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Laughlin, J.: This is an action to foreclose a mortgage executed by the defendant Jones on the. 6th day of December, 1911, on two parcels of real estate in the then borough, now county, of The Bronx in the city of New York, to secure the payment of $1,100 on the 6th day of December, 1913, together with interest thereon, according to the tenor of a bond executed by her to the mortgagee bearing even date therewith. The bond and mortgage were duly assigned to the plaintiff on the 25th day of March, 1913. Default was made in the payment of the principal, and of six months’ interest due with the principal, on the 6th day of December, 1913; and on the 20th day of January, 1914, this action for the foreclosure of the mortgage was commenced.
The bond provided that the principal should become due at the option of the obligee after default in the payment of interest for twenty days, or after default in the payment of any taxes, assessments or water rates for sixty days; and it is expressly stated in the mortgage that the whole of the principal should become due after default in the payment of interest, taxes or assessments, or after any other default, “anything herein contained to the contrary notwithstanding.” The bond and mortgage each contain a provision giving the mortgagor the privilege of paying the sum of $550 with accrued interest on
*767 account of the principal “ on thirty days’ notice in writing ” to the mortgagee or his assigns, and further provide that “ on the receipt of such payment ” the mortgagee, or his assigns or personal representatives 'agrees to release one of the parcels herein described from the lien of this mortgage,” the parcel to be so released to be designated by the mortgagor.It is alleged in the complaint and admitted by the answer that on the 13th day of July, 1912, the mortgagor duly conveyed one of the parcels; but it was not shown to whom she conveyed it. It was shown, however, that the defendant Bunt was the owner of one of the parcels at the time of the trial, but it was not shown when she obtained title, excepting 'as it may be inferred from testimony the substance of which I will now state. On the 28th day of January, 1914, after the commencement of this action, a notice in writing in the name of the mortgagor, prepared by the attorney for defendant Bunt, who was also her husband, was mailed to the plaintiff in care of her attorney", stating that on the 28th day of February, 1914, at the office of the attorney for the plaintiff, the mortgagor would pay the sum of $550 and accrued interest thereon, or at the residence of the plaintiff as given in the assignment to her, if so desired, and two days’ notice thereof should be given; and that upon such payment the mortgagor would demand a release of the parcel which it was shown was owned by defendant Bunt at the time of the trial.
The attorney for defendant Bunt testified that shortly before the mortgage became due, and on or about December 1, 1913, he had a casual interview with the attorney for the plaintiff, in which he informed the latter that he intended to pay his wife’s one-half of the mortgage and that he had negotiations pending for raising the money by a mortgage on a parcel owned by himself and the parcel owned by his wife, and that he promised to let the attorney for the plaintiff hear from him further; that on or about the tenth day of December he met the plaintiff’s attorney again and the latter inquired what progress he was making in obtaining the money, and he stated that a definite date for the loan had not yet been agreed upon; that in answer to a like inquiry by the attorney for the plaintiff on or about the twenty-eighth day of
*768 December, he stated that he had been delayed by the commencement of a foreclosure action which he thought was by mistake extended to one of the parcels on which he expected to raise the money, and that as soon as he heard from a letter which he had written he would be ready “to close the matter up,” to which the attorney for the plaintiff replied: “All right; I will expect to hear from you; ” and that in the first or second week of January, 1914, he met the attorney for the plaintiff, who inquired what progress he was making, and he said that he expected that he would be able in about a week’s time to dispose of “ the whole matter,” and that there were no further negotiations until after the commencement of this action, when he met the attorney for the plaintiff, and said that he thought the latter was going to wait until he “ got the matter disposed of,” and the plaintiff’s attorney replied: “Why, I thought you had abandoned it.” The attorney for the plaintiff testified that he and the attorney for defendant Bunt had had a misunderstanding with respect to a prior action, and were not on good terms, and that the only conversation he had with the latter with respect to the matter involved in this action prior to the commencement thereof was between the holidays, at which time the attorney for defendant Bunt in answer to an inquiry as to what he was going to do about paying the mortgage, stated that he was making an arrangement to get a new mortgage, but had been delayed by a foreclosure action; and that after the commencement of this action, and on the twenty-sixth day of January, the attorney for defendant Bunt called on him and asked “whether he could get a release on payment of one-half the amount,” and was informed that he could not.On this testimony the trial court found that the strict due date of the bond and mortgage was extended “to the date of closing of the new second mortgage loan, arrangements for which were then being perfected, or a fair and reasonable time to perfect the same thereafter; ” and found as conclusions of law that the plaintiff, “ by acquiescing in the arrangement ” of the defendant Bunt “regarding the perfecting of a new second mortgage, waived the strict due date ” of the bond and mortgage “ and consented to extend said strict due date to a fair and reasonable time thereafter,” and that the defendant Bunt was
