Lobsenz v. Micucci Holdings, Inc.

303 A.2d 335, 123 N.J. Super. 392, 1973 N.J. Super. LEXIS 627
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMarch 30, 1973
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 303 A.2d 335 (Lobsenz v. Micucci Holdings, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lobsenz v. Micucci Holdings, Inc., 303 A.2d 335, 123 N.J. Super. 392, 1973 N.J. Super. LEXIS 627 (N.J. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

Koi/e, J. S. C.

The sheriff’s sale in this mortgage foreclosure action took place on February 5, 1973. The mortgagee in possession was the purchaser at the sale.

On February 20, 1973 the moving party herein, Sic & Due, Inc., obtained an assignment from the mortgagor of certain items of personal property and “the premises located at 33-35 Monroe St., Garfield, N. J.,” the property in question. The consideration stated in the assignment is $5,000.

It is admitted, however, that the payment of the aforesaid $5,000 is contingent upon this court’s allowing the assignee to redeem. The mortgagor has received no moneys for the assignment and will receive none unless there is court approval of the relief sought by Sic & Due, Inc. — i. e., allowing it to exercise the mortgagor’s right of redemption. It should also be noted that the sum of $5,000 is not apportioned between the personal property and the premises in question. The “personal property” consists of several items which, taken together, apparently represent a heating system of indeterminate value on the facts presented but which was apparently 100% financed when installed.

[394]*394Sic & Due seeks, as assignee of the mortgagor’s rights in the subject premises, to stand in the mortgagor’s, shoes in order to exercise the post-sale right of redemption recognized in Hardyston Nat'l Bank v. Tartamella, 56 N. J. 508 (1970). Under Hardyston the mortgagor is permitted to redeem “within the ten-day period fixed by B. 4:65-5 for objections to the sale and until an order confirming the sale if objections are filed under the rule.” (At 513).

B. 4:65-5 directs the sheriff to deliver a deed pursuant to the sale “unless a motion for the hearing of an objection to the sale is served upon him within 10 days after the sale or at any time thereafter before the delivery of the conveyance.”

There is a question here as to whether an “objection” was filed under the rule within the meaning of the Hardyston ease and, therefore, whether movant is out of time to redeem under the rule and Hardyston. This issue need not be dealt with since the purchaser at the foreclosure sale (who is also the-mortgagee), in opposing the redemption in this case, has not raised the issue. In view of the more significant question of policy hereinafter discussed, I shall assume, without deciding, that the movant has acted in time. Again, I shall assume, without deciding, the validity of the assignment of the- mortgagor’s interest in the real estate to the movant.'

In Hardyston the Supreme Court determined, as a matter of policy, that the mortgagor should be permitted to redeem his property after a foreclosure sale. In so holding the court observed:

“The situations are probably rare in which a mortgagor can profitably assert a right to redeem after the sheriff’s sale, but the right should be his unless some public interest would be significantly offended.”

I, of course, have sympathy for a defaulting mortgagor who will come out $5,000 ahead by being permitted to redeem. But such sympathy should not blind the court to the implications of the contingency type of assignment of the right to redeem here involved.

[395]*395I conclude that in the present case allowing redemption would significantly offend a public interest — the exception stated by Hardyston. The principal of Sic & Due was present at the foreclosure sale, but did not bid. Subsequent to the sale he visited the mortgagee who had purchased the property at the sale and obtained information on the approximate rents and some expenses of the premises. Armed with this knowledge Sic & Due’s representative apparently considered the property a good investment. Some 15 days after the sale he obtained an assignment of the mortgagor’s rights in the premises for $5,000 contingent upon court approval of the transaction.

In effect, then, Sic & Due seeks court approval of a contingent private sale, negotiated with the mortgagor, of his right to redeem after the public sale, made with knowledge of the maximum bid and income and expense figures (obtained after the sheriff’s sale) and free from any competitive bids. The court’s approval of this practice could, in my view, seriously impede the judicial process in mortgage foreclosures and lend aid to disruption of orderly mortgage foreclosure sale procedures by speculators in mortgagors’ rights.

The situation presented seems closely akin to that which confronted the Supreme Court in Bron v. Weintraub, 42 N. J. 87 (1964). Bron involved certain speculators who had learned of a defect in the title to lands that had arisen some 20 years earlier in a tax foreclosure proceeding. The speculators had obtained quit-claim deeds from the heirs in whom title apparently lay, for a nominal amount. The Supreme Court condemned, on public policy grounds, the intrusion by third persons seeking only to further their own interests to the detriment of existing interests of owners of the land. In reaching its conclusion the court noted that, as distinguished from the initial sale for taxes, to which the statute seeks to attract third parties by means of public notice, there is no like policy to invite the public to participate with respect to the foreclosure of the right to redeem. Rather, the foreclosure process concerns only the holder of the tax sale [396]*396certificate and the holders of existing interests in the property. 42 N. J. at 92.

On the facts in Bron it appeared that the speculators had learned of the title defect by virtue of a published notice intended to give notice to the heirs who might claim an interest in the premises and who could not be located for normal service. As the speculators had done nothing “illegal” under existing statute or case law, the householders seeking to quiet title to their properties appealed to public policy. After discussing the ever-changing dimensions of the concept of public policy, and conceding that no precedent was precisely in point, the court declared that “public policy is more than a mere summation of its past applications.” Finally, the court quoted from Latham v. Father Divine, 299 N. 7. 22, 85 N. E. 2d 168, at 170, 11 A. L. R. 2d 802 (Ct. App. 1949), as to the applicability of the concept of a constructive trust as being “limited only by the inventiveness of men who find new ways to enrich themselves unjustly by grasping what should not belong to them.” Concluding that the common conscience undoubtedly condemns the conduct of the speculators before the court, a constructive trust was imposed on the lands in question for the benefit of the homeowners, subject only to reimbursement of the $400 paid by the speculators to the heirs.

It should be observed that Bron involved substantial improvements to the lands in question by the homeowners in reliance on their title, many of which might have been lost had the speculators prevailed. In other words, there were significant equities in favor of the homeowners in Bron. Nonetheless, the holding has been interpreted as being based on public policy, not on a balancing of the equities. See Harvey v. Orland Properties, Inc., 108 N. J. Super. 493 (Ch. Div. 1970), aff’d 118 N. J. Super. 104 (App. Div. 1972).1

[397]*397In addition, as noted in

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388 A.2d 260 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1978)

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Bluebook (online)
303 A.2d 335, 123 N.J. Super. 392, 1973 N.J. Super. LEXIS 627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lobsenz-v-micucci-holdings-inc-njsuperctappdiv-1973.