McCarthy v. Emma

106 N.E.2d 497, 304 N.Y. 153
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 29, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 106 N.E.2d 497 (McCarthy v. Emma) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCarthy v. Emma, 106 N.E.2d 497, 304 N.Y. 153 (N.Y. 1952).

Opinions

Ftjld, J.

The owners of certain real property in the city of Elmira mortgaged it to plaintiff’s assignor in 1941. Taxes thereafter assessed against the premises having remained unpaid and in arrears, the property was sold by the city to defendant at a tax sale, and, fifteen months later, in November of 1948, he received a declaration of sale ” whereby the city granted him a lease for a fifty-year term. In 1950, the mortgagee sought to redeem the premises from the tax sale; his tender to effect such redemption was refused. There then followed this action, in which plaintiff seeks an adjudication that the declaration of sale is “ of no effect ”.

The rights of mortgagee and tax sale purchaser with respect to each other are set out in the Elmira City Charter (L. 1906, ch. 477). Section 58 of that statute deals with the delivery of a “ declaration of sale ” to the purchaser at a tax sale, with the leasehold estate to be granted him thereby, and with his right “ at the expiration of such term ” to remove any buildings or fixtures that may have been erected in that period. A declaration of sale, it provides, shall be delivered to the purchaser if the [156]*156real estate sold for taxes “ shall not be redeemed in fifteen months after the sale ”. During the fifteen-month interval between tax sale and the time fixed for delivery of the declaration of sale, section 61 recites, any “owner or claimant” may “ redeem ” the real estate so sold by paying the purchaser the amount paid by him at the tax sale plus other specified sums, and “ on such payment * * * the title acquired by such sale shall cease and determine.”

In order to accomplish a balance between the several economic interests represented by taxing authority, fee owner, mortgagee and purchaser at the tax sale, the legislature apparently took the view that, to allow a tax sale to destroy or affect the lien of a mortgage by the mere lapse of time — fifteen months in this instance — without more, would not afford proper protection to the mortgagee. Such a view was not without justification, since the assessment rolls are required to state the name of the owner and not the mortgage holder; since it is the owner, not the mortgagee, who in practice receives the bills for taxes; and since the obligation to pay the taxes is solely that of the owner, both by provision of the city charter and, invariably, by the terms of the mortgage. Accordingly, section 62 — following immediately the section defining the rights of an “ owner or claimant ” — was enacted to provide in its first sentence that “ No sale of real estate * * * for nonpayment of any tax * * * shall destroy, or in any manner affect, the lien of any mortgage thereon * * * except as hereinafter provided.” That sentence unequivocally reflects a purpose to ameliorate the adverse effect upon the lien of a mortgage that would otherwise result from a sale for taxes.

It is to the remaining three sentences of section 62 that we turn to find what is intended by the clause, “ except as hereinafter provided.” The second sentence declares that it “ shall be the duty of the purchaser ” to give to the mortgagee a written notice of the sale, “’requiring him to pay the amount of the purchase money, with interest * * * within six months after the giving of such notice.” The following sentence treats the case in which “ such payment ” is made by the mortgagee within six months after the purchaser, consonant with his “ duty ”, has given notice, and the fourth and last sentence, the case in which notice is given and the mortgagee fails to pay. If payment is made, the amount so paid is added to the amount of the mort[157]*157gage “ in like manner as if the same had been included ” therein, and the sale shall be of no further effect if the mortgagee fails to pay, the mortgagee “ shall not be entitled to the benefit of the last preceding section of this title ”, which, as already indicated, is the one dealing with the right of an “ owner or claimant ” to redeem.

It is conceded that the purchaser did not give the required notice, and our problem, therefore, is to determine the consequences of such omission. Plaintiff mortgagee maintains that by reason of that omission her right to nullify the tax sale, as prescribed in section 62, still persists. Defendant purchaser, on the other hand, contends that, despite his failure to give notice, the mortgagee’s right to nullify the sale expired at the end of fifteen ' months — although, he asserts, such failure resulted in subordinating his interest as purchaser to the lien of the mortgage.

Upon defendant’s motion for summary judgment, the court at Special Term decided in his favor, and the Appellate Division unanimously affirmed; both courts held that defendant’s title is subject to the lien of plaintiff’s mortgage and that such title could be extinguished by foreclosure of the mortgage. We are unable to agree with that determination and venture the thought that the unusual spectacle here presented of a contest between two interests, each claiming to be subordinate to the other, may well have been responsible for the result attained by the courts below.

It is well established that unpaid taxes constitute a lien upon the real estate against which they are assessed prior and superior to that of any mortgage. (See, e.g., Lee v. Farone, 261 App. Div. 674, 676, affd. 288 N. Y. 517.) And, when that lien is transmuted into a tax title or a tax lease upon a sale for taxes, the interest so derived is likewise paramount to the lien of a pre-existing mortgage and cannot be cut off or extinguished by its foreclosure. (See Erie Co. Sav. Bank v. Schuster, 187 N. Y. 111, 114-115; Cromwell v. MacLean, 123 N. Y. 474; Stevens v. Breen, 258 App. Div. 423, affd. 283 N. Y. 196; Middle Is. Land & Water Co. v. Greis Co., 86 N. Y. S. 2d 282, affd. 274 App. Div. 998; Gillespie v. Board of Supervisors of Broome Co., 178 Misc. 890, 891-893; see, also, 3 Weed, New York Real Property [3d ed., 1938], p. 1627.) That it suits defendant’s purposes to pay plaintiff’s mortgage rather than [158]*158permit plaintiff to pay him his statutory due — which would deprive him of his bargain purchase — should not lead us to deviate from settled principles or to overrule sound holdings.

The proposition that the tax sale did not per se affect, either favorably or adversely, the lien of plaintiff’s mortgage, cannot be disputed (Elmira City Charter, § 62, 1st sentence). Before the sale, the mortgagee had the right to pay taxes in arrears (see, e.g., Sidenberg v. Ely, 90 N. Y. 257, 262; see, also, Real Property Law, § 254, subd. 6), and that right — which is all a mortgagee’s right to redeem amounts to — was specifically made to survive a tax sale by section 62. It continues until barred in accordance with the terms of that section. To say that, even if and when the mortgagee is deprived of that right to redeem, the mortgage lien remains unaffected, because the right to foreclose the mortgage as against the owner’s reversionary interest happens in this case to survive the tax sale, is to blind oneself to reality. Since the estate derived through the tax sale cannot be extinguished by the foreclosure and since the sale upon such foreclosure must be subject to the rent-free fifty-year lease acquired upon the tax sale, the right to foreclose is little more than illusory. Under the circumstances, therefore, to deprive the mortgagee of the right to redeem affects the lien of his mortgage in a most substantial way.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Knopf v. Esposito
S.D. New York, 2021
In re Foreclosure of Tax Liens
107 A.D.3d 989 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 N.E.2d 497, 304 N.Y. 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccarthy-v-emma-ny-1952.