Dorff v. Bornstein

14 N.E.2d 51, 277 N.Y. 236, 1938 N.Y. LEXIS 976
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 8, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 14 N.E.2d 51 (Dorff v. Bornstein) 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
Dorff v. Bornstein, 14 N.E.2d 51, 277 N.Y. 236, 1938 N.Y. LEXIS 976 (N.Y. 1938).

Opinion

Ripfey, J.

In February, 1926, the defendant Hyman Bornstein purchased from one Edna Hyde certain real property situate in Brooklyn for $60,000 and executed and delivered to the seller, as security for part of the purchase price, his bond in the penal sum of $36,000, with interest at six per cent per annum on the principal, of which $1,000 was payable on April 1, 1926 and $2,500 annually thereafter in quarterly installments until April 1, 1938, when the balance of unpaid principal and accrued interest was payable. He gave to the seller a mortgage on the premises as security for the payment of that sum upon the terms specified in the bond.

There was then outstanding a first mortgage lien for $16,000 on the premises, held by the Title Guarantee and Trust Company, which the purchaser assumed and agreed to pay. By the terms of the second mortgage it was expressly agreed that it should be a junior and subordinate lien to the mortgage held by the trust company and to any increase, provided such increase should be paid to the second mortgagee in reduction of the amount of the *239 bond for which the second mortgage was given as security. Subsequently the trust company loaned Bornstein $4,000 on the security of the property, and that sum, according to the terms of the second mortgage, and with the consent of the holder thereof, became an additional first lien on the premises.

Payments of interest and principal installments required to be paid by the terms of the several bonds and of taxes and assessments were regularly made by Bornstein until April 1, 1932, by which date the principal amount due on the bond given to Klyde had been reduced to $21,875. After that date he failed to make any further payments. On March 14, 1933, the plaintiff became the owner of the bond and second mortgage on the property. On foreclosure of the first mortgage the holder thereof bid in the property on the sale, and the lien of plaintiff was thereby cut off. Some four months after title in the purchaser had been perfected the defendants Benjamin J. Bornstein and Rose Bornstein, son and daughter of Hyman Bornstein, bought the property for $19,000, paying $4,000 in cash and giving back a purchase-money mortgage for $15,000.

This action is brought to foreclose the second mortgage on the theory that the purchasers were dummies for the previous owner, that the previous owner forced the foreclosure of the first mortgage to cut off the hen of the second mortgage and to enable him to acquire the property free of any such hen and that the hen thereof revested upon the previous owner again acquiring title to the property. Plaintiff has so far succeeded, and the appeal is from the judgment of foreclosure and sale.

The property in question was a rooming house or summer hotel located at Coney Island, unsuitably equipped for winter occupancy, -with some forty rooms available for leasing during the summer season. By 1931 the economic depression had seriously impaired if not wholly destroyed the rental value and marketability *240 of real estate. In better times and under more favorable conditions, if all the rooms were rented there might have been an expected gross annual income from the property of about $7,000 which, if received, would have been sufficient to provide for payment of amounts due annually on the two mortgages and insurance and taxes, without providing anything for repairs or maintenance or any return on the investment of the owner. Bornstein had no means with which to make such payments except from moneys derived from income from the property. He had only part-time employment for seven or eight months per year at an average of twenty-two to thirty dollars per week with a family to support. In 1932 he took in from the property from $1,500 to $1,800. After September, 1932, he had no income from the property, as the preceding owner of the second mortgage thereafter had a receiver appointed who took possession and collected rental therefrom.

The lower courts have found that Bornstein, in collusion with his son and daughter, willfully omitted to pay the carrying charges on the property during the years 1931-1933, although able to do so, in order to precipitate a foreclosure of the first mortgage and thereby cut off the hen of the junior mortgage. He was financially unable to meet the required payments, and there is no finding that the income from the property was sufficient to meet them. Whether the situation would be different, in equity, if the income from the property itself had been sufficient to satisfy the carrying charges had it been received by him, we are not called upon to decide. We think it immaterial whether he was otherwise financially able to keep the mortgages from default or whether he deliberately refrained from making any payments thereon.

In situations such as arose in this case there are fundamental principles which we are bound to recognize and which equity cannot set aside. A bona fide purchaser (other than the owner) on an unconditional sale of real *241 property pursuant to a regular foreclosure acquires a clear and absolute title as against all parties to the suit and their privies which relates back to the date of the mortgage so as to cut off all intervening rights and equities (3 Jones on The Law of Mortgages of Real Property [8th ed.], §§ 2121, 2122; Chicago & Vincennes R. R. Co. v. Fosdick, 106 U. S. 47; Smith v. Gardner, 42 Barb. 356, 366; Pardee v. Steward, 37 Hun, 259, 262; Jaycox v. Smith, 17 App. Div. 146; Rector, etc., v. Mack, 93 N. Y. 488, 492; Sautter v. Frick, 229 App. Div. 345; affd., 256 N. Y. 535, 536; Civ. Prac. Act, § 1085). All parties to the foreclosure sale are estopped from disputing the title acquired by the purchaser on the sale (McGee v. Smith, 16 N. J. Ch. 462; White v. Evans, 47 Barb. 179; Holden v. Sockett, 12 Abb. Pr. 473). Such a title so acquired is beyond attack directly or collaterally. Thereby every interest of the owner has been divested, and his estate has been completely cut off with no outstanding right to redeem (Lansing v. Goelet, 9 Cow. 346, 391). All rights of subsequent mortgagees have been finally and conclusively cut off and a new estate in the new owner has been created (Hopkins v. Walley, 81 N. Y. 77, 84; Huzzey v. Heffernan, 143 Mass. 232; Plum v. Studebaker Bros. Mfg. Co., 89 Mo. 162). The holder of a junior mortgage who stands by while the sale is made and confirmed must be deemed to have waived any right thereafter to redeem (Simmons v. Burlington, C. R. & N. Ry. Co., 159 U. S. 278). As to those whose interests in the property are cut off by the foreclosure, such a purchaser has no further obligation or duty after the actual delivery of the referee’s deed. He may do with the property as he sees fit.

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Bluebook (online)
14 N.E.2d 51, 277 N.Y. 236, 1938 N.Y. LEXIS 976, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorff-v-bornstein-ny-1938.