78 N.Y.S. 440 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
There having been a judgment ordered for the plaintiff upon the pleadings, the questions presented arise exactly ás they would had the plaintiff interposed a demurrer to the defendant’s answer; and it remains, therefore, to determine whether any defense was pleaded.
The action is brought to recover upon an agreement of guaranty executed by the defendant on August 16, 1892, in favor of the plaintiff herein and Henry Shipman, since deceased, trustees under the will of Caleb H. Shipman. It appears that George Moore, for the purpose of procuring a loan, had made and executed on August' 15, 1892, his bond for the sum of $20,000, secured by a mortgage of real estate of which he was the owner, and the defendant, for additional security, gave on the following day his guaranty in terms as follows: “ In consideration of the sum of One dollar to me in hand paid, and other good and valuable consideration to me moving, I do hereby guarantee the payment to the obligees therein named of the within bond and the mortgage therein referred to, according to terms thereof.” Thereafter Moore conveyed to Niles the property in question, subject to the mortgage.
Default having been made by Moore, the plaintiffs instituted proceedings to foreclose the mortgage, having first made Moore and
His contention now is that the plaintiffs’ failure to retain Moore as a party defendant and to demand and obtain as against him a deficiency judgment, and their neglect in that action to charge the defendant Niles as guarantor was, in effect, an election to resort alone to. the collateral real estate for the payment of the debt; and that the legal result was that Moore, the principal debtor, was released, and as a consequence the remedy against the defendant as guarantor was lost. Stripped of verbiage, the principle which the defendant invokes and which lies at the basis of the defenses variously pleaded, is that by reason of the facts stated, Moore, who was the principal on the bond and, therefore, the principal debtor, having been released from his obligation, the defendant, who was the mere guarantor or surety, was equally released. If, therefore, it should appear that the plaintiffs did not release Moore, but that he was liable for the deficiency resulting after the sale of the mortgaged premises, then the whole structure which has been built upon this foundation falls.
As we take it, apart from foreclosure by advertisement, which is not here involved, the plaintiffs, under the ordinary proceedings to enforce the obligations and conditions contained in the bond and mortgage and guaranty, had three remedies: First, they might have proceeded upon the bond and guaranty alone against the guarantor, or the bondsman and guarantor, and after judgment, if unsatisfied, have foreclosed upon the real estate for the purpose of having it sold and applied to the satisfaction of the debt; second, following the usual course in foreclosure, they might have made Moore a party in a foreclosure action, and after service and judgment and sale of the property, upon asking for such relief in their complaint, could have obtained a deficiency judgment; or, third, they could, as was done in this cáse, have a foreclosure as against
Authority for this latter procedure is to be found in Equitable Life Ins. Society v. Stevens (63 N. Y. 341), wherein it was held that “ Under the provisions of the Revised Statutes (2 R. S. 199, § 153)
Thus it appears that the plaintiff, after the sale in foreclosure, was not entirely without recourse to his bondsman, under section 1628, foi’ the deficiency, although he had not asked for a deficiency judgment. Nor was he, under the procedure followed in such a foreclosure, obliged to give personal notice of the sale to Moore. He had joined in that action the defendant Niles, who at that time was not
The judgment accordingly is affirmed, with costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., Patterson, McLaughlin and Laughlin, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.
3R. S. 191, § 158.—[Rep.