Staples v. Hendrick

93 A. 5 | Conn. | 1915

The defendant indorsed to the plaintiffs a promissory note for $600 made by one F. G. Hendrick to the order of the defendant. The note was dishonored, and the plaintiffs recovered judgment against the maker and filed a judgment lien against certain lands of his, which were subject to a prior mortgage in favor of the Jewett City Savings Bank. The bank brought a suit to foreclose its mortgage and made the plaintiffs parties, and the plaintiffs moved for a foreclosure by sale, which was ordered. The property was appraised, pursuant to the statute, at $16,900, and was thereafter sold for $10,000, and the court rendered a deficiency judgment in favor of the Jewett City Savings Bank for $4,148.62.

The defendant claimed, and the Superior Court held, that the taking of judgment and filing a judgment lien discharged the indorser from his obligation on the note; and also that, under § 4146 of the General Statutes, the plaintiffs, on whose motion the sale was ordered, were barred against bringing any action to collect the debt *102 against the maker, until one half the difference between the appraised value of the land and its selling price has been credited on the debt. Such a credit would wholly extinguish the plaintiffs' claim against the maker, and therefore the court held that the indorser's liability was gone.

The ruling that the taking of judgment and filing a judgment lien upon the maker's land operated, ipsofacto, as a discharge of the indorser, rests upon a misunderstanding of the case of Couch v. Waring, 9 Conn. 261. In that case the holder of the note obtained judgment by default against the maker, who succeeded in staying the collection of the judgment for three or four years by proceedings in chancery. The chancery suit was then abandoned, and judgment was rendered in the original action on the note for the amount of the former recovery, with interest, so far as the ad damnum clause in the original declaration would permit. The amount demanded was not, however, large enough to include the whole of the interest which had accumulated during the delay, and as to this deficiency the indorser was held to be discharged, because it was due to the plaintiff's voluntary act in omitting to make his original demand large enough. In this case there has been no satisfaction of the judgment against the maker. The filing of a judgment lien was only the first step in a special kind of execution which might or might not result in full or partial satisfaction.

Section 124 of the rules under the Practice Act (Practice Book, 1908, p. 238) provides that where the plaintiff may, at his option, join several as defendants, or sue them separately, judgment without satisfaction against one shall not bar a suit against another; and § 119 (p. 237) expressly provides that the maker and indorser of a promissory note may be sued jointly. These sections cover the present case so far as the *103 effect of the judgment and judgment lien are concerned.

The other ruling of the court brings up the question whether § 4146 requires the plaintiffs, before collecting the judgment, to credit thereon one half of the difference between the appraised value and the selling price of the land sold under the decree in the foreclosure suit.

Prior to 1833 the foreclosure of a mortgage operated as a bar to any subsequent action on the note. DerbyBank v. Landon, 3 Conn. 62; Swift v. Edson, 5 Conn. 531,534, 535. Chapter 18 of the Public Acts of 1833 removed this bar, and ever since then the right of a mortgagee to a deficiency judgment after strict foreclosure, has always been coupled, in this State, with some provision for fixing the actual value of the property as of the date of the foreclosure, and for making that valuation a conclusive basis for determining the existence and amount of any claimed deficiency. Rev. 1849, Title 12, Chap. 3, p. 341, § 27; Rev. 1866, Title 18, Chap. 3, p. 396, § 28; Rev. 1875, Title 18, Chap. 7, p. 358, § 2; General Statutes of 1888, § 3011; General Statutes of 1902, § 4124.

The plain object of these provisions is to require a mortgage creditor, who appropriates the property in part payment only of his debt, to apply the actual value of the security to the debt before collecting any claimed deficiency. When, in 1887, mortgages were permitted to be foreclosed by sale, at the discretion of the court, similar provision was made for fixing the actual value of the premises by an appraisal. For some reason this appraisal was made binding only on those upon whose motion the sale was ordered. Public Acts of 1887, Chap. 109, p. 725. The statute has remained in the same form down to the present time. General Statutes, 1888, §§ 3023, 3028; General Statutes, 1902, §§ 4141, 4146. *104

