In re Brose

254 F. 664, 166 C.C.A. 162, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 1344
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedNovember 13, 1918
DocketNo. 6
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 254 F. 664 (In re Brose) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Brose, 254 F. 664, 166 C.C.A. 162, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 1344 (2d Cir. 1918).

Opinion

ROGERS, Circuit Judge.

The question which is presented by this case involves the right to the rents of an apartment house owned by the bankrupt in the city of New York, and the controversy is between the trustee of the banlfcrupt and a receiver appointed in a foreclosure proceeding instituted by a second mortgagee, who is the petitioner. The petitioner’s mortgage contains the following clauses:

“Fifth. That if default shall be made in the payment of any Installment 01 the whole of the principal sum mentioned in the condition of the bond, or of the interest which shall accrue thereon, or any part of either, at the respective times therein specified for the payment thereof, the mortgagee shall have the right forthwith, after any such default, to enter upon and take possession of the said mortgaged premises, and to let the said premises, and receive the rents, issues, und profits thereof, and to apply the same, after payment of all necessary charges and expenses, on account of the amount hereby secured, and said rents and profits are in the event of any such default hereby assigned, to the mortgagee.
“Sixth. And the mortgagee shall also be at liberty immediately after any such default, upon proceedings being commenced for the foreclosure of this mortgage, to apply lor the appointment of a receiver of the rents and profits of the said premises without notice, and the mortgagee shall be entitled to the appointment of such a receiver as a matter of right without consideration of the value of the mortgaged premises as security for ihe amounts due the mortgagee, or the solvency of any person or persons liable for the payment of such amounts.”

It appears that the bankrupt filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy on April 30, 1917, and on May 2d there was appointed a receiver in bankruptcy of the assets, property, and effects of the bankrupt. The receiver in bankruptcy has collected the rents from the premises on which the petitioner held a second mortgage for $10,000, which mortgage was long overdue, being due and payable on December 7, 1910. For reasons not necessary to state the second mortgagee took no steps to foreclose his mortgage until November 27, 1917, when he commenced an action in the Supreme Court of the state of New York for the county of New York and obtained the appointment of a receiver on December 1, 1917. Then on January 2, 1918, the mortgagee filed a petition in the bankruptcy court, in which he asked for an order directing that the rents collected by the receiver in bankruptcy [666]*666be used for paying the taxes and assessments, upon the property, as well as the principal and interest due under the mortgage. He also asked that future rénts be payable to the receiver appointd in the foreclosure proceedings, and- that possession of the premises be also turned over to that receiver. The District Judge thereupon entered an order directing the receiver in bankruptcy to pay over, to the receiver in the foreclosure action, all of the rents which he had collected, irrespective of the time or times when such rents had been collected by him less his expenses and disbursements incurred in the maintenance of the premises, and to turn over the possession of the premises. The order he directed to be entered was not in accordance with the opinion which he had previously filed in the case, in which he held that the rents previously collected should not be turned over. The explanation made is that, after filing his opinion, his attention was directed to the case of Sullivan v. Rosson, 166 App. Div. 68, 151 N. Y. Supp. 613, in which the Appellate Division of the. Supreme Court of the state of New York of the First Department, in construing a similar mortgage, had held that the rent clause entitled the mortgagee to the rents upon default without entry and without the appointment of a receiver. In reliance upon that decision he signed the order now sought to be revised.

There is no doubt what the general rule is relating to clauses in a mortgage giving the mortgagee the right to take the rents in terms similar to those used in the mortgage herein involved.

[1] It was stated by the Supreme Court in Freedman’s Saving Co. v. Shepherd (1888) 127 U. S. 494, 502, 8 Sup. Ct. 1250, 1254 (32 L. Ed. 163), when Mr. Justice Harlan, writing for the court, said, citing cases:_

“The general rule is that the mortgagee is not entitled to the rents and profits of the -mortgaged premises until he takes actual possession, or until possession is taken, in his behalf, by a receiver, * * * or until, in proper form, he demands and is refused possession.”

This general rule the federal courts will follow, except in cases where it appears that the law of the state where the premises are situated applies a different rule.

[2, 3] The mortgage, the meaning of which is involved here, is a New York mortgage, and if the New York courts have determined its meaning this court must give the same meaning to its words which would be given to them by the courts of that state.

The question involved herein does not appear heretofore to have been before this court. It has, however, been before the District Court-of the Southern District, with the result that conflicting decisions have been rendered.

In 1907 the District Court held in In re Banner, 149 Fed. 936, that a provision in a mortgage, following the usual one giving the mortgagee a right to a receiver of rents and profits in case of default, operated merely as a pledge of the rents, and that the pledgee was not entitled to them until he asserted his right in some legal form, as by an application for a receiver and a demand by such receiver. The decision was rendered by Judge Hough, then District Judge, but now of this court. So in 1916, in In re Israelson (D. C.) 230 Fed. 1000, [667]*667the question was whether under such a mortgage clause the assignment of rents became operative at. the time of the default, or only upon the appointment of the state court receiver, and it was held by Judge Mayer that the clause only authorized a mortgagee to collect the rents after taking possession of the property, and not while he permitted it to remain in the possession of the mortgagor after default. In 19J5 the question came before Judge Learned Hand in In re Jarmulowsky (D. C.) 224 Fed. 141, 35 Am. Bankr. Rep. 514. A mortgagee asked for an order directing a receiver in bankruptcy to pay to him rents which had been collected after default, but before the mortgagee had applied either for a foreclosure, receiver, or for a sequestration order; and the receiver in bankruptcy was directed to pay over the rents which he had so collected.

In all the cases in the Southern District the principle has been conceded that the question involved arising under a New York mortgage should be determined in accordance with New York law. The difficulty has been to determine what the law of that state upon the subject is. That difficulty has now been cleared up by a recent decision of the New York Court of Appeals in the case of Sullivan v. Rosson, 223 N. Y. 217, 119 N. E. 405, which reversed'the decision made by the Appellate Division to which reference has already been made, and upon which the District Judge relied. A fourth mortgage in that case provided that in case of default: the mortgagee should have the right forthwith “to enter upon and.

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Bluebook (online)
254 F. 664, 166 C.C.A. 162, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 1344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-brose-ca2-1918.