Lomas & Nettleton Co v. DiFrancesco

164 A. 495, 116 Conn. 253, 1933 Conn. LEXIS 29
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 14, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 164 A. 495 (Lomas & Nettleton Co v. DiFrancesco) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lomas & Nettleton Co v. DiFrancesco, 164 A. 495, 116 Conn. 253, 1933 Conn. LEXIS 29 (Colo. 1933).

Opinion

Hinman, J.

The stipulation united in by all the parties for the purpose of determining priorities and law days for the several defendants discloses the following facts: September 28th, 1925, the defendant DiFrancesco executed to the plaintiff as trustee the mortgage being foreclosed, which covered a tract of land in New Haven. January 14th, 1929, DiFrancesco executed a mortgage to Edward C. Kennedy and Loretta D. Kennedy covering a portion of the same premises, which portion we hereafter refer to as Parcel A. March 22d, 1928, DiFrancesco executed a lease to the defendant Abraham Shapiro, of the remaining part of the premises, which we refer to as Parcel B. September 28th, 1929, DiFrancesco executed a mortgage to the defendant Straguzzi covering all the property described in plaintiff’s mortgage. October 22d, 1931, the Kennedys brought an action to foreclose *256 their mortgage, making Straguzzi a party defendant, and by judgment in that action title to Parcel A vested in them on January 8th, 1932. At the time the present action was instituted, Parcel A was still owned by and in the possession of the Kennedys without encumbrances except taxes and the plaintiff’s mortgage, and Parcel B was still owned by the defendant DiFrancesco subject to taxes, the lease to Shapiro and the mortgage held by Straguzzi. In the judgment, the redemption dates were fixed in the following order: DiFrancesco, Straguzzi, Shapiro, the Kennedys.

The appellant, Straguzzi, assigns as error that the defendants DiFrancesco and the Kennedys were not given the same redemption date, claiming that as tenants in common or joint tenants they had a joint right of redemption. Lyon v. Robbins, 45 Conn. 513; Seymour v. Davis, 35 Conn. 264. These defendants were not owners in common of the whole tract, but each had a separate interest in a part of it. But, assuming that owners of separate portions of a mortgaged tract do ordinarily have an equal obligation to discharge the mortgage debt and should be given the same law day, it does not follow that the rule applies in this case. When DiFrancesco, having mortgaged the property to the plaintiff, placed upon a portion of it the mortgage to the Kennedys, he assumed an obligation to them to protect their security from being taken away by the foreclosure of the plaintiff’s mortgage. Desiderio v. Iadonisi, 115 Conn. 652, 163 Atl. 254. Their right to that protection was' an equity adhering to the interest they acquired by their mortgage. Had DiFrancesco thereafter conveyed his equity of redemption, his grantee, .taking with notice, would have been bound by the same obligation to the Kennedys. When he created an interest in the property in Straguzzi by his mortgage to him, Straguzzi took *257 that interest burdened with the equity in favor of the Kennedys. Bernhardt v. Lymburner, 85 N. Y. 172, 175. Hence, had it not been for the foreclosure of the Kennedys’ mortgage, the order of redemption would unquestionably have been DiFrancesco, Straguzzi, the Kennedys. The effect of that decree of foreclosure was not to give the Kennedys a title to the land foreclosed, but to cut off the right of DiFrancesco and Straguzzi to redeem and to that extent to make absolute in them the title which before had been conditional. Goodman v. White, 26 Conn. 317, 323; Colwell v. Warner, 36 Conn. 224, 234. There was nothing in that foreclosure proceeding which destroyed the Kennedys’ equity to have precedence over DiFrancesco and Straguzzi in the obligation to redeem the plaintiff’s mortgage. The fact that the Kennedys thereafter had an unconditional title to only a portion of the tract included in the plaintiff’s mortgage does not change the rule, because that portion was subject to the whole mortgage debt and they were as much entitled to have it protected as though their mortgage had been of the entire tract. If this were not so, the situation would be that the failure of Straguzzi to redeem on the foreclosure of the Kennedys’ mortgage would have placed him in a more advantageous position than he 'previously occupied. Such a result would be anomalous and inequitable.

The appellant also invokes the rule stated in 2 Jones, Mortgages (8th Ed.) § 897: “The holder of a junior mortgage upon one of two lots embraced in a prior mortgage may compel the prior mortgagee to resort in the first place to the other lot, upon which there is no other encumbrance.” Of this rule, we said in Andreas v. Hubbard, 50 Conn. 351, 364: “The rule as one of equity is well settled, and is easy of application where mortgaged property is sold on foreclosure, *258 as is done in most of our sister states, but the same result would be reached more circuitously under our own law.” Under our law, the mortgagee is ordinarily entitled to appropriate to the payment of the debt all the land included in the mortgage, unless some party redeems. Waters v. Hubbard, 44 Conn. 340, 349. It is, of course, true that a mortgagee is only entitled to the payment of the debt owing him, including such incidental charges as he may add to it, and when he has appropriated property sufficient in value to discharge that debt, he is in equity entitled to no more. Desiderio v. Iadonisi, supra. If, upon proper pleadings, the holder of a junior mortgage upon one of two lots covered by a mortgage being foreclosed can prove that by the appropriation of the lot not included in his mortgage, the mortgage being foreclosed will be fully paid and discharged, it may be that the court would be justified, in the absence of other controlling equities, in restricting the foreclosure to that lot. But in the absence of such proof, there is no way under our law by which a decree in favor of the foreclosing mortgagee can be restricted to less than the whole land included in his mortgage. There can be no apportionment of the debt without the consent of the foreclosing mortgagee, but any party redeeming must pay it all. Franklin v. Gorham, 2 Day, 142; Young v. Williams, 17 Conn. 393, 397; Lyon v. Robbins, 45 Conn. 513, 524. An owner or mortgagee of a. part interest in the land foreclosed, having paid the debt, will be subrogated to the rights of the foreclosing mortgagee, so far as to enable him to protect any equities he may have, to place a portion or the whole of the burden upon the owner or mortgagee of a separate interest in it. Young v. Williams, and Lyon v. Robins, supra; Delaware & Hudson Canal Co.’s Appeal, 38 Pa. St. 512, 516. Upon proper plead *259 ings, any such right between the defendants in a foreclosure action might be determined in that proceeding. But, however the equity which we are discussing may be worked out, it is obvious that it can be done in a foreclosure action only where proper pleadings have been filed. Sanford v. Hill, 46 Conn. 42, 64. Not only in this case were no such pleadings filed, but the record bears out the contention of the appellees that the point was not raised at the trial.

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Bluebook (online)
164 A. 495, 116 Conn. 253, 1933 Conn. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lomas-nettleton-co-v-difrancesco-conn-1933.