Citation Numbers: 52 A.D. 218, 65 N.Y.S. 155
Judges: Hirschberg
Filed Date: 6/15/1900
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The action is brought to foreclose a purchase-money mortgage made by the defendant Amelia E. Louis to the plaintiff. The mortgage and the bond to which it is collateral each contains the usual thirty-day interest clause, making the entire principal due at plaintiff’s option on default. Six months’interest became due on May 13,1899. The thirty days expired on the twelfth day of June following. The only witnesses examined on the trial were the plaintiff’s husband and the defendant Louis. The proof indicates that the mortgage was given as a purchase-money mortgage on a trade of property belonging to plaintiff’s husband, and that it was taken subject to two prior incumbrances. At. all events it establishes without dispute that the money secured by the bond and mortgage belonged to 'the plaintiff’s husband, the securities being taken in the name of the plaintiff as a present to her from him. It also establishes the fact that the husband acted as his wife’s agent in all the transactions connected with the mortgage, and that he had authority from his wife to so act for her. The proof on this point, as indeed-on every question in the case, is undisputed. The bond and mortgage also contain a provision that the principal shall become due on default in the payment of taxes, and such default had occurred before the default in payment of interest: but the plaintiff, or her husband acting for her, had refused to elect that the principal should then become due. After the thirty days’ arrearage of interest had elapsed, however, the plaintiff’s husband wrote a letter to the defendant Louis, dated June 14,1899, in which he said : “ Inasmuch as you have defaulted in payment of interest on mortgage I herewith have to inform you that I now call the pri/ncvpal, and unless you pay same plus interest by 21st inst., I shall begin foreclosure proceedings at once. In this connection I might just as well inform you that I do not care at the present time for any more lots on the ■ Parkway, my business having changed for the Avorse recently, and that, the sole reason why I call the mortgage is that I need the
“ If you care to make an exchange of your Boulevard lots against my new house shall be pleased to talk to you and might just as well tell you that you can secure a bargain.
“ Trusting that this explanation will show you that my calling in the mortgage is not done for spite, but because I can use the money to much better advantage, I hope you will provide for payment at an early date.”.
The defendant knew that this letter referred to the mortgage in question. There was no other mortgage than the one in question to which it could refer, and writing under date of August fourth the defendants’ attorneys addressed to the plaintiff’s husband a letter on the subject, in which the following .phrases occur : “ Mrs. Amelia E. Louis has referred to us your several letters wherein you claim that the mortgage held by your xoife on her property is due by reason of non-payment of interest within thirty days after it was due.” “ She has since tendered the money to your wife who holds the mortgage. We have advised Mrs. Louis that yoiir wife, the only party in interest, has never declared' the mortgage due, and that the tender to her is good. She does not recognize any letters from you as emanating from your wife.” With full knowledge, therefore, that the letter from the plaintiff’s husband related to the plaintiff’s mortgage, the defendant Louis, on the day following the sending of the letter, viz., June 15, 1899, called on the plaintiff’s husband in regard to the matter and tendered him a check for the interest payable tó his wife, which he refused Both witnesses agree that the refusal was based on the fact that by the default in the payment of interest the whole principal had become due at the option of the mortgagee. The plaintiff’s husband testified 1 “I said to her: Mrs. Louis, I won’t take interest now, I don’t want it ; I want now the whole principal.” The defendant Louis testified : “ I handed him the check for the amount in his wife’s name, to his wife’s order, and he put out his hand, as if he was. going to take it, drew it back and said he would not accept it since I had defaulted on the interest, and I had given him the chance to call in the principal.” Both parties also agree that a conversation then ensued in which the defendant Louis asked the plaintiff’s ; bus-
At this interview between the defendant Louis and the plaintiff, it would seem a discussion was had on the subject of the payment of the mortgage, for on the same day the plaintiff’s husband wrote' to the defendant informing her of a party willing to make a loan more than sufficient to take up the mortgage, and on reasonable terms, and adding that “ This will be much cheaper than taking a new mortgage for the whole amount from Thrift, as you mentioned, to Mrs. H. to-day " "At this point the negotiations between the principal partiés ceased, however, and two days afterwards the defendant’s attorneys wrote the letter to 'the plaintiff’s husband already mentioned, in which they say: “ If you wish to foreclose the mortgage, we will accept service of papers for Mrs. Louis.”
The learned trial justice dismissed the complaint on the merits, on the ground that “ the plaintiff did not elect that the mortgage set forth in the complaint be due and payable and notify the defendant Amelia E. Louis of such election before the amount- of i interest due was duly tendered by the defendant Amelia E. Louis, mortgagor, to the plaintiff, mortgagee, and that, therefore, the said mortgage was not due and payable at the beginning of this action.” The finding is not only without evidence to support it, but, as has been seen, is in direct.conflict with all the evidence in the case. It
But the defendant here had abundant notice of plaintiff’s election to consider the whole sum due. She had the letter from the plaintiff’s agent explicitly informing her of the fact. After its receipt she had a personal interview with the agent, when she was informed personally of the election,. assented to it, and expressly agreed to raise the money to pay off the mortgage, principal and interest. Having first tendered the interest, which was refused, and the reason for the refusal distinctly stated^ viz., that the plaintiff through her husband had elected to consider it all due, and having then promised to raise the money in order to pay off the mortgage, but failing in her efforts after several weeks’ trial, she finally visited the plaintiff in person and tendered her the interest money, which was again refused, and refused with the statement that the plaintiff was acting in the matter in accordance with her husband’s advice. To hold in such a case that there has been no notice of an election to consider the principal due and to refuse to accept the interest without it, is to utterly ignore and disregard the plain law and the undisputed facts.
It is unnecessary to consider cases where the courts have relieved
In French v. Row (77 Hun, 380), where a defaulting mortgagor was relieved because the course of dealing between him and the mortgagee induced the belief that the interest- had in fact been paid, the court stated the rule as follows (p. 383): “ The general rule relating to mortgages containing a provision that, in case of default in payment' of part of the amount secured, the whole shall become due at the option of the mortgagee, is that the provision is a valid one and courts will grant no relief to a mortgagor from the effect of his default, in the absence of fraud or improper conduct on the part of the mortgagee, or anything to render it unconscionable to avail himself of the provision in it. (Bennett v. Stevenson, 53 N. Y. 508 ; Malcolm v. Allen, 49 id. 448; Hale v. Gouverneur, 4 Edw. Ch. 207; Ferris v. Ferris, 28 Barb. 29 ; Noyes v. Anderson, 124 N. Y. 180 ; Valentine v. Van Wagner, 37 Barb. 60.) ” “ And if,” said Chancellor Walworth in Noyes v. Clark (7 Paige, 179, 180), “ from the mere negligence of the mortgagor in performing his contract, lie suffers the wdiole debt to become due and pay
The cases cited by the respondents’ counsel on the question of the effect of a tender of the amount due on a mortgage as a means of destroying the lien in case of refusal to accept, have manifestly no bearing on the case. Neither is there any force in the point that the agent, plaintiff’s husband, was not competent to prove the agency. This would be true as against the principal, but it is not so where the agent is called as a witness by and for the principal to prove the agency in her behalf. Moreover, in this case all the parties knew perfectly well that the plaintiff’s husband was in fact her agent, and the defendant dealt with him in that capacity. But if any doubt existed on that point it was resolved when the defendant Louis visited the plaintiff herself and learned from her that her husband was acting for her in the matter, and that in refusing to take the interest without the principal she was acting under his advice.
The judgment should be reversed.
All concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the final award of costs.