Frederici v. Guarantee & Trust Co.

250 A.D. 432, 294 N.Y.S. 319, 1937 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8362
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 19, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 250 A.D. 432 (Frederici v. Guarantee & Trust Co.) 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
Frederici v. Guarantee & Trust Co., 250 A.D. 432, 294 N.Y.S. 319, 1937 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8362 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinions

Hagarty, J.

In the year 1925 plaintiffs purchased from the defendant a $7,500 bond, secured by a mortgage on unimproved real property, payment of which was guaranteed by the bond and mortgage guarantee company, hereinafter referred to as “ the mortgage company.” Rescission is sought on the ground of fraud. The basis of the cause of action is that the guaranty of the mortgage company is void, although represented by the defendant to have been a valid guaranty. The question presented is whether or not the mortgage company had the power to guarantee payment of this mortgage on unimproved real property.

Section 170 of the Insurance Law, as amended by chapter 290 of the Laws of 1929, provides as to title and credit guaranty corporations that they may invest in, purchase and sell, with or without guaranty, or guaranty of payment, bonds secured by mortgage or mortgages upon improved and unincumbered real property, situate in the United States, worth fifty per cent more than the amount loaned thereon. Clearly, then, the guaranty in question here is repugnant to this statute permitting guaranty of payment [434]*434on improved property exclusively. But this statute, as so amended in 1929, is inapplicable, not only because the transaction here in question took place before that amendment, but the power of the mortgage company to guarantee payment of bonds and mortgages which inured to it by virtue of the statute under which it was created, has been preserved to it.

The respondent’s contentions in support of the validity of the guaranty are twofold: First, that the mortgage company was permitted to guarantee payment of bonds and mortgages without restriction as to the improved character of the real property under the statute in force at the time of its creation, and that its power to do so since then has been preserved by saving clauses contained in the Insurance Law, despite amendments; and second, that up to and including the time of this purchase, a guaranty upon unimproved real property was lawful.

Concededly, the mortgage company was organized pursuant to the provisions of chapter 538 of the Laws of 1885. That act is entitled: “ An Act to provide for the organization and regulation of corporations to examine and guarantee bonds and mortgages and titles to real estate.”

Section 1 of the act provides:

“ Section 1. Corporations may be organized under the provisions of this act for the purpose of examining titles to real estate, of procuring and furnishing information in relation thereto, and of guaranteeing or insuring bonds and mortgages, and the owners of real estate and others interested therein against loss by reason of defective titles and other incumbrances of or upon such real estate.”

It will be noted that the purposes for which such corporations may have been organized under that section were four in number: First, for the purpose of examining titles to real estate; second, of procuring and furnishing information relating thereto; third, of guaranteeing or insuring bonds and mortgages; and fourth, of guaranteeing “ the owners of real estate and others interested therein against loss by reason of defective titles and other incumbrances of or upon such real estate.”

The appellants claim that this provision with respect to the power of such corporation, so organized, to guarantee or insure bonds and mortgages must be limited to a guaranty with respect to the mortgagee’s title, even though it will be noted that the provision with respect to the guaranteeing of bonds and mortgages contained in the section is separated by a comma from that with respect to defective titles and incumbrances. The appellants point to sections 14 and 15 of this act, which provide for the invest[435]*435ment of the capital of such corporations in bonds and mortgages on unincumbered and improved real estate worth fifty per cent more than the sum loaned thereon, and providing for the setting apart of a sum not less than two-thirds of the amount of its capital stock as a guaranty fund, to be invested in real estate of the same nature, or in other ways that are not material here. Section 15 provides that no corporation shall issue any guaranty or policy of insurance upon bonds and mortgages, or to owners of real estate and others interested therein, against loss by reason of defective titles and other incumbrances, until the guaranty fund has been set apart and invested. These latter sections relate to the investment of the corporation’s own funds, and do not contain a limitation upon a guaranty made by the corporation of any bond and mortgage. While it may seem anomalous to permit a corporation to guarantee bonds and mortgages without restriction, although requiring it to invest its own funds in improved realty, nevertheless we must take the law as it was written.

Section 3 of the act relates to the means of organizing such a corporation, and provides that the incorporators shall execute a certificate which shall set forth;

“ 2. Their intention to form a corporation for the purpose of examining titles to real estate, and guaranteeing and insuring the same, and bonds and mortgages as expressed in the first section of this act.”

Here there is a clear segregation of the purposes of the corporation, the examination of title to real estate and the guaranteeing and insuring of the same, and then the guaranteeing of bonds and mortgages. If this statute were to be construed in the manner claimed by the appellants, namely, that the power to guarantee bonds and mortgages is limited to the guaranty of title alone, the words in this section “ and bonds and mortgages ” would be superfluous inasmuch as section 1 speaks of guaranteeing the owners of real estate and others interested therein against loss by reason of defective titles and incumbrances, and certainly a mortgagee would be so considered.

My conclusion with respect to this act is that it permitted a guaranty of bonds and mortgages without limitation, and, in the absence of express limitation, such guaranty must be deemed to relate to a guaranty of payment in accordance with the common acceptance of the scope of that term.

Despite many amendments since enacted, the following saving clause, originally enacted in 1892, has been continuously incorporated in the Insurance Law in substantially the same language, viz. (Insurance Law, § 37): —“ Corporations heretofore [436]*436formed * * *. Any domestic insurance corporation heretofore incorporated or extended under the provisions of any general or special law of the State is hereby brought under all of the provisions of this chapter relating to such corporation, except that its capital may continue of the amount named in its charter during the existing term thereof, unless it extends its business to other kinds of insurance, and it shall be entitled to all privileges granted by such charter not authorized by this chapter.”

It will be observed, as hereinafter set forth, that section 170 of the Insurance Law, which is the successor statute relating to the powers of a corporation to guarantee and which was originally enacted pursuant to the codification of the different laws relating to insurance companies by chapter 690 of the Laws of 1892, comprehends, despite amendments, the exercise of the powers as therein set forth with respect to corporations to be organized in the future.

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Related

People v. Dilliard
163 Misc. 146 (New York Court of General Session of the Peace, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
250 A.D. 432, 294 N.Y.S. 319, 1937 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frederici-v-guarantee-trust-co-nyappdiv-1937.