In re People of New York

149 Misc. 498, 268 N.Y.S. 554, 1933 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1887
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 23, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 149 Misc. 498 (In re People of New York) 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
In re People of New York, 149 Misc. 498, 268 N.Y.S. 554, 1933 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1887 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1933).

Opinion

Frankenthaler, J.

This is a motion by the City Bank Farmers Trust Company (hereinafter referred to as the “petitioner”), to compel the Superintendent of Insurance, as rehabilitator of Lawyers Title and Guaranty Company (hereinafter termed the “ company ”), (1) to elect as to whether he intends to adopt or reject a contract entered into between petitioner and the company guaranteeing payment of a bond and mortgage owned by petitioner, and (2) to pay over to petitioner all rents collected by the company from the owner of the mortgaged property.

Petitioner owns three bonds and mortgages covering property at 2-26 South William street and 38-56 Beaver street, New York city. Two of the bonds and mortgages were made by Kerr Realty Corporation, as mortgagor, and were acquired by petitioner on [502]*502June 3, 1930, through an assignment from Seamen’s Bank for Savings. The third was executed on the same date by William and Beaver Corporation, the present owner of the mortgaged premises, as mortgagor, to petitioner, as mortgagee. By an agreement dated June 3, 1930, all three mortgages were consolidated into a single first mortgage in the principal sum of $3,000,000 maturing June 1, 1933, and bearing interest at the rate of six per cent per annum.

Contemporaneously with the assignment of the two mortgages, the making of the third, and the consolidation of the three, the company executed and delivered to petitioner its guaranty (1) that interest would be paid to petitioner at the rate of five and one-half per cent per annum within five days after it should have become due under the bond and mortgage, and (2) that principal would be paid as and when collected by the company, but in any event within eighteen months after the maturity of the bond and mortgage and demand of payment by petitioner.

The guaranty contains the following provisioh: “ By the acceptance of this policy the Company is irrevocably appointed the exclusive agent of the assured at its own expense to sue for and receive the proceeds of any policy of Title Insurance and of any policy of Fire Insurance covering the mortgaged premises and to collect the interest on the bond and mortgage hereby guaranteed and to exercise every option or privilege in said bond and mortgage or either of them contained and given to the mortgagee;-and the assured agrees until the breach or termination of this guarantee to refrain from exercising any such option or privilege and from collecting any part of said interest or of the principal secured by said bond and mortgage except through the Company and to permit the Company to retain as its premium for this guarantee all interest collected in excess of the rate guaranteed above.

“ This policy is subject to the agreements, conditions and general provisions hereto annexed and to such others as may be endorsed hereon and signed by an officer of the Company, all of which are hereby made a part of this contract.” (Italics the court’s.)

The agreements ” referred to include covenants by the company to institute and conduct as and when it may deem expedient but without expense to the assured all such proceedings as may be necessary to enforce payment of said Bond and Mortgage or the fulfilment of the other covenants and agreements contained therein ” and to require the owner * - * * to pay all such Taxes, Assessments and Water Rates * * * as by the terms of the mortgage are required to be paid.”

The “ conditions ” annexed to the guaranty and incorporated [503]*503therein by the italicized language quoted above consist of covenants by petitioner, of which the following are important: •

Third. To permit the Company, and the Company is hereby authorized without further action by the assured, at any time when the said bond and mortgage shall become due, either by the terms thereof or by reason of the exercise of any option given therein to the mortgagee, to enforce payment of the same in the name of the assured, by its own agents and attorneys but without expense to the assured either by foreclosure or otherwise; and on notice from the Company to produce and deposit with it for that purpose the bond and mortgage, all securities collateral thereto and all muniments of title relative thereto held by the assured, and to execute and verify such proofs and pleadings as may be required by the Company in the course of such proceedings, and out of the proceeds of such action to permit the Company to receive so much as may remain after paying to the assured whatever may be due the assured for principal and interest at the rate hereby guaranteed.
Fourth. To permit the Company to buy in the property covered by said bond and mortgage and to take title thereto in the name of the assured, in case at any sale of said property in any foreclosure suit brought by the Company no bid shall be received for said property sufficient to cover the amount of the judgment and the expenses of the sale. In case the said property shall be so purchased by the Company in the name of the assured, the Company shall be entitled, upon paying the assured, or the executors, administrators, successors or assigns of the assured, within the time limited in the foregoing policy, the amount of the principal guaranteed by this policy, together with interest thereon at the rate hereby guaranteed (in so far as the same has not already been paid), to the conveyance of the said property to it or its nominee by the assured or the heirs, devisees, or successors of the assured free and clear of all claims, charges and hens thereon created by the assured since the purchase thereof upon the said foreclosure and to an assignment of the deficiency judgment entered in said foreclosure action. Until such payment or until the time shall have expired within which same may-.be made by the Company, the Company shall be entitled to the possession and management of the said property and to control the leasing, repairs and maintenance and insurance thereof at its own expense and to receive the rents and profits thereof, but at all times the liability of the Company under this policy shall continue until the assured shall have received the full amount of the principal guaranteed hereby with interest thereon at the rate guaranteed hereby.”

On December 1, 1932, the company, though it failed to collect [504]*504from the owner of the mortgaged property the interest amounting to $90,000 due that day, paid to petitioner from its own funds $82,500, representing interest at the guaranteed rate. As a result of negotiations which ensued between the company and the owner, the latter appointed a new agent to operate the property and agreed to turn over to the company the net income received from the agent without deduction for taxes. Pursuant to this agreement the owner, between January 4, 1933, and May 6, 1933, paid to the company the sum of $55,161.12, which the company used to partially reimburse itself for the $82,500 previously paid out of its own funds to petitioner. On June 1,1933, the owner of the property failed to pay the interest and principal due on that date, amounting to $90,000 and $3,000,000, respectively. The company, in turn, has made no payment to petitioner on account of said interest or principal. Although it has eighteen months within which to pay the principal under its guaranty, it is clearly in default as to the June, 1933, interest, amounting at the guaranteed rate to $82,500. Between June 1, 1933, and October 4, 1933, the company has received certain payments from the owner of the property aggregating $31,232.62.

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Bluebook (online)
149 Misc. 498, 268 N.Y.S. 554, 1933 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1887, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-people-of-new-york-nysupct-1933.