McLean v. Tompkins

18 Abb. Pr. 24
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 18 Abb. Pr. 24 (McLean v. Tompkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McLean v. Tompkins, 18 Abb. Pr. 24 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1857).

Opinion

Strong, J.

Ordinarily, a plaintiff in an action for the foreclosure of a mortgage, has a right to a judgment for the sale of the mortgaged premises for the satisfaction of his secured debt, without being delayed or troubled by the conflicting claims of those having subsequent liens, incumbrances, or estates. But the sole object of his suit is to obtain satisfaction of such debt, including the payment of his costs. That being accomplished, he can have no further claim. When he has paid to him or tendered to him the full amount due, and, when the circumstances require it, a satisfactory indemnity against any future damage is offered, he can make no equitable or effectual resistance to a claim for subrogation in behalf of any one who has an interest in the property, which can only be saved by, or which would be seriously endangered without, the proposed substitution. The plaintiff’s rights in this cáse are not at all extended by reason of his holding a third mortgage, given subsequent