138 N.Y.S. 848 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1912
The defendant Menno Brown appeals from so much of a judgment of foreclosure and sale as directs that a personal judgment be entered against him for any deficiency that may arise upon a sale of the mortgaged premises.
On January 15, 1906, one Samuel Ramsfelder, not a party to this action, made, executed and delivered to the McKinley Realty and Construction Company a bond for $16,000 payable on December 31, 1910, and to secure the payment thereof executed the mortgage sought to be foreclosed in this action. The mortgage further provided that in default of payment of interest due upon any prior mortgage, the owner of the present mortgage might pay the amount of such interest, which thereupon became a lien upon the premises and secured by the present mortgage.
The bond and mortgage in due course came into the ownership of the plaintiffs, and the mortgaged premises were acquired by Menno Brown, the present appellant.
On December 12, 1910, Brown entered into an agreement with plaintiffs, who then owned the bond and mortgage, for an extension of the time for the payment of the principal sum due, which had then been reduced to the sum of $9,000. This agreement contained the following clause which constitutes the only agreement on the part of Brown to assume the payment of the mortgage debt, or any part of it: “And the said party of the first part [Menno Brown] agrees to the extension of the time of payment of the principal, to wit, the sum of Nine thousand ($9,000) Dollars now due and payable, and for his heirs, executors- and administrators does hereby covenant and agree to pay the same at the time and in the manner hereinbefore specified, and to pay the interest thereon on the days on which the same becomes due, as hereinbefore mentioned.”
Brown thereafter transferred the real estate to certain parties named Uhlfelder and Weinberg. The plaintiffs paid about $1,200 of interest due on a former mortgage and seek, as the mortgage permits them to do, to tack this sum onto the principal sum now due (amounting to $6,000) on the present mortgage. The judgment of foreclosure and sale provides that the
The appellant claims that he cannot be subjected to a personal judgment for more than the principal sum due upon the mortgage, with interest, and that as to that he stands in the position of a surety and is entitled to have the purchase price" first applied to so much of the amount found due as he is liable for before any payment is made of the $1,200 paid for interest on the prior mortgage or for taxes and assessments due upon the property.
So far as concerns the $1,200 paid for interest on the prior mortgage, we think that the appellant’s position is well taken.
It is well settled that a purchaser of land incumbered by a mortgage assumes no personal obligation to pay the mortgage debt unless he, in some way, assumes the debt or agrees to pay it. (Belmont v. Coman, 22 N. Y. 438; Equitable Life Assurance Soc. v. Bostwick, 100 id. 628; Smith v. Cornell, 111 id. 554.) The only personal undertaking that appellant ever made to pay any part of the mortgage debt was his agreement above quoted to pay the principal sum then due, with interest. He never agreed, so far as the record shows, to pay any sum which the holder of the mortgage might have to pay for interest on a prior mortgage. The original mortgagor agreed to pay it, and of course the amount so paid falls under the mortgage and is secured by it, but that does not establish the appellant’s personal liability for it if the mortgaged property proves to be an insufficient security. The provisions for tacking onto the mortgage debt the amount paid for interest on prior mortgages was intended merely to protect the mortgagee’s security, but it does not increase the personal liability of any one who has ■ not assumed its payment.
As to so much of the amount due upon the mortgage as represents unpaid principal, the appellant undoubtedly is person
It is suggested that the judgment was entered upon appellant’s default and, therefore, that he may not appeal from it, but should have moved below to correct the judgment and, if his motion had been denied, should have sought relief by appealing from the order denying it. We do not understand that the judgment was entered upon appellant’s default. He appeared generally in the action, and while he waived service of the complaint, he demanded service of all papers except the complaint. This included a notice of settlement of the judgment, which he apparently received, for the judgment as amended recited his appearance. It is true that he did. not answer, and, so far as the record shows, did not attend at the trial, but this was because he could not deny any of the allegations of the complaint, and had neither an affirmative defense or a counterclaim to interpose. His sole interest was as to the form of the judgment to be entered on the admitted facts, and he reserved his right to be heard on that subject.
It appears from the records of our own court, of which we may take judicial notice as to the questions relating tó the history of litigation, that after the entry of the judgment the appellant moved before the trial justice that the judgment be amended by reciting his appearance, and also that he filed an affidavit in opposition to the form of the judgment as entered. This motion was granted only to the extent of reciting his
Ingraham, P. J., McLaughlin, Clarke and Dowling, JJ., concurred.
Judgment modified as directed in opinion, and as modified affirmed, without costs. Order to be settled on notice.