124 Misc. 645 | New York County Courts | 1925
This action was submitted to the court without a jury for decision upon stipulated' facts and affidavits as to valuation. The action is for money had and received. Plaintiff purchased certain premises, subject to a mortgage for $2,800 held by a dummy for the defendant. The premises were insured against fire in favor of the plaintiff. The policy contained the usual mortgagee clause. The mortgage was foreclosed. Between the time of entry of the order and the time of • sale pursuant thereto the buildings on the premises were damaged by fire.
At the time of the sale, against the plaintiff’s written protest and although not authorized by the judgment of foreclosure and sale, the referee appended to the terms of sale an agreement signed by the attorneys for the plaintiff therein; the plaintiff being the defendant’s dummy, and the attorneys who signed the agreement-being the same as now appear for the defendant in this action. The text of the agreement was that the holder of the mortgage would assign the fire insurance policy to the purchaser at the foreclosure sale, together with any award or payment by the insurance company for the fire which had occurred. This plaintiff’s protest to the inclusion of that agreement was in writing. The plaintiff in foreclosure then bid in the property for $3,200, subject to taxes and water rates, and at once assigned her bid.to this defendant, her principal. There was a deficiency judgment of $261.05. The defendant thereafter collected $1,429.21 on the insurance policy.
Plaintiff sues for the difference between the deficiency judgment and the insurance collected, to wit, $1,168.16. The defense is that the defendant has resold the premises at private sale at a loss of $1,429.21. The defendant claims to be entitled to recoup the latter loss out of the balance of the insurance moneys. The resale was the best that could be made at the time.
The implied obligation upon which this character of action is based is sometimes called “ quasi contract.” The fundamenta1 principle is that, where one has received money which in equity and good conscience should be paid to another, the law will, in the absence of an actual promise, imply a promise to so pay it. It is a promise implied in law as distinguished from a promise implied in fact. It means that one who is unjustly enriched by his own wrong shall be obliged to pay over the amount thereof to the one who is justly entitled to it, notwithstanding he has not agreed so to do.
The defendant cannot be heard to gain advantage by its illegal act, but must stand in its original position as a mortgagee holding through a dummy, and have recoupment out of the insurance only to the extent of the deficiency judgment. There is no attempt to collaterally attack either the judgment or the title. The act whereby the defendant seeks to retain beyond recoupment for the deficiency judgment is without legal basis. The loss sustained by the defendant on the resale has no bearing on the case. To allow further recoupment on that item would be to mount a legal right upon a wrong.
Furthermore, the fact that the resale was the best that could be made at the time, falls short of establishing value, as it was at a time of a practically dead market, and the actual value was in excess of an amount sufficient to cover the defendant’s investment.
Judgment for the plaintiff for $1,168.16, plus interest from date of suit, there being no evidence of prior demand.