In the case exhibited by this record, the difference between the appraisal and the sale price was $6,900, and the amount realized was insufficient to satisfy the first mortgage, so that no part of the plaintiffs' judgment lien was paid. As the plaintiffs' lien was for less than $700, the application of § 4146 to their case would produce the result that a judgment creditor who sought to execute his judgment by foreclosure, instead of by an ordinary execution, would find that because he asked for a foreclosure by sale his judgment debt might be wiped out without any partial payment at all.* *105

We are of opinion that the credit directed to be made in § 4146, of one half the difference between the appraised value and the selling price, is a credit to be made on the debt or debts secured by the mortgage or lien foreclosed, as distinguished from any subsequent mortgage or lien. The legislature, in § 4145, uses the phrase "the mortgage or lien foreclosed" as not including "any subsequent mortgage or lien." Section 4146, in dealing with the contingency of an insufficiency of proceeds of the sale, is in terms limited to the case of such an insufficiency to pay in full "any mortgage or lien thereby foreclosed," and says nothing about subsequent mortgages or liens. We must suppose this difference to have been intentional, and that the phrase last quoted is used in both sections in the same limited sense. There is nothing in § 4146 which indicates that it refers to subsequent mortgages or liens, unless such an indication may be suggested by the italicized words in the phrase, "no judgment shall be rendered in that suit or in any other for the unpaid portion of the debtor debts of the party or parties upon whose motion the sale was ordered," etc. At first reading these words seem to include debts secured by subsequent mortgages or liens; but a moment's reflection will show that the context is not consistent with that construction, for in a foreclosure by sale, as between successive liens of different rank, each of which is entitled to be paid in full before the next is paid at all, there can be but one debt left with an "unpaid portion," in respect of which a deficiency judgment can be claimed. It is therefore probable that the plural number was used in this connection not to include subsequent successive liens, but to provide for the case of a suit to foreclose several liens of the same rank, such as mechanics' liens of subcontractors, which, under § 4138, would be entitled to share proportionately in the proceeds of a foreclosure *106 by sale in case the fund was insufficient to pay all in full.

Any party to the action may, under § 4141, move for a foreclosure by sale, and this is as it should be, for otherwise the holder of a small mechanic's lien might be required to redeem a large prior mortgage in order to attempt to realize on his security. In the case exhibited by this record, the plaintiffs would have been compelled, under a strict foreclosure, to redeem a $14,000 mortgage in order to hold on to their security for a $600 judgment lien. Practically speaking, the cost of exercising the privilege of redemption in such a case may be prohibitive; and it may be that one of the reasons for authorizing any party to ask for a foreclosure by sale was to give the owner of a relatively modest subsequent incumbrance the chance of realizing on his security without first redeeming the mortgage or lien sought to be foreclosed. We do not think the legislature intended in such cases to punish a subsequent mortgagee or lienor to the possible extent of preventing the collection of his entire debt, simply because he asked for a sale which turned out to be disappointing to himself as well as to all other parties in interest.

The apparent object of § 4146 is to attach a condition, under certain circumstances, to the allowance of a deficiency judgment, or to the collection in any other manner of the unpaid portion of the debt or debts secured by the mortgage or lien thereby foreclosed. There is good reason for such a condition, for as it is reasonable and in accordance with established practice in cases of strict foreclosure to require (in case any party desires it) a foreclosing plaintiff who appropriates the property in part satisfaction only of his debt, to apply the appraised value of the property on the debt before claiming a deficiency judgment for the amount of any alleged deficiency, — so it is reasonable to require a *107 foreclosing plaintiff who asks for a foreclosure by sale, with a view to the possibility of obtaining a deficiency judgment in the same action, to bear a moiety of any shrinkage in the appraised value resulting from such a sale.

We cannot, however, perceive any good reason for extending the provisions of § 4146 to subsequent mortgagees and lienors who have been cited into a suit for a strict foreclosure simply to have their rights of redemption extinguished, and who ask for a foreclosure by sale by way of protection against the burden of being required to redeem the plaintiff's mortgage; and there is nothing in the language of the section which requires us to so extend it.

There is error and a new trial is ordered.

In this opinion the other judges concurred.

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