Holland v. Fulbert, Inc.

49 A.D.2d 86, 371 N.Y.S.2d 509, 1975 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10341
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 24, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 49 A.D.2d 86 (Holland v. Fulbert, Inc.) 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
Holland v. Fulbert, Inc., 49 A.D.2d 86, 371 N.Y.S.2d 509, 1975 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10341 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinions

Reynolds, J.

This motion arose out of an action by the plaintiff Alex Holland to foreclose a mortgage. The appellant Marine Midland Bank-Eastern, National Association, Sanford E. Thompson and Jean F. Thompson and Fulbert, Inc., were named as defendants in this foreclosure action.

The facts are as follows:

Plaintiff, Alex Holland, owned the premises in question, which were at the time of his ownership under mortgage to Whitestone Inn, Inc. Plaintiff, Alex Holland, sold the premises to the defendants, Sanford E. Thompson and Jean F. Thomp[88]*88son, on June 14, 1968 and, at the time of this sale, defendants Thompson assumed, in writing, the Whitestone mortgage, and defendants Thompson then gave a second purchase-money mortgage to the plaintiff. The defendants, Thompson, then defaulted on the senior Whitestone mortgage, and the White-stone mortgage was brought to foreclosure, while the plaintiff’s junior mortgage was still in full force. At the time of the foreclosure sale of the senior Whitestone mortgage (having been previously assigned to Anthony and Anna Mangino) the defendants Thompson were still the owners of the real property, and the defendant, Jean F. Thompson, bid the property in, in her name, and received a deed to the premises from the referee in foreclosure. Subsequent to the foreclosure and sale and the referee’s deed to defendant, Jean F. Thompson, the defendant, Jean F. Thompson, conveyed the property to defendant, Fulbert, Inc., the present owner, and the defendant, Fulbert, Inc., mortgaged the premises to the appellant, Marine Midland Bank-Eastern, National Association.

The appellant, Marine Midland Bank-Eastern, National Association, moved to dismiss plaintiff’s complaint in the action to foreclose his mortgage for failure to state a cause of action. Special Term denied this motion finding on the law and the facts that the plaintiff’s mortgage remained a prior recorded lien as against all subsequent purchasers and mortgagees.

The issue is: can the owner of the equity of redemption who is personally obligated to pay the first mortgage and the second mortgage on his property, purchase the mortgaged property on the judicial sale held on the foreclosure of the first mortgage and thereby effectively eliminate the lien of the second mortgage?

It has apparently been the law for years that he cannot. All of the cases (which are not recent) have so held. The courts have held that fraud must be alleged and proven where the purchaser on foreclosure was not the owner of the property, but was in collusion with the owner to defraud the second mortgagee, but where the owner bids in at a mortgage foreclosure fraud is not a necessary element.

The leading case on this subject is Dorff v Bornstein (277 NY 236, 240-241) where the Court of Appeals said: "A bona fíde purchaser (other than the owner) on an unconditional sale of real property pursuant to a regular foreclosure acquires a [89]*89clear and absolute title as against all parties to the suit and their privies which relates back to the date of the mortgage so as to cut off all intervening rights and equities”. (Emphasis supplied.)

In this case the defendant, Jean Thompson, was the owner, and she therefore is not a bona fide purchaser under the Dorff rule. She did not acquire a title free and clear of the liens of record at the time of her purchase. Dorff goes on to say (p 242): "In cases where either an unconditional warranty of title or a covenant to protect the title of the second mortgagee against all encumbrances or liens, or a convenant to defend the title against the claims of others or to pay all taxes was contained in the second mortgage indenture or in the conveyance in which such encumbrances or liens were assumed, it has been held that, even without the intervention of fraud, the second mortgage would reattach as a lien on the property upon the previous owner who was also the maker of the second mortgage, or his nominee, reacquiring the title upon the foreclosure sale, upon the theory that the maker of such a mortgage is estopped to dispute the lien of the second mortgage [citations omitted] or on the theory that the payment of the prior mortgage will be deemed a payment and extinguishment of the prior lien”. The second mortgage which is made a part of the complaint in the case at bar, at paragraphs "6” and "9”, recites: "6. That the mortgagor will pay all taxes”. "9. the mortgagor warrants the title to the premises.”

Other significant holdings are: Duer v Jaeger (113 Misc 743, 745) where the court held that fraud was unnecessary, and stated: "It was only by taking title to the mortgaged premises and not by any overtures looking toward that end, that they consummated a revivor of the second mortgages.” And at page 747, the court went on to say: "The owner of the equity of redemption when he purchases at a sale of foreclosure of a first mortgage restores the lien of a second mortgage which except for his purchase would be extinguished, and this is so, because to hold otherwise would make him guilty of a constructive fraud. He is thus acquitted of fraud by the law, and when he does the second mortgage the kindness of reviving his security albeit under the compulsion of the law, it is inconceivable that he has done any wrong. He is forced by equity into a place of honor and generosity.” And at page 745, this court also acknowledged that the lien of the junior mortgagee attaches as a first mortgage immediately upon [90]*90transfer of the deed to the owner of the equity of redemption of the senior mortgage.

In Hilton v Bissell (1 Sandf. Ch. 407) the defendant purchased the subject property assuming the two outstanding mortgages, defaulted on the senior mortgage, and the senior mortgagee foreclosed. Defendant was the purchaser at the foreclosure sale, and the court held that defendant’s purchase at the sale did not bar plaintiff’s action to foreclose the junior mortgage. The court stated (pp 410-411):

"In effect, the defendant used the money which he was bound to apply to the payment and extinguishment of (the senior) mortgage, for the purpose of buying the land under that mortgage. And instead of leaving the premises subject to the complainant’s mortgage as the first lien, which would have been the effect of an honest application of his money, the defendant claims that he has so applied it as to cut off entirely the lien of that mortgage. He has satisfied [the senior mortgagee], but in such a mode that he thereby annihilates the second mortgage. This is substantially the ground assumed by the [answer].

"Looking beyond the forms through which the defendant has effected this arrangement, it is a payment of [the senior] mortgage. He was bound by his covenant to make such payment. It was his duty to discharge that mortgage. This court cannot permit him so to perform that duty, as to defeat the whole benefit secured by the covenant to the parties for whose protection it was made. No one can take advantage of his own wrong. And equity, disregarding the forms of title which the defendant has managed to acquire, will consider him as the owner of the land subject to the complainant’s mortgage, and discharged from the mortgage to [the senior mortgagee].

"The decree of foreclosure on the latter, would doubtless have been conclusive against the complainant in favor of a bona fide purchaser of the premises under it.

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Bluebook (online)
49 A.D.2d 86, 371 N.Y.S.2d 509, 1975 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holland-v-fulbert-inc-nyappdiv-1975.