In re the Estate of Nix

154 Misc. 61, 276 N.Y.S. 823, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1925
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 154 Misc. 61 (In re the Estate of Nix) 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 the Estate of Nix, 154 Misc. 61, 276 N.Y.S. 823, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1925 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1934).

Opinion

Frankenthaler, J.

The special guardian has raised only one objection to the account, viz., in respect to a guaranteed participation certificate held by the committee and forming part of a series known as series F-l, issued by the New York Title and Mortgage Company. He maintains that this certificate is not a legal investment for trust funds, and that the committee should, therefore, be surcharged for the difference between $1,000, the face value of the certificate, and its present market value.

The certificate does not represent a share in any specific mortgage or mortgages. The F-l issue is what is known as a “ group issue.” All the certificates of the issue are secured by a group of mortgages deposited with a trust company, each certificate constituting an undivided coordinate share of the same amount in the principal sum secured by the bonds and mortgages or in the money secured ” to the title company in the deposited bonds and mortgages. Each bond and mortgage, under the terms of the agreement between the title company and the depositary, was to be accompanied by a policy of title insurance insuring that the mortgage was a valid first lien for the amount therein specified, with interest, and also by a sworn certificate of an expert appraiser showing the appraised value of the property covered thereby, which was to be at least fifty per cent greater than the principal sum secured by the mortgage. The title company had the right from time to time to withdraw bonds and mortgages from the depositary upon substituting therefor other bonds and mortgages accompanied by similar documents and by certificates showing the same margin of safety. The title company guaranteed to the holders of the certificates payment of the principal sum thereby secured ten years after the first interest date specified therein. Each certificate, however, contained an additional provision permitting the holder, at any time after three years from the first interest date, on sixty days’ notice, to compel the title company to pay the principal sum and interest out of any moneys received by the Company in payment of the deposited bonds and mortgages.” All certificates were to be payable in the order in which such notices were received and registered by the company.

The terms of the F-l certificates and of the deposit agreement are very similar to those considered by the Court of Appeals in Matter of People (Title & Mortgage Guarantee Co.) (264 N. Y. 69), and [63]*63are identical with those referred to in a very recent opinion of this court (Matter of New York Title & Mortgage Co., 153 Misc. 858).

There is serious doubt as to whether the F-l certificate represents a legal investment for trust funds. In the first place, the statutes authorizing the investment of trust funds in mortgage participation certificates (Pers. Prop. Law, § 21; Dec. Est. Law, § 111) permit the investment of such funds in “ shares or parts of * * * bonds and mortgages,” but do not contain any language indicating that the words “ shares or parts of * * * bonds and mortgages ” are broad enough to include shares or parts of group bonds and mortgages in addition to shares or parts of single bonds and mortgages. The argument is made that the Legislature, had it intended to authorize investment in group mortgages, could easily have expressed that intention by adding the words, “ or of groups of such bonds and mortgages.”

A second ground for assailing the legality of the investment of trust funds in F-l certificates is that the Court of Appeals has held that the holders of certificates similar to the F-l certificates had not, by virtue of owning the certificates, become the owners of the underlying mortgages, but had acquired merely the rights of pledgees thereof. (People v. Title & Mortgage Guarantee Co. of Buffalo, supra, at p. 88.) The court said: Though the certificate states that the company ‘ assigns to the registered holder hereof an undivided, coordinate share of the same amount in the principal sum secured by the bonds and mortgages deposited or which may hereafter be deposited by the company with the Marine Trust Company of Buffalo, * * * as depositary under the terms of an agreement bearing date June 10, 1927, subject to which this certificate is issued, together with interest thereon at the rate of 5|% per annum ’ an analysis of all the terms of the certificate, and of the contract, to which it is subject, discloses that the guaranty company has entered into an unconditional promise to pay, ten years from the date of the certificate, the principal sum secured and accrued interest and has transferred to the holder only an interest in the deposited mortgages as collateral security for its debt. Certainly the holder acquires, prior to default, no rights in the mortgages other or greater than the rights of a holder of collateral security and the guaranty company retains at least the rights of an owner who has cumbered his title with a hen. True the certificate provides that the guaranty company shall exercise these rights as ' agent ’ for the holder of the certificate, but we construe the contract in accordance with its substance and effect, not with its form, So construed, the guaranty company is a [64]*64primary debtor, assigning the mortgages only as collateral security for the debt.” The Circuit Court of Appeals for this circuit felt itself bound to follow the Court of Appeals of this State “ regardless of our [its] own judgment ” (Prudential Ins. Co. of America v. Liberdar Holding Corp., Aug. 7, 1934, 72 F. [2d] 395, 396). “The company being the mortgagee of many mortgages on separate parcels of land, would deposit a number of them in a pool with a depositary. Against each pool it issued certificates of different amounts to investors, by which it purported to assign to the holder of the certificate an aliquot share in all'the mortgages deposited in the pool, and ‘ guaranteed ’ payment to him of the amount of his investment within ten years, together with interest meanwhile. We are freed from an independent analysis of the rights and obligations which resulted from these transactions, because the Court of Appeals of New York in Van Schaick v. Title & Mortgage Guarantee Co. (264 N. Y. 69) has settled them in a decision which we must treat as authoritative, regardless of our own judgment. The court there held that certificate holders had an interest in the assigned mortgages only as security for the direct obligation of the company to repay their advances; that in substance the situation was the same as though the company had borrowed money of the holders on notes, and pledged the pooled mortgages to secure them.” In the light of the constructions thus placed upon the rights of holders of certificates in group issues, the special guardian vigorously maintains that such certificates are not within the scope of the statutes authorizing the investment of trust funds in shares or parts of bonds and mortgages.

Another basis for questioning the legality of an investment in F-l certificates is that the provision permitting the title company to withdraw deposited bonds and mortgages and substitute others is one which the statutes permitting the investment of trust funds in mortgage participation certificates do not expressly authorize.

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Related

In re People
246 A.D. 435 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
154 Misc. 61, 276 N.Y.S. 823, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1925, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-nix-nysupct-1934.