Keller v. Quad Realty Corp.

24 Misc. 2d 1051, 199 N.Y.S.2d 564, 1960 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3795
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 24 Misc. 2d 1051 (Keller v. Quad Realty Corp.) 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
Keller v. Quad Realty Corp., 24 Misc. 2d 1051, 199 N.Y.S.2d 564, 1960 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3795 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1960).

Opinion

Matthew M. Levy, J.

This action to foreclose a second mortgage on real estate was commenced in 1954. A Referee was appointed in 1955 to determine the amount due under the mortgage. The Referee’s report was filed about July 22, 1957, and specified the amount due up to July 1, 1957. On September 22, 1958 a judgment of foreclosure was signed (Geeehbeeg, J.), in which the Referee’s report was confirmed and the premises ordered sold pursuant to the terms of the judgment. The amount due the plaintiff, as specified in the judgment, was the sum of $133,094.36, with interest from July 1, 1957; and there were taxes, assessments, water rates, a conditional bill of sale, restrictions, leases, a right of redemption in the United States, Referee’s fees, plaintiff’s costs and disbursements, expenses of the sale and other items to be taken into account. The judgment also specifically provided that the sale is to be “ subject to a mortgage held by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company as reduced.”

The Referee’s notice of sale stated, among other things, that the premises would be sold subject to “ the lien of a prior open first mortgage of approximately $345,000.00.” The purchaser on the foreclosure sale paid $236,000 as the highest bidder. The sale was held on August 4; the closing on August 31, 1959. The principal balance unpaid on the first mortgage held by Metropolitan was $339,400. Interest unpaid, plus interest computed to August 4, 1959, the date of the foreclosure sale, amounted to $4,967.94. Interest of $1,321.88 was also due from August 4, 1959 to the date of the closing of the transaction, August 31,1959. A dispute arose at the closing as to who should be required to pay the interest. To avoid postponement, a stipulation was entered into reserving the rights of the respec[1053]*1053tive parties, the purchaser paid the interest, totaling $6,289.82, and the issue was arranged to be submitted to the court for resolution.

A motion has now been brought on by the 'plaintiff for an order determining whether the interest on the first mortgage shall be paid by the Referee out of the proceeds of the sale. The plaintiff submits, at the outset, that the only question before the court is whether such payment is required by the terms of the judgment of foreclosure. The judgment — which, as usual, precisely specifies the distribution to be made by the Referee of such proceeds — does not so provide. The plaintiff argues that that disposes of the matter. I do not agree. The Referee has custody of the proceeds as an officer of and subject to the direction of the court. In my view, if the court is convinced that, in law or equity, a payment out of the fund on hand should be made to one person or another, there is jurisdiction in the court (upon proper application and due notice) so to direct.

The purchaser contends that, because of the relationship between the owner defendant and the second-mortgagee-plaintiff and the manner in which the income of the premises was used during the pendency of the foreclosure proceedings, the purchaser should not bear the burden of the interest due the first mortgagee. I do not agree. The purchaser was a stranger to the property and, prior to his bid at the foreclosure sale, unrelated in any way to any of the parties. So far as the purchaser is concerned, therefore, it is my view that it is the record alone upon which I must rely in determining this application. On the basis of the record — the judgment, the judgment roll, and the notice and terms of sale — I am of the opinion that the purchaser is not entitled to be reimbursed out of the proceeds of the sale for the interest which it paid to the first mortgagee.

It is the purchaser’s contention that a Referee must adhere strictly to the directions of the judgment and cannot vary the provisions therein contained, either in the notice of sale or in the terms of sale, and that nowhere in the present judgment was it provided that the purchaser was to take subject to past-due interest on the first mortgage or was to pay interest which had accrued thereon up to the date of the sale or interest which accrued thereafter and up to the date of the delivery of the deed. That contention is not persuasive in any of its facets.

Section 986 of the Civil Practice Act provides that the ‘1 terms of the sale must be made known at the sale, and if the property * * * is to be sold subject to the right of dower, charge or lien, that fact must be declared at the time of the sale.” The [1054]*1054‘ ‘ referee who is directed by a judgment to sell certain described real property cannot insert in the terms of sale on his own motion or at the suggestion of the plaintiff or his agents a provision that the premises are sold subject to a vague, indefinite, uncertain outstanding interest in another. The effect of such an act is to make the subject-matter of the sale uninviting to intending purchasers, and the probable result is an unjust and needless sacrifice of the property of the owner of the mortgaged premises ” (Mullins v. Franz, 162 App. Div. 316, 318). Of course, meticulous compliance with the precise terms of the judgment is safe and advisable. But that is not the question. The correct rule of law, in my opinion, is that a Referee must adhere substantially and equitably — rather than (necessarily) strictly and technically — to the mandates of the judgment. And, if there be a material variance, the court may, at the behest of a party in interest, and in a proper ease, vacate the post-judgment sale and issue a direction for a resale (Sufrin v. Arbeau, 24 Misc 2d 909), and the purchaser would be entitled to an order permitting him to withdraw his bid if he were truly, substantially, and to his disadvantage, misled by the terms of sale (Termansen v. Matthews, 49 App. Div. 163). But the Referee’s statement in the present notice of sale (that the property would be sold subject to the lien of a prior open first mortgage of approximately $345,000) as compared with the language of the judgment here involved (that the sale was to be subject to a mortgage held by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company as reduced) is not, in my opinion, such a variance as would warrant upsetting the transaction. Indeed, the Referee’s statement in the notice of sale was more specific than the judgment. In any event, a vacatur of the sale is not what the purchaser here has sought. It has not objected to, but has consummated, the deal, and seeks relief of another kind.

The purchaser’s contention, based upon the failure to refer to ‘ ‘ interest ’ ’ in the judgment or in the notice or terms of sale, is meritless. The word “ interest ” is not the magic talisman that the purchaser has urged that it is. “Lien” and “ mortgage ” are no less words of comprehensive meaning, adequate enough to embrace “ interest ” as well as “ principal ”. The effect of declaring the existence of an encumbrance is to charge the purchasers at the sale with knowledge thereof (15 Carmody-Wait, New York Practice, §§ 310, 326), In Corpus Juris (Vol. 41, Mortgages, § 389, p. 474) it is stated: “A mortgage securing an existing debt or a written obligation for the payment of money, on which interest is reserved, will [1055]*1055likewise • secure such interest as it accrues, hoth in respect of the extent of its lien and for purposes of foreclosure or redemption; and this although the interest is not specially mentioned as being part of the obligation secured by the mortgage”. And in Corpus Juris Secundum (Yol. 59, Mortgages, § 179e, p.

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Bluebook (online)
24 Misc. 2d 1051, 199 N.Y.S.2d 564, 1960 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keller-v-quad-realty-corp-nysupct-1960.