In an action for a judgment declaring a mortgage null and void, in which a sixth-party action was commenced to recover
Ordered that the order is affirmed insofar as appealed from, with costs.
The instant sixth-party action was brought by the Trustee in Bankruptcy of SprintMortgage Bankers Corp. (hereinafter Sprint), to recover the proceeds of two checks which were allegedly endorsed by unauthorized persons, who forged the names of the individuals to whom the checks were written. Here, it is undisputed that Sprint received the cancelled checks which allegedly contained the forged endorsements and the bank statements relating to those checks on or about December 27, 1988. Neither the appellant nor Sprint notified the payer bank of the alleged unauthorized endorsements until the instant sixth-party action was commenced by the Trustee in Bankruptcy for Sprint in May 1993, nearly two years after June 27, 1991, the date of the order for relief in the bankruptcy proceeding.
Pursuant to UCC 4-406 (4), a customer who claims a check contains an unauthorized endorsement must discover and report the unauthorized endorsement to the bank within three years "from the time the statement and items are made available to the customer” or "is precluded from asserting against the bank such unauthorized * * * indorsement” (see, Touro Coll. v Bank Leumi Trust Co.,
11 USC § 108 (b) gives a trustee in bankruptcy extensions of time to commence an action or file "any pleading, demand, notice, or proof of claim or loss, cure a default, or perform any other similar act”. Pursuant to 11 USC § 108 (a), if the period within which the debtor may commence an action has not expired before the date of filing of the bankruptcy petition, the trustee’s time to commence the action is extended until the expiration of the period of limitations or "two years after the order for relief’. However, if the time limit to be extended does not apply to the commencement of an action, but involves the filing of "any pleading, demand, notice, or proof of claim or loss, cur[ing] a default, or preform[ing] any other similar act, and such period has not expired before the date of the filing of the petition, the trustee may only file, cure or perform * * * before the later of—(1) the end of such period * * * or (2) 60 days after the order for relief’ (11 USC § 108 [b]).
When a Statute of Limitations also constitutes a "statutory prerequisite” the extension of time in bankruptcy is governed by 11 USC § 108 (a), which applies to time limits for commencing actions, whether they be substantive or procedural (see, Dower v Bomar, 313 F2d 596, 598-599; Engstrom v De Vos,
