Koury v. Sood

62 A.2d 649, 74 R.I. 486, 1948 R.I. LEXIS 105
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 10, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 62 A.2d 649 (Koury v. Sood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Koury v. Sood, 62 A.2d 649, 74 R.I. 486, 1948 R.I. LEXIS 105 (R.I. 1948).

Opinion

*487 Capotosto, J.

This bill in equity was brought in behalf of the widow and heirs of Peter Koury against the Rhode Island Hospital Trust Company, hereinafter called the bank, and David Sood and Nicholas Elias, hereinafter referred to collectively as Sood: (1) to restrain the respondents from foreclosing certain mortgages executed by Peter Koury between 1918 and 1925; (2) to account for moneys had and received by the respondents in the care and management of the property covered by the mortgages by virtue of an assignment of rents made by Peter Koury; (3) to appoint a receiver to collect rents and moneys belonging to the complainants; (4) to discharge and deliver the mortgages and notes to the complainants if the respondents had received sufficient moneys to satisfy the mortgage indebtedness; and (5) to have the court determine the amount payable by them for a cancellation of the mortgages if the moneys received by the respondents did not satisfy such indebtedness. The bill also contained a prayer for such other and further relief as was prqper in the circumstances.

The cause was heard in the superior court on bill, answers and proof, in the course of which hearing numerous. exhibits were introduced in evidence by the respondents to account in detail for the moneys received and expended by them in managing the property. In a carefully prepared decision the trial justice found that by virtue of an assignment of rents, hereinafter referred to generally as the assignment, the bank and Sood were in effect mortgagees in possession with the duty to account to the mortgagor or his successors, these complainants; that there was no evidence *488 of mismanagement, overreaching, inaccuracy, fraud or misrepresentation by either respondent; that, with the exception of $640 expended by Sood for alterations in the nature of permanent improvements after the transfer of the mortgages and assignment to him, the respondents had in fact given to the complainants in open court a full, fair and accurate account of their management of the property under the assignment; that, as of. January 27, 1947, there was due and owing on the mortgages the sum of $15,003.90; that upon the payment of such sum by the complainants to Sood within a period of one month from the entry of a decree, in accordance with the decision, the mortgages, notes and assignment were to be returned to the complainants; and that in the meantime Sood was enjoined from disposing of the mortgages and assignment and from instituting foreclosure proceedings under the mortgages during said period of one month. From a decree incorporating these findings the complainants duly appealed to this court.

It appears in evidence that in 1918 Peter Koury acquired certain premises, consisting of five stores and five tenements, in the city of Woonsocket. The land was in a poor location and at the time of the hearing the buildings were over sixty years old. Between 1918 and 1925 Peter Koury executed three mortgages in the usual form, including a power of sale upon any default oh the mortgages, to the Mechanics Savings! Bank of Woonsocket for $4,500, $3,000 and $2,000, respectively. In 1928 these mortgages passed by transfer to the Rhode Island Hospital Trust Company, one of the present respondents, when the Mechanics Savings Bank merged with the said trust company.

In 1932 Peter Koury, being considerably in arrears in the payment of taxes and interest, agreed orally with the bank to turn over to it all the rents from the mortgaged premises, which rents the bank was to apply in paying the necessary expenses. This arrangement continued for a period of about four years, during which time the returns made by Koury were always insufficient to cover the expenses. The *489 result was that the bank made up the deficiencies and charged him therewith. Finally, in February 1935, the bank, apparently believing that Koury was not turning over all the rents, demanded and secured from him a formal assignment of rents. Thereafter the bank managed the property until April 19, 1946 when, after notice to the complainants, it transferred the mortgages and assignment for $8,500 to Sood, who, in June 1946, started foreclosure proceedings on the third mortgage, whereupon the present proceedings were instituted.

In view of complainants’ main contention, to which we will presently refer, it is necessary to mention in detail the language of the assignment. This instrument, dated February 18, 1935, recited the position of Peter Koury and the bank as mortgagor and mortgagee in the three mortgages hereinbefore mentioned, the existing default of the indebtedness, and the desire of Koury to avoid foreclosure. In consideration of the bank’s promise to refrain from instituting foreclosure proceedings under the mortgages “for such period as it may see fit to do so,” Koury assigned to the bank “its successors and assigns” the rents from the mortgaged premises “upon special trust,” to collect and apply those rents to the payment of the principal and interest of the indebtedness secured by the mortgages and other indebtedness of Koury to the bank in connection therewith; to pay all charges for taxes and insurance; and to make payments for such repairs as the bank “shall consider necessary for the proper preservation and maintenance of said mortgaged property * * (italics ours)

The instrument further provided that if there was “no principal, interest, taxes, assessments or insurance premiums due at the time when any of said rent shall be collected, or if at any time a surplus of rents remains of the rent so collected after the payment of all principal, interest, taxes, assessments or insurance premiums then due, to hold and accumulate said rents and apply the same to the payment of' such principal, interest, taxes, assessments, insurance *490 premiums, and payments for repairs which become due in the future as and when the same become due.” (italics ours) The instrument then provided that the assignment would continue in force and effect until the full payment of all sums secured by the mortgages.

Peter ,Koury died intestate April 11, 1940, leaving a widow and eight children, all adults, who are the complainants here. Since the complainants Alfred, Charles and George Koury invoke the benefits of the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Civil Relief Act of 1940,, as amended, it becomes necessary to mention the termination of their respective terms of service, which were as follows: Alfred, July 15, 1943; Charles, December 24, 1945; and George, January 10, 1946.

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Bluebook (online)
62 A.2d 649, 74 R.I. 486, 1948 R.I. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koury-v-sood-ri-1948.