Elna Realty Co. v. Mamaquarro Apartments Corp.

234 A.D. 105, 254 N.Y.S. 329, 1931 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8304
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 11, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 234 A.D. 105 (Elna Realty Co. v. Mamaquarro Apartments Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elna Realty Co. v. Mamaquarro Apartments Corp., 234 A.D. 105, 254 N.Y.S. 329, 1931 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8304 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

Kapper, J.

Defendants moved under rule 107, subdivision 5, of the Rules of Civil Practice, to dismiss the complaint upon the ground that “ there is an existing final judgment or decree of a court of competent jurisdiction rendered on the merits, determining the same cause of action between the parties.”

On December 4, 1928, the corporate parties, plaintiff and defendant, entered into a contract for the exchange of real property. The property owned by the defendant corporation, hereinafter referred to as Mamaquarro,” was valued at $300,000, mortgaged for $147,000, leaving an equity of $153,000. The property of plaintiff corporation, hereinafter called Elna,” consisting of eight houses, was valued at $236,000, with mortgages thereon of $176,000, [106]*106leaving an equity of $60,000. The difference in equities was $93,000, and it was agreed to give “ Mamaquarro ” a purchase-money mortgage for $68,000 and the cash sum of $25,000 to make up the $93,000. Of the $176,000 of mortgages on the property of “ Elna,” $45,000, or $5,625 on each of the eight houses, constituted second mortgages, and upon the bonds accompanying these mortgages the individual plaintiffs, Israel Robinowitz and Lena F. Robinowitz, his wife (who compose the plaintiff corporation), were personally obligated. After the exchange was consummated by the deeding of the respective properties, the holder of the eight second mortgages foreclosed, and deficiency judgments aggregating $22,562 were entered November 1, 1929, against the plaintiffs, both corporate and individual.

On July 31, 1.929, the plaintiffs brought an action against Mamaquarro in which they sought a reformation of the contract so as to provide that that defendant had obligated itself to assume the payment of the second mortgages. The prayer for relief also asked that should the premises conveyed to Mamaquarro be sold in foreclosure actions “ now pending ” and should there result a deficiency judgment against the plaintiffs, the amount of such deficiency be deducted from said $65,000 purchase-money moitgage given as a part of the consideration for the exchange. It was further sought by the prayer for relief that if it should be determined that plaintiffs were not entitled to reformation, rescission of the contract be decreed, provided the defendant corporation, at the time of entry of judgment, is in a position to return the premises to the corporation. The last-mentioned relief sought was unavailable because judgment in that action was directed by findings made on April 4, 1931, by Mr. Justice Morschauser, who heard and determined the action upon the merits.

The theory of that action was, according to the allegations of the complaint, that the defendant corporation, through its president and secretary, orally stated that the $25,000 cash payment on the exchange would be at once utilized by the defendant in connection with the refinancing of the mortgages [the second mortgages] * * * which, when done, would reheve the plaintiffs from any and all further responsibility with regard to the payment of the eight mortgages;” that the plaintiffs were “ induced ” to enter into the agreement of exchange upon such assurances, and that they “ assumed ” that the agreement which they signed contained appropriate provisions for the carrying out of the defendant’s agreement to assume the payment of the mortgages, and that defendant’s said officers “ advised ” the individual plaintiffs that the contract contained the promise. It was further alleged that [107]*107the failure of the contract to set forth the defendant’s promise was the result of either mutual mistake or of fraud upon the part of defendant and its said officers in misleading the plaintiffs by their representations and assurances that plaintiffs’ Exhibit C ’ [a binder made a part of the contract of exchange] contained such a provision that would so obligate the defendant to pay, when the same fell due, the mortgages that were upon the property so conveyed to the defendant.”

Among the findings made by Mr. Justice Morschauser is the following:

“ 20. That at the time of the making of said formal agreement of exchange of properties, dated December 4, 1928, there was no verbal discussion, agreement, understanding or promise that the defendant Mamaquarro Apartments Corporation would assume the payment of the second mortgages then a lien on the premises owned by plaintiff Elna Realty Co., Inc., nor that it would use the $25,000 to be paid to it in cash by plaintiff Elna Realty Co., Inc., at the closing of title, to a reduction or liquidation of said second mortgages then a lien on the premises owned by the plaintiff Elna Realty Co., Inc., nor that it would relieve the plaintiff Elna Realty Co., Inc., Israel Robinowitz and Lena F. Robinowitz, or any of them, from any and all liability or responsibility in connection with the payment of the second mortgages then a Hen on the premises owned by plaintiff Elna Realty Co., Inc., but that on the contrary said agreement dated December 4, 1928, contained the whole agreement between the parties thereto and expressly provided that defendant Mamaquarro Apartments Corporation should take title to the premises consisting of eight parcels of land with the buildings thereon, then owned by the plaintiff Elna Realty Co., Inc., subject to the first and second mortgages then a Hen thereon, aggregating together- the sum of $173,000, and that plaintiff Elna Realty Co., Inc., would take title to the premises consisting of land with an apartment house thereon, then owned by defendant Mamaquarro Apartments Corporation, subject to a mortgage then a Hen thereon in the sum of $147,000.”

The learned justice also found as a conclusion of law:

“ 7. That never at any time was any agreement made between the plaintiffs and the defendant, either oral or written, that the defendant would apply $25,000 of the purchase price to the Hquidation or reduction or payment of the second mortgages which were a Hen on the Harding Avenue property.”

The judgment which was thereupon entered adjudged that the written agreement contained the entire agreement made between said parties on said date * * * that there was no other agree[108]*108ment, verbal or written, in existence at the time of the delivery of said deed;” and that there was no mistake, mutual or otherwise, and no fraud on one side and mistake on the other, in connection with the wording ” of the agreement, nor was there any clause, or provision, or statement, or agreement of any kind whatsoever omitted from any one of said instruments [the binder and contract of exchange] by mutual mistake of the parties thereto or otherwise.” A new action has now been begun by the plaintiffs against the corporate defendant, including its said officers, in which the relief sought is the recovery of the sum of $22,562, the amount of deficiency which the plaintiffs paid. This complaint alleges, as did the one in the foimer action, that the defendant corporation, through its said officers, stated that the $25,000 cash given on the exchange of the properties

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Bluebook (online)
234 A.D. 105, 254 N.Y.S. 329, 1931 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elna-realty-co-v-mamaquarro-apartments-corp-nyappdiv-1931.