendant’s bankruptcy filing on the Statute of Limitations, we find that it neither renewed nor tolled the six-year Statute of Limitations. The first action had been discontinued prior to the time that defendant filed its bankruptcy petition in December 1997 and the bankruptcy petition was dismissed in December 1998, long before this second foreclosure action was commenced and, thus, the bankruptcy proceeding never operated to toll a pending foreclosure action (see, Zuckerman v 234-
Accordingly, since neither the court-appointed receiver’s payment of rents and profits to plaintiffs’ predecessors in interest nor the listing of the debt in the bankruptcy proceeding extended or renewed the Statute of Limitations, plaintiffs’ foreclosure action — commenced in October 1999 — should have been dismissed as untimely (see, CPLR 213 [4]).
Cardona, P. J., Peters, Carpinello and Mugglin, JJ., concur. Ordered that the order is reversed, on the law, without costs, motion granted and complaint dismissed against defendant Cinelli Enterprises, Inc.
Notes
Plaintiffs do not allege a default date in their complaint, although defendant’s last payment appears to have been in 1989.
