D'Eliza v. . Ritondo

139 N.E. 251, 235 N.Y. 232, 1923 N.Y. LEXIS 1171
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 6, 1923
StatusPublished

This text of 139 N.E. 251 (D'Eliza v. . Ritondo) 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
D'Eliza v. . Ritondo, 139 N.E. 251, 235 N.Y. 232, 1923 N.Y. LEXIS 1171 (N.Y. 1923).

Opinion

Crane, J.

This action was brought to foreclose a mortgage given to the plaintiff by her mother on property which she took as survivor in a tenancy by entirety. Natale Stamile and Charlotte, his wife, the plaintiff’s father and mother, took the property in question as tenants by entirety under full covenant and warranty deed on October 25, 1905. When the husband died on April 22, 1910, his wife, surviving him, became owner in fee. She gave to her daughter, Mollie Stamile, the bond and mortgage in suit, dated September 23, 1910, as a wedding dowry upon her marriage to Evangelist D’Eliza. The mortgage debt carried six per cent interest due and payable from the death of the mother. The defendants, Mariagata Stamile Santoro, Maria1' Louise Ritondo, Susie Stamile Cascar di and Ida Stamile are daughters of the* said Natale Stamile .and Charlotte Stamile, and the only heirs at law and next of kin of said Charlotte Stamile. Prior to the death of the father and on or about the 7th day of July, 1907, he and his wife executed a certain paper which purported to be a mutual will whereby it was provided that upon the death of *235 either, the survivor should take the real property for life with the remainder to their children. The terms of this will need not here be given as the courts below have held that upon the death of the husband, the wife took a fee of the property as the survivor under the tenancy by the entirety and did not take under this will merely a life tenancy with the remainder to the children. The court found that there was no contract to make mutual wills binding upon the wife. This conclusion cannot now be questioned as there has been no appeal taken by the remaindermen from this decision.

The principal and interest not having been paid on the death of Charlotte Stamile November 17, 1912, this action to foreclose was commenced, resulting in a decree of foreclosure and sale. The property was bought in by the plaintiff for $1,000 over and above the amount of principal and interest and other charges and the title taken in the name of the plaintiff and her husband.

The judgment of foreclosure was made and entered on the second day of November, 1915, and thereafter and on the first day of May, 1916, the plaintiff, Mollie Stamile D’Eliza, and her husband procured a loan of $3,000 from one John Johnston, and delivered to him a bond and mortgage for that amount upon the property as security. Of this amount $2,500 was used to pay off a first mortgage which was a hen prior to that of the plaintiff’s. Nearly three years after and in September of 1918, the defendant Mariagata Stamile Santoro, who was an infant at the time of the foreclosure decree, made an application to the Supreme Court to set aside the said judgment of foreclosure and sale entered on November 3, 1915, and while her application was denied by the Special Term, it was granted on May 9, 1919, by the Appellate Division in an order which permitted said defendant to interpose an answer and directed the judgment of foreclosure and sale in the meantime to stand until the final determination of the issues raised by the *236 answer.” There were no defects or irregularities in the foreclosure proceedings or in the sale. All these defendants were then parties to the action although infants. The plaintiffs on the sale procured good title which they could pass on as security to their mortgagee. Johnston, the mortgagee, apparently had no notice of this application to open the default and the foreclosure proceedings. In accordance with this permission granted by the Appellate Division order, the defendant Santoro served an answer which raised an issue to be tried. Two other infant defendants, Susie Stamile Cascardi and Ida Stamile through their guardian ad litem also served answers although no permission had been granted them to do so. These issues thus raised came on for .trial and resulted in the judgment which is under review on this appeal. The only issue raised by Santoro’s answer was the title of the mother, Charlotte Stamile, to a fee in the premises. It was alleged that she took under the joint will of herself and husband only a life estate and could not, therefore, give to the plaintiff the mortgage in question which would survive her death as a lien. There was no issue, so far as I can discover, raised as to the validity of the prior foreclosure proceedings and sale, nor was any demand made in the answer to set them aside as unfair or inequitable, and to permit this defendant or codefendants to redeem the property.

The action proceeded to trial resulting in the same decision as had previously been made in 1915, i. e., the mortgage was declared valid, the issues raised by the answers being decided against the defendants. This might have resulted in a judgment confirming the prior judgment of 1915 and declaring it valid and binding. As stated, the Appellate Division opened the default solely for the purpose of trying the issue raised by the answer of Santoro, directing the judgment of foreclosure to stand until the issues were so determined. The prior judgment of foreclosure and sale was net disturbe.d nop *237 the actual sale which had taken place set aside. All the proceedings stood as binding upon alt parties. After hearing these defendants the trial court found that the previous judgment was right, that the plaintiff’s mortgage was valid and was properly foreclosed and that these defendants had no interest therein other than as determined in the prior action. There was no reason, therefore, for setting aside the prior. judgment of foreclosure and sale and directing a resale. No doubt these defendants could have had such relief if any such issue had been raised and the sale had resulted in any great injustice to them or the equities of the situation made it right that a resale should be ordered. If upon the sale the defendants were not properly represented or could not have been for any justifiable reason, or the sale took place under conditions indicating that the property did not bring its fair market value and the plaintiff greatly profited by receiving an equity above the amount of the mortgage and interest which she would not have received under a properly conducted salo, the court could have ordered a resale or redemption in the interest of all the heirs. However, no such claim was made in the answer nor upon the trial. It was found as a fact that the property was worth at the time of this trial approximately $14,000. There was due the plaintiff upon her mortgage $7,461.60. She paid $1,000 for the property on the sale. There was $2,500 on the first mortgage which remained a hen upon the property after the sale. This totalled about $11,000 exclusive of the costs and expenses of the foreclosure leaving an apparent equity of $3,000 which the plaintiff obtained in 1915 by buying in the property under her own foreclosure. This equity it must be remembered is based upon the valuation of an expert, called by the defendants, estimated three years after the sale. We realize that we have no power to review the facts and that an order, setting aside a sale, may be discretionary, but we state these facts in order to empha^ *238 size the point of law that the judgment ordering a resale was error under the circumstances of this case and the direction of the Appellate Division.

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Bluebook (online)
139 N.E. 251, 235 N.Y. 232, 1923 N.Y. LEXIS 1171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deliza-v-ritondo-ny-1923.