Farmers & Mechanics Savings Bank of Lockport v. Eagle Building Co.

151 Misc. 249, 271 N.Y.S. 306, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1270
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 151 Misc. 249 (Farmers & Mechanics Savings Bank of Lockport v. Eagle Building Co.) 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
Farmers & Mechanics Savings Bank of Lockport v. Eagle Building Co., 151 Misc. 249, 271 N.Y.S. 306, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1270 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1934).

Opinion

Noonan, J.

This is an action for the foreclosure of a mortgage held by the plaintiff upon certain property in the city of Jamestown, Chautauqua county, N. Y., owned by Arvid N. Lundquist, Charles A. Anderson and Fred R. Hemphill, as trustees of Jamestown Aerie No. 816, Fraternal Order of Eagles. Among the parties defendant are certain individuals who entered into an agreement whereby they undertook to and did agree, in consideration of the making of the loan secured by the mortgage, that, in the event of foreclosure and sale of the premises and a deficiency, they and each of them would pay to the plaintiff, its successors or assigns, the amount of such deficiency. The Bank of Jamestown is made a party defendant as holder of a chattel mortgage upon certain personal property which plaintiff claims is included within the description of the property mortgaged to it.

The guarantors moved for a dismissal of the complaint as against them, upon grounds not necessary to be here stated, and by agreement the question of the liability of the guarantors for any deficiency upon the sale has been postponed until it shall be determined whether such a deficiency will arise, and that question will not be further considered herein.

The Bank of Jamestown interposed an answer denying that the lien of its chattel mortgage is subordinate and inferior to the lien of the plaintiff’s mortgage and setting up as a defense that the property covered by the chattel mortgage was not in existence at the time of the execution of the plaintiff’s mortgage and that the plaintiff’s mortgage does not cover that property and that defendants’ claim to the property is superior to that of the plaintiff.

The case was brought on for trial and evidence introduced tending to support the allegations of the complaint as to the giving [251]*251of the mortgage and the amount due thereunder, and also as to the mailing of the guaranty agreement and the execution, delivery and filing of the chattel mortgage held by the Bank of Jamestown.

The guarantors introduced evidence tending to show that the value of the property covered by the plaintiff’s mortgage is far in excess of the amount due thereon, and at the conclusion of the evidence made a motion that the court fix an upset price of $25,000 to be paid for the property upon the sale. The plaintiff also asked for an additional allowance under section 1513 of the Civil Practice Act, claiming the full five per cent permissible under the second subdivision of that section.

It thus appears that there are three questions upon which the court is asked to rule, which are:

1. Whether the chattel mortgage held by the Bank of Jamestown is superior or inferior to the plaintiff’s mortgage in respect of the property covered by the chattel mortgage;

2. Whether the court has the power to fix an upset price to be bid upon the sale of the mortgaged property, and if so whether it should exercise that power and what amount should be fixed, and

3. Whether the plaintiff should be granted an allowance additional to costs.

The. description of the mortgaged property in the plaintiff’s mortgage, after describing the parcel of real estate upon which the building is situated, proceeds as follows: “ Together with all the buildings and structures, with their equipment, and all fixtures and articles attached to or used in" connection with said premises, and all plumbing, piping, heating and lighting apparatus and appliances, now or hereafter erected or placed on said premises or used in connection therewith, and which for the purposes of this mortgage are and are to be deemed as part of the realty and covered by this mortgage.” The description contained in the chattel mortgage held by the defendant Bank of Jamestown is as follows: All of the furniture, utensils, chattels, machinery, tools and equipment on the lands and within the structure designated as the Eagle Temple, situate on the easterly side of Washington Street, Jamestown, New York, but subject, firstly to the prior lien of the mortgage of the Farmers & Mechanics Savings Bank of Lockport, New York, and secondly, to the prior lien of O. Nelson Rushworth, as Trustee, under a certain mortgage delivered to him by the Eagle Building Company.”

It is impossible from anything which is before the court to determine whether the descriptions above set forth overlap so as to cover the same property wholly or in part, and the court is in no position to determine the question of priority at this time [252]*252upon the evidence before it. It is elementary that a foreclosure action is not the proper proceeding to try title paramount to the mortgage and this court should not, therefore, in this action assume to determine whether the property covered by the chattel mortgage is subject to the hen of the plaintiff’s mortgage. There are other appropriate methods by which that question can be decided.

So far as this question is concerned, I am of the opinion that the plaintiff is entitled to judgment of foreclosure and sale of the property described in the mortgage which it holds, that the sale should be a sale of that property according to the description contained in the mortgage and if a purchaser shall attempt to take possession of any property not included within that description or not subject to the lien of that mortgage, but which is subject to the hen of the chattel mortgage, the owner of the latter will doubtless have a complete remedy against such purchaser.

Coming now to the motion of the guarantors that the court fix a price for the property below which it will refuse confirmation of the sale, a rather difficult question is presented. In the first place, I would call attention to the recent act of the Legislature, being chapter 794 of the Laws of 1933, passed at the extraordinary session of that year and which became a law August 28, 1933, which prohibits the granting of any deficiency judgment during an emergency which is declared to exist until July 1, 1934, except upon apphcation to the court on notice to the parties against whom the judgment is sought and upon a determination by the court as to the fair and reasonable market value of the mortgaged premises as of the date of sale or such nearest earher date as there shall have been any market value, and the deficiency judgment may not exceed the difference between the value as determined by the court and the amount due upon the mortgage.

The method of relieving mortgaged debtors against the market conditions brought about by "the emergency is, in my view, a clumsy one and under some circumstances would operate in an unconstitutional manner, for if the plaintiff should allow the property to be sold to a third person for less than the amount due upon the mortgage, relying upon a deficiency judgment to obtain the balance of his debt, and if the court should refuse to allow him judgment for all of such balance, the result is suspiciously like depriving him of property without due process of law. This situation would be obviated if the mortgagee should be advised in advance of the sale what sum is necessary to be bid in order that be may expect a confirmation, as he will then be able to protect himself up to" the fair value of the property, as fixed by the court, by bidding up to that sum, for he will then be able to obtain a deficiency judg[253]*253ment for the remainder and will secure either the sum bid if a third party purchases or the property at its fair value.

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Bluebook (online)
151 Misc. 249, 271 N.Y.S. 306, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-mechanics-savings-bank-of-lockport-v-eagle-building-co-nysupct-1934.