Bloomer v. . Sturges

58 N.Y. 168, 1874 N.Y. LEXIS 485
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 22, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 58 N.Y. 168 (Bloomer v. . Sturges) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bloomer v. . Sturges, 58 N.Y. 168, 1874 N.Y. LEXIS 485 (N.Y. 1874).

Opinion

Johnson, J.

The claim to redeem, advanced by the plaintiff, is founded upon his purchase from the receiver of the Anchor Insurance Company in June, 1866, in whom was then supposed to be vested such rights, in respect to the property in question, as belonged to the Ocean Insurance Company at and immediately after the purchase by the defendant Sturges, at the foreclosure sale in May, 1860. If, therefore, the proceedings and judgment in the foreclosure suit, under which the defendant Sturges purchased, were effectual to extinguish the rights of the Ocean Insurance Company in the property sold, the plaintiff cannot succeed.

The Ocean Insurance Company being the holder of these notes and mortgages by assignment from the present plaintiff, to whom they were originally made, and being indebted to the firm of Sturges & Co., assigned the sanie to that firm as collateral security for the claim due to it from that company.

The notes being unpaid, Sturges & Co. commenced a suit for the foreclosure of the mortgages and the sale of the mortgaged premises. Among the defendants were Bloomer, the present plaintiff, then the owner of the equity of redemption of the lands mortgaged, by conveyance from Cook the mortgagor, the Ocean Insurance Company and one Horn, who had been appointed, and then was, receiver of that company, and also Cook, the mortgagor and maker of the notes which the mortgages were given to secure. The preceding material facts were alleged, and it was further averred that the defendants had or claimed to have some *174 interest in or lien upon the said mortgaged premises, or .some part thereof, but that such interest or lien, if any, had accrued subsequently to the lien of the said mortgage. The relief prayed for was, among other things, that the defendants might be barred and foreclosed of all right, claim, lien •and equity of redemption in the mortgaged premises, and that the premises should, be sold and the plaintiff paid the amount due on the notes and mortgages. Upon this complaint, the defendants named appear to have been duly served, or to have actually appeared in the action; and such proceedings were subsequently had that a judgment was rendered by the court for the sale of the mortgaged premises, by which it was also adjudged that any of the parties to the action might purchase at the sale, and that the defendants and each of them should be forever barred and foreclosed of all right, title, interest and equity of redemption in said mortgaged premises so sold, or any part- thereof. Besides these provisions, the judgment contained a direction for .arresting the sale when enough should be realized to pay the amount determined by the judgment to be due to the plaintiff from the Ocean Insurance Company, but as the whole premises did not sell for the requisite sum the provisions in that behalf did not affect the proceedings. Under this judgment the sale took place, and the defendants Sturges became the purchasers.

It is obvious that the court which pronounced the judgment which has been stated had jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the action and of the parties who have been named. This being so, the judgment, in every form of collateral inquiry, must be taken to be valid and effectual, even though it should appear both erroneous and irregular. The remedies for such defects are by appeal for error, or application to the court which gave the judgment to correct the irregularity. These are proceedings in the suit itself in which the error or irregularity occurred. But the case now before the court is a new and original proceeding and the judgment in foreclosure cannot be attacked, jurisdiction having existed. It must *175 be dealt with in the same manner and receive the same support as if it had been pronounced upon full argument and mature consideration. It is, however, scarcely necessary to invoke these principles in support of the judgment in the foreclosure suit here in question. The object of that suit, as disclosed by the averments and prayer of the complaint, was to obtain payment and satisfaction of the mortgages which the plaintiff held by assignment from the Ocean Insurance Company. Primarily this object was sought to be effected by the sale of the mortgaged premises. To effectuate the end sought it was necessary to make a good title to the purchaser at the sale, and this could only be done by the extinguishment of all rights which were subsequent or subject to the lien of the mortgages in foreclosure. To this end, among others, was the Ocean Insurance Company made a party defendant. The possibility that the mortgaged premises might not sell for enough to satisfy the claim of the plaintiff in the foreclosure was one which the company was bound to contemplate and to act in view of, for its own protection. It might have paid off the plaintiff’s claim or have protected its interest by bidding in the property. Doing neither of these things, nor alleging any ground of defence against the action, it is impossible that it should now be held entitled to any further right in the premises. Indeed, if the assignment had been absolute and no interest had remained in the company, it would not have been a proper party to the foreclosure suit. Its interest in the mortgaged property, that it should -bring more than the amount as ' security for which it had been assigned, was the only ground on which it needed to be made a party; and as to its rights in that aspect it had its day in court and the adjudication made is binding upon it so long as it stands unreversed or unmodified.

This case must not be confounded with those in which a party having a right subsequent to a mortgage sought to be foreclosed, and, also, a prior right, has been held not to be precluded in respect to the prior right by a foreclosure, the terms of which were obviously framed with reference *176 to the subsequent right, though expressed broadly enough to seem to include the prior right also. Such were the cases of Frost v. Koon (30 N. Y., 428, 444, 446) and the cases therein stated and considered. Such was also the case of Malloney v. Horan (49 N. Y., 111), in which a wife’s right of dower was deemed not barred by a judgment setting aside a conveyance of the fee made to her by the grantee of her husband as fraudulent as against his creditors, although she had joined with her husband in the conveyance adjudged fraudulent. These cases are not understood to trench at all upon the well settled doctrine in respect to the effect of judgments as estoppels, which is stated in Clemens v. Clemens (37 N. Y., 74) in terms long approved. “A judgment or adjudication is final and conclusive not only as to the matter actually determined, but as to every other matter which the parties might have been litigating and have had decided as incident to or essentially connected with the subject-matter of the litigation, and every matter coming within the legitimate purview of the original action, both in respect to matters of claim and of defence.” They are rather held to be cases in which the matter was only apparently and not really involved in the determination of the former suit, and was in fact neither the ground of any claim or defence appropriate to the original suit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 N.Y. 168, 1874 N.Y. LEXIS 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bloomer-v-sturges-ny-1874.