*769 not in default and the bond and mortgage were not due and the plaintiff was not entitled to institute the foreclosure action until notice to the defendant Bunt who had “ a right to rely on plaintiff’s promise to wait accordingly.” This finding of fact and these conclusions of law are wholly unwarranted. There was no consideration or agreement for any extension, and no evidence of waiver or estoppel.The only real quéstion in the case is. whether the mortgagor, or her grantee, had the right to exercise the privilege of tendering one-half the amount of the indebtedness secured by the mortgage, and obtaining a release of one of the parcels to be then designated, after the principal became due. The evidence does not satisfactorily show a tender of one-half the amount due on the mortgage at the time and place specified in the notice; but it fairly shows that a formal tender was waived by the refusal of the attorney for the plaintiff to accept it, and the defendant Bunt pleads the tender and paid the money into court on the trial. The trial court did not consider that the payment of the money into court was unconditional for the decree provides that the plaintiff shall not be entitled to receive it until she executes a release of the parcel. It does not appear that the respondent Bunt is liable for any part of the debt and, therefore, the moneys so paid into court should be returned to her at her option if she is not to receive the release.. Assuming that there was a sufficient tender and that it was kept good, I am of opinion that the privilege of obtaining a release was lost by the failure to duly demand it before default in payment of the principal. The question depends upon the intention of the parties, and that is to be determined from the provisions of the mortgage with respect to the release. It is manifest, I think, particularly in view of the provision with respect to the thirty days’ notice, that the privilege was only to be exercised by the service of the notice and tender of the money in advance of the time the principal became due, for otherwise by the service of the notice the period of payment could be postponed beyond the due date unqualifiedly fixed by the mortgage, and this is emphasized by the provision to the effect that the whole of the principal shall become due after any default, “ anything herein
*770 contained to the contrary notwithstanding. ” It was held in Werner v. Tuch (52 Hun, 269) that the privilege of obtaining a release of part of the mortgaged premises under a release clause not materially different from the one now under consideration, could he exercised only before default. In that case the clause contained a provision to the effect that the mortgagor should have the privilege of making a payment on account of principal before the same became due, and" in that event, for the purpose of subsequently exercising the privilege of obtaining a release, the payment on account of principal should be apportioned on the sums necessary to be paid to enable the mortgagor to obtain releases on the respective parcels. The decision in that case was also based on the fact that the tender had not been kept good; and the Court of Appeals affirmed on that ground without considering the question as to whether the privilege of obtaining a release could be exercised after default. (Werner v. Tuch, 127 N. Y. 217.) That is the only decision on the point in this jurisdiction to which our attention has been called, and it is the only one we have found. The decisions in other jurisdictions appear to be conflicting. It has been held in Massachusetts that ordinarily the privilege must be exercised before default (Reed v. Jones, 133 Mass. 116); but in New Jersey, Minnesota, Michigan and Iowa it has been held that where there is no express limitation with respect to the time within which the privilege may be exercised it may he exercised at any time before the rights of the mortgagor are actually foreclosed. (American Net & Twine Co. v. Githens, 57 N. J. Eq. 539; Vawter v. Crafts, 41 Minn. 14; Commercial Bank v. Hiller, 106 Mich. 118; Gammel v. Goode, 103 Iowa, 301.) As already observed, however, the question depends upon the construction of the release clause in each particular case.I am of opinion that finding of fact numbered XXI should be reversed, and the exception in conclusion of law numbered third, and conclusion of law numbered fourth, in so far as it excepts defendant Bunt, and all of the conclusions of law numbered sixth, ninth, tenth, eleventh and twelfth, and the direction for judgment in favor of defendant Bunt, and the provisions with respect to the giving of a release by plaintiff, and to the effect that the receiver be discharged, should be
*771 reversed and appropriate additional findings and additional conclusions of law should be made to the effect that there was no extension of the time of payment, or waiver or estoppel and requiring a sale of the premises in the inverse order of alienation and, if the respondent Bunt consents thereto, the application of the money paid into court on the amount of the judgment remaining after a sale of the parcel still owned by the mortgagor and before a sale of the remaining parcel which in that event shall only be had to pay any deficiency then remaining, and if in that event the entire amount so paid into court shall not be required to pay the balance of the judgment remaining after the sale of the first parcel the surplus shall be paid to the respondent Bunt and that the entire amount paid into court by the respondent Bunt shall be repaid to her if she does not so consent to its application; and that the judgment in so far as it is adverse to the plaintiff should be reversed, with costs to appellant, and judgment of foreclosure awarded as to both parcels as herein directed.Ingraham, P. J., and Clarke, J., concurred; McLaughlin and Scott, JJ., dissented.
Document Info
Judges: Laughlin, McLaughlin
Filed Date: 5/7/1915
Precedential Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024