Martorano v. Spicola Ex Rel. Spicola

148 So. 585, 110 Fla. 55
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMay 4, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 148 So. 585 (Martorano v. Spicola Ex Rel. Spicola) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martorano v. Spicola Ex Rel. Spicola, 148 So. 585, 110 Fla. 55 (Fla. 1933).

Opinion

Davis, C. J.

This case is on appeal from an order of the Circuit Court denying motion for defendants' in a foreclosure case for vacation of an order appointing a receiver for the mortgaged property without notice and without a substantial showing of necessity therefor. We have considered this appeal in consonance with an original prohibition proceeding filed by defendants in connection with 'the supersedeas allowed herein.. See State ex rel. Martorano v. Robles, Circuit Judge, decided at the present term.

The bill of complaint showed that the mortgaged property consisted entirely of real estate upon which was situate a dwelling house occupied by the mortgagors. The mortgage sued on contained a provision reading as follows: “It is mutually covenanted and agreed that the party of the second part upon the breach of any of the covenants of this mortgage shall have the right upon the institution of foreclosure proceedings without'notice to secure the appointment of a receiver for the said prenrises' and the rents, issues and profits thereof to be held by the said receiver for the payment of the indebtedness secured, hereby and for any other purposes as may be ordered by the Court in such proceedings.”

The bill of complaint after alleging a breach of the mortgage as to payment of taxes and assessments and of installments due on the mortgage debt, set up the fact that the defendant, Cosmo Martorano, and his wife insolvent and *57 unable to respond to any deficiency judgment that might be entered; that the mortgaged property would not bring enough money when sold to pay the mortgage indebtedness and costs and that it was necessary that a receiver be appointed with full power to assume possession of the mortgaged dwelling house occupied by defendants, to rent or to collect rent thereon from the defendants as occupants. The court without notice appointed a receiver and directed him to take possession of the described land immediately, and collect rents therefrom, whether same be occupied by the defendant, Cosmo Martarano, and his wife or others, and to rent the same when vacancy occurs. Defendants filed motion to set aside said receivership order on the ground that no authority had been shown authorizing the court to make such an order upon the ex parte application of complainants, especially since the property as described in the mortgage was not the property occupied by defendants, although the mortgage was intended to cover such property and reformation was prayed for in the bill to adjudge that it had such effect. The motion was denied and it is from the latter order that this appeal is taken.

When a mortgage pledges the rents and profits and consents to the appointment of a receiver upon default, such provisions, while not controlling upon the courts, should be accorded due weight, and may in many cases authorize the appointment of a receiver where without them the application will be denied. And even where the mortgage contains no express pledge of the rents and profits, the possession of the mortgagor may be subordinated to the equitable rights of the mortgagee and a receiver of the rents and profits appointed, where the mortgagor is in default and is insolvent and the security inadequate. Carolina Portland Cement Company v. Baumgartner, 99 Fla. 987, 128 Sou. Rep. 241; Cone-Otwell-Wilson Corp. v. Commodore’s Point *58 Terminal Company, 94 Fla. 448, 114 Sou. Rep. 232; McEwen v. Grocers Loan & Guaranty Co. (Fla.) 139 Sou. Rep. 805.

But this Court is committed to the rule that a bill asking the appointment of a receiver without notice to the party whose rights are to be affected, should set forth with particularity the facts and circumstances relied on to justify an ex parte exercise of this extraordinary power. Fricker v. Peters 21 Fla. 254.

Rules 46 and 47 of the Rules Governing Circuit Courts in Chancery proceedings expressly provide that in all cases of applications for the appointment of receivers, the judge to whom presented, before granting same, shall be satisfied that sufficient notice of the application has been given to the party whose property is sought to be adversely affected, and no order for the appointment of a receiver shall be granted without such notice, unless it is manifest to such judge, from the sworn allegations of the bill, or affidavit of the complainant or other competent person, that the injury apprehended will be done if the immediate remedy of a receivership is not afforded. This Court has held that it is error to appoint a receiver without such notice as is required by Circuit Court rules 46 and 47, unless upon the conditions expressly provided for in such rules. Jones v. Rakestraw, 59 Fla. 537, 51 Sou. Rep. 927; Jacksonville Ferry Co. v. Stockton, 40 Fla. 141, 23 Sou. Rep. 557.

The only injury “apprehended” in the case now before us was the loss of the rents of the property being foreclosed upon, pending the hearing and disposition of an application for a receiver. The bill of complaint showed that the property in question was in the city of Tampa and that the defendants themselves were in actual occupancy of a dwelling house located upon the same. No showing w-as made, nor attempted to be made, in excuse of not giving the notice *59 contemplated by the rules' governing applications for re-ceiverships, except that the' mortgage being foreclosed gave the mortgagee the right “upon the institution of foreclosure proceedings without notice to secure the appointment of a receiver.”

Conceding arguendo that the stipulation in the mortgage would be sufficient to warrant the appointment of a receiver without notice upon a showing that the mortgaged property had been abandoned, or that it was being wasted or destroyed through the mortgagor’s neglect of it, it cannot be" said that the stipulation per se authorizes a court of equity in awarding, without compliance with rules 46 and 47 hereinbefore mentioned, what is in effect a writ of possession for the mortgaged property in advance of a decree of foreclosure, by the appointment of a receiver without notice for the purpose of ousting mortgagors from their actual occupancy of a dwelling house on the mortgaged land, when it is not shown that the mortgaged dwelling house on the mortgaged land, when it is not shown that the mortgaged dwelling house would be placed in jeopardy of destruction or irreparable injury result, should notice of the application for appointment of a receiver be given as required by the rules. The policy of our law is to allow the mortgagor of a dwelling house to continue his occupancy of it until after a decree of foreclosure shall have been entered and a sale of the mortgaged property made and confirmed. It should not be lightly presumed that a stipulation for appointment of a receiver without notice is applicable where the property involved is a dwelling house in the actual occupancy of the mortgagors and not being used nor offered for use as rental property. This is especially true where, as in this case, the stipulation is not unambiguously to such effect in terms.

Where mortgaged property is actually occupied by the *60

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Bluebook (online)
148 So. 585, 110 Fla. 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martorano-v-spicola-ex-rel-spicola-fla-1933.