Harrison v. Union Trust Co.

39 N.E. 353, 144 N.Y. 326, 63 N.Y. St. Rep. 668, 99 Sickels 326, 1895 N.Y. LEXIS 533
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 39 N.E. 353 (Harrison v. Union Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrison v. Union Trust Co., 39 N.E. 353, 144 N.Y. 326, 63 N.Y. St. Rep. 668, 99 Sickels 326, 1895 N.Y. LEXIS 533 (N.Y. 1895).

Opinion

Finch, J.

This action appears to be supplemental to that of Stevens, etc., v. The Central Nat. Bank of Boston et al., the judgment in which we have recently affirmed. (144 N. Y. 50.) The complaint before us recites the long history of the Lebanon Springs railroad, which is so fully stated in the case *329 referred to as to render a formal repetition needless. We may go at once to the merits of the succeeding controversy, adding only such facts as have been hitherto unconsidered.

The demurrer interposed questions the sufficiency of the complaint, asserting that it states no cause of action, and from the decision below overruling that demurrer this appeal has been taken.

The complaint asks for three forms of relief, which are, the removal of the trustee, an accounting, and the execution of a conveyance to the purchaser on the last foreclosure. There is no case made for an accounting. The complaint does not allege that the Trust Company was ever in possession of the railroad or any part of it, or that it received any of its earnings or income, or that it ought to have done so and is chargeable therefor, or that it ever had a title, legal or equitable, to the road, or has any funds to which the bondholders are entitled. The facts detailed show that the Trust Company has always stood in the attitude merely of the mortgage trustee, foreclosing and selling when its trust duty required, never buying at any such sale, or taking possession under it, or operating or managing the railroad. The only money it is charged with receiving is the check of Duncan on the first New York sale and that of Park on the first "Vermont sale, both of which checks it failed to collect and thereby became responsible for the purchase price of one hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars. But the bondholders who might have required a distribution among themselves of that sum, which would have been an affirmance of the sale, have chosen, as they had a right to do, to disaffirm the sale and require a re-sale of the property. That has occurred, and the bondholders in a new corporate capacity have become the purchasers. The result ends all liability of the Trust Company upon the uncollected checks, and no other money to which the plaintiffs are entitled is alleged to have come to the hands of such company, and no facts are pleaded which admit of any such inference. There is no cause of action for an accounting.

*330 Hor can the action be sustained as one to compel a conveyance merely. The plaintiffs have already recovered one judgment which explicitly awards that relief, and a court does not sit to repeat over again the identical decree which it has already rendered and which simply needs to be enforced. A foreclosure under the Lebanon Springs mortgage and under the Harlem Extension mortgage has ended in a sale. The intermediate Sackett suit and the new mortgages by purchasers have been sponged out, or the possible rights they created have been concentrated in Foster, who has conveyed to the final purchaser. The foreclosure action which worked this result, was one in which the bondholders were plaintiffs. The Trust Company was joined as a party defendant. Ho relief was asked specially against it, and so it made no defense and interposed no answer. There was no apparent reason why it should. But thereafter, without notice to the Trust Company, the foreclosure judgment was amended by adding a direction which required that company to convey. After it was made, notice* of the amendment was given to the Trust Company which did not move to strike it out or annul it, but chose to take no action. The complaint in this suit stands upon the validity of that amendment. It does not admit its invalidity and seek to* cure the defect by a new action demanding a relief which had been ineffectually awarded. Ho such ground is taken. On the-contrary, the plaintiff assumes the validity of the amendment and assails the Trust Company for disobedience of the command' to convey. So that if there was nothing else about the-case, we should hold that a new decree, merely repeating an existing judgment, was superfluous and not a right which the-plaintiff can lawfully claim.

But there is something else about the case. The plaintiff seeks the removal of the trustee upon the ground of its alleged misconduct both in accepting the unpaid checks and in refusing to make the required conveyance. As the plaintiff now relies upon that misconduct in accepting the checks to save-the road to its bondholders instead of losing it for the one* hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars previously bid, the* *331 complaint must stand upon the disobedience alleged in the refusal of the Trust Company to convey. That refusal makes out a prima facie case for the removal of the trustee if the amendment of the judgment is not absolutely void, for the court has undoubtedly the power by way of enforcing its previous decree to remove the trustee who will not convey and appoint one who will. The answer made by the Trust Company is that the amendment is void and a nullity and that contention becomes the pivotal point of the controversy. The learned counsel for the defendant insists that since the Trust Company made default and did not answer, no relief could be given beyond that asked in the complaint and refers us to the provision of the Code, (§ 1207), which enacts that where there is no answer the judgment shall not be more favorable to the plaintiff than that demanded in the complaint.” I think the amendment cannot be said to violate that provision. The plaintiffs became entitled to a judgment of foreclosure and sale. They obtain that relief and that only. The incidents follow the principal and the demand for the foreclosure and sale carries with it a demand for all those details essential to make it effectual. If the judgment had omitted a direction that the referee convey an amendment curing the defect would not have been more favorable to the plaintiff than his general demand for a foreclosure and sale. And it should be added that the provision of the Code is simply a rule of procedure, intended for the protection of defendants not answering, and not a limitation upon the jurisdiction of the court. The case is not one in which the court had no authority at all to order a conveyance, but one where, having that jurisdiction, it was required not to exercise it in a particular state of the litigation. The order was probably voidable, and no notice of the application for it having been given to the Trust Company such defendant might have moved to vacate and annul it. But it was not void, and disobedience to it cannot now be justified on that ground.

It is suggested that an action solely for the removal of the trustee was needless because the relief could have been given *332 on a mere motion, and that we onght not to encourage a formidable action with its heavy expenses and prospective counsel fees where a simple motion, speedy and inexpensive, would have served. There is force in the suggestion. But the statute permits the removal of a trustee either by bill or petition, (2 R. S. [6th ed.] p. 1111, § 83), and the plaintiff here had her choice.

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Bluebook (online)
39 N.E. 353, 144 N.Y. 326, 63 N.Y. St. Rep. 668, 99 Sickels 326, 1895 N.Y. LEXIS 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-union-trust-co-ny-1895.