Eschmann v. Alt

4 Misc. 305, 24 N.Y.S. 763
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1893
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Misc. 305 (Eschmann v. Alt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eschmann v. Alt, 4 Misc. 305, 24 N.Y.S. 763 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1893).

Opinion

Patterson, J.

The complaint in this action contains allegations of fraud against the defendant Alt and Mr. Goebel, an attorney, of a very serious character; but, on an examination of the record preparatory to a decision of the case, I find that the counsel for the plaintiff has distinctly withdrawn those charges, and they are now eliminated, and a decision is thus very much simplified.

Tlie plaintiff sues to redeem a fractional interest claimed to belong to her in certain premises which were owned by her grandfather, and under the following state of facts :

Edward Dalton, the grandfather, was the owner of certain premises which were mortgaged to the Bowery Savings Bank. He died, and by his will such premises were devised to his widow for life, with remainder to his children, with a further provision that in case of the death of any child the share of the child so dying should pass to the children of such deceased child. After the death of the testator, and while the mortgage to the Bowery bank was outstanding, and in view of the imminence of a foreclosure of that mortgage, application was made by Mrs. Dalton, the widow of the testator, to Mr. Goebel, an attorney, to find somebody who would relieve the. estate from the immediate pressure of such foreclosure; and an arrangement was entered into by which Mr. Goebel procured Mr. Alt, one of the defendants, to take an assignment of the mortgage and to foreclose it, he (Alt) to be substituted in the place of the Bowery Savings Bank, Goebel acting for Mr. Alt. The assignment was duly made, and Mr. Alt acquired a clear title to the mortgage of the bank, and, without [307]*307any fraud or wrong, he became the owner of that mortgage by payment of the full consideration, but, doubtless, as subsequent events showed, intending the transaction to be for the benefit of Mrs. Dalton and her children, so far as it would be consistent with his interest in advancing the money.

The first ground upon which the plaintiff places her right to redeem this fractional interest is : That in the foreclosure of the Bowery Savings Bank mortgage thus assigned to Mr. Alt, the children of John Dalton, the father of the plaintiff, were made parties to the suit; but that they were not properly served with process, and that other irregularities existed in connection with the proceedings which rendered the decree in that foreclosure suit (in the Court of Common Pleas for the city and county of New York) void.

With reference to that branch of the case, viz., the first foreclosure suit, I see no reason why this plaintiff can claim a right to,redeem. The situation of the ease was simply this: Mr. Alt became the assignee of the mortgage of the Bowery Savings Bank; he advanced his own money, and, although that foreclosure suit was intended indirectly for the benefit of the Dalton family, there was nothing in any agreement which, by its terms or conditions, prevented his taking the title ; on the contrary, it was intended that he should take the assignment of the mortgage, foreclose it, take title, and, being the owner thereof, convey the fee of the property for the benefit of the Dalton family, and the subsequent history of the case shows that this was done.

The question now arising on this first foreclosure is, who were necessary parties defendant to it ?

As said before, the widow and the children of the testator were made parties, and some of his grandchildren; and the particular ground upon which this first foreclosure suit is assailed is that those grandchildren were not properly served with process. I am clearly of the opinion that, under the ■devise contained in the will of the testator, it was not necessary to bring in the grandchildren as parties, because the widow and the children of the testator were in being at the [308]*308time the foreclosure suit was brought, and they were all served with process. The only ground upon which there can be an assault made upon this first foreclosure suit would be that parties necessary to the suit were not served in the manner required by law.

It seems to me to be entirely clear that the life tenant — i. e., the widow — and those in whom a remainder vested, were the only parties who were, as against the mortgage, necessary. It is a rule of law that any one interested in the reversion or in the remainder, and in the equity of redemption, must be made a party to the suit. But that does not, in my judgment, compel a mortgagee seeking to enforce his mortgage to find out who would be entitled to interests or estates in case of their passing over by reason of such a devise as that contained in this will.

So far as this first foreclosure suit is concerned, it may be conceded that the service, or intended service, on the children of John Dalton, was improper. But the point I desire to emphasize with respect to that first foreclosure suit is, that while the children of John Dalton were made parties, they were not necessary parties, and that, when the mortgagee brought into the suit all those who were then in being and who were entitled to what must be conceded to be vested remainders, it gave him the right to foreclose, and would have given him the right to foreclose as against all interests. The testator’s widow and children having been made parties to the suit, it is indifferent as to who might succeed them in interest, so long as the whole equity of redemption as then owed was cut off. So, while it is not strictly accurate to say that the plaintiff takes “ under her father,” it is plain that the rights and remedies of a mortgagee to foreclose the mortgage are not affected by the terms of the will so as to compel him to examine and find out who might become (possibly) contingently owners of undivided interests in the land, so long as those in being and who are entitled to the whole estate are made parties to the action.

This is sufficient to dispose of the first foreclosure suit, [309]*309although a great many irregularities are suggested concerning it, with regard to the times at which and the places where orders were made in the action pending in the Court of Common Pleas, as for instance, orders made by judges of the Supreme Court in the second judicial district and not by a judge of the Court of Common Pleas, and the differences in dates, and other apparent blunders that were made in the foreclosure suit in that first action. That action was conducted in a most irregular and unsatisfactory way; but, at the same time, I find nothing in those irregularities to authorize a decree in this case that the plaintiff shoidd he entitled to redeem.

But, regardless of that, and coming down to the second foreclosure suit involved in this case, I find that the facts are these: Mr. Alt and Mr. Gfoebel, after the title was taken by Mr. Alt on the foreclosure suit in the first action in the Court of Common Plfeas, in pursuance of some arrangement by which Mrs. Dalton and her children were to be benefited, caused the property to he conveyed to Mrs. Dalton, as executrix. She gave back a mortgage on the property to Mr. Alt. The deed made to her was as executrix, which, of course, means nothing as affecting tenure. The designation of Mrs. Dalton in the deed as “ executrix ” is descriptio persones, and nothing else. It is scarcely worth while to cite authorities on this subject, but, inasmuch as the deed was given to her by that description, and the mortgage back was given to Mr.

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4 Misc. 305, 24 N.Y.S. 763, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eschmann-v-alt-nysupct-1893.