Eberich v. Solomon

152 A. 823, 112 Conn. 498, 1931 Conn. LEXIS 35
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 13, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 152 A. 823 (Eberich v. Solomon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eberich v. Solomon, 152 A. 823, 112 Conn. 498, 1931 Conn. LEXIS 35 (Colo. 1931).

Opinion

Banks, J.

On June 2d, 1927, the defendant gave the plaintiff his promissory note for $5500, secured by a second mortgage upon real estate in Waterbury. The note was payable $100 every three months, beginning three months from its date, until eight years, when the balance of the principal was payable on demand. Both the note and the mortgage contained a provision that upon default in any payment of principal or interest, interest on the prior mortgage, or taxes, assessments or insurance premiums, for a period of more than ten days, the unpaid balance of the note should become due and payable on demand. The defeasance clause of the mortgage read as follows: “Now therefore, if said note should be well and duly paid according to its tenor and effect; and if all taxes assessed against said premises or this loan, and all assessments levied against said premises shall be kept paid as respectively assessed and levied and the grantee saved harmless therefrom, and if said premises shall be kept insured to the benefit of the grantee in companies and amounts satisfactory to said grantee, then this deed shall be null and void; otherwise good and valid.” There was a first mortgage of $10,000 upon the property and at the time this mortgage was given to the plaintiff the property was insured by a policy in the sum of $10,-000 which was indorsed so that any loss would be paid to the first mortgagee and to the plaintiff as second mortgagee as their interests might appear. At that time the defendant also carried a second insurance *500 policy of $5000 upon the property. In October, 1927, the plaintiff demanded an insurance policy to protect his mortgage interest and, after some controversy, the defendant caused an indorsement to be made upon the $5000 policy so that the mortgage interest of the plaintiff would be protected, and forwarded the policy itself to the plaintiff. This policy expired on December 12th, 1928. The defendant failed to renew it until January 4th, 1929, when he took out a new policy for $5000, which contained a clause protecting the mortgage interest of the plaintiff, and which he placed in his safe without informing the plaintiff that it had been written. On February 11th, 1929, the plaintiff, not having received a policy to protect his mortgage interest, caused a $5000 policy to be written and a bill for the premium to be sent to the defendant who refused to pay it. On March 1st, 1929, the plaintiff, who did not then know of the existence of the policy of January 4th, notified the defendant that because of his failure to pay the premium on the policy of February 11th, the full amount of the mortgage fell due and that he was commencing foreclosure. On March 5th the defendant notified the plaintiff that he had taken out a policy to protect the latter’s interest as mortgagee and that he would send it to him upon request, but the plaintiff nevertheless commenced this action on March 13th. On May 1st, 1928, a sprinkling assessment of $2.40 against the premises became due and payable, but was not paid by the defendant until March 21st, 1929, and on January 25th, 1928, a sewer assessment of $100 became due and payable but was not paid by the defendant until October 28th, 1928.

The court found that the unpaid balance of the note was due and payable and rendered its judgment of foreclosure for $5253.58, the amount so found due. There was no default by the defendant in the payment of *501 either the principal or interest of this note, and the unpaid balance of the note was not due and payable when this action was brought unless it became so under the terms of the acceleration clause contained in the note and mortgage. That clause provided that the unpaid balance of the note should become due and payable upon a default in the payment of insurance premiums for a period of more than ten days after they became due. It did not provide for the acceleration of the due date of the note by reason of the failure of the mortgagor to keep the property insured for the protection of the plaintiff’s mortgage. The defeasance clause provided that “if said premises shall be kept insured to the benefit of the grantee in companies and amounts satisfactory to said grantee, then this deed shall be null and void; otherwise good and valid.” This manifestly had no reference to the time of payment of the debt, and did not of itself have the effect of accelerating the due date of the note. A failure to keep the property insured does not give a mortgagee the right to an immediate foreclosure for the unpaid principal of the note in the absence of a clause in the note or mortgage providing that the principal shall become due and payable upon such failure. 1 Wiltsie on Mortgage Foreclosure (4th Ed.) p. 97, § 68; 41 Corpus' Juris, pp. 857, 858, § 1046; Williams v. Townsend, 31 N. Y. 411; Kirk v. VanPetten, 38 Fla. 335, 21 So. 286; Harshaw v. McKesson, 66 N. C. 266; Johnson v. Northern Minnesota Land & Investment Co., 168 Iowa, 340,150 N. W. 596; First National Bank v. Kirby (Mo.) 175 S. W. 926. The defeasance clause of the mortgage did impose upon the mortgagor the primary duty of keeping the property insured for the benefit of the mortgagee. Upon his failure to do so the plaintiff had a right to take out insurance himself for the protection of his security, at the expense of *502 the defendant. 41 Corpus Juris, p. 641, § 625, p. 643, § 627, p. 849, § 1030; 1 Wiltsie on Mortgage Foreclosure (4th Ed.) p. 97, § 68. He could then charge the premium upon the policy to the defendant, and the latter’s failure to pay it within ten days would constitute a default under the acceleration clause making the principal of the note due and payable on demand. But before the plaintiff proceeded to take out a policy at the expense of the defendant it was his duty at least to inquire whether the latter had not already insured the property as he was required to do. If that was done, and the plaintiff’s security thus protected, he could not by taking out an additional policy impose upon the defendant an obligation to pay the premiums upon that policy. When the plaintiff took out the $5000 policy on February 11th his mortgage interest was already protected by the policy taken out by the defendant on January 4th. True, the defendant had not delivered the policy to him, but failure to do so does not constitute a default unless the mortgage expressly so requires. Williams v. Wisner Bldg. Co., 200 N. Y. Supp. 802. It is not found that the plaintiff requested the defendant to renew the original $5000 policy when it expired, but he proceeded to take out a new policy himself without ascertaining whether or not the defendant had done so. On March 5th the defendant notified the plaintiff that he had taken out a policy to protect the plaintiff’s interest as mortgagee and the latter on March 13th commenced this action, having notified the defendant on March 1st that he was doing so because of the defendant’s failure to pay the insurance premium on the policy to protect the plaintiff’s mortgage. The defendant had paid the premium upon the policy which he had himself taken out to protect the plaintiff’s mortgage, and the plaintiff knew of the existence of that policy,»and that his in *503 terest was protected, before he started foreclosure.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 A. 823, 112 Conn. 498, 1931 Conn. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eberich-v-solomon-conn-1931.