91 N.Y.S. 1062 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
In this action on the bond for a deficiency arising from the fore.closure of the mortgage covering lands in New Jersey given to secure the bond, the defendants among others interposed as a defense the statute, of New Jersey regulating proceedings to recover on bonds and mortgages, and the foreclosure and sale of property thereunder. ■ That statute, among other things, provided that in all cases where a bond and mortgage were given for the same indebtedness the proceedings to collect the debt shall be : First, to- foreclose the mortgage, but no deficiency judgment can be obtained in a foreclosure action; second, if the property does not sell for enough to satisfy the debt, interest and costs, an action may be brought on the bond for the deficiency within six months after the sale; third, if the mortgagee recovers a judgment for the deficiency in an action' on the bond, the foreclosure is opened and the mortgagor may redeem within six months after the entry of judgment. (See Gren. Stat. N. J. 2112, §§ 47, 48.)
The point upon which the learned trial judge decided the case was that this New Jersey statute was binding and was a bar to the maintenance of this action. It follows, therefore, that the question
These general rules are subordinate to the primary canon of construction, which "requires that where it can be ascertained -the intention of the parties, shall govern. Thus, though it may be stated generally that a contract is to be considered and determined under the law of the State where it was made, this rule is of no force in a case where it can be fairly said that the parties at the time of its execution, manifested an- intention that, it should be governed by the. laws of another State; or, differently expressed, “ where thé contract is, either, expressly or tacitly, to be performed in any other place (than where made), there the general' rule is in conformity to the ■ presumed intention of the parties, that the contract as to its' validity, nature, obligation and interpretation is to be governed by the law of the place of performance.” (Story- Confl. Laws [8th ed.], § 280.)
As indicative-of the intention of the parties, as to the law of the place which should govern, we start first with the proposition, not" to be disputed, that the bond and mortgage constituted one contract and are to be considered together. Examining them, we find that the obligee was a resident of Hew Jersey; that the bond was secured' by mortgage on lands in-Hew Jersey; that the bond is made in reference to the laws of Hew Jersey^ that being the State in which the lands mortgaged to secure the payment of . said bond were, situate,
We deem it unnecessary to decide the point as to whether or not the failure to make the defendants parties in the foreclosure suit and the proceedings taken to sell the property discharged the defendants, because upon the first proposition which we discussed, as to whether it was the law of Hew York of the law of Hew Jersey that should govern, we have sufficiently indicated our view that the law of Hew Jersey must govern. Under the statute of that •State the right to proceed upon the bond for a deficiency was barred, and the learned trial judge was right in holding that the plaintiff’s action could not be maintained. In directing a nonsuit, which is an anomaly, there was an error in form. The learned
Van Brunt, P. J., Patterson, Hatch and Laughlin, JJ., concurred.
Judgment modified as directed in opinion, and as modified affirmed, without costs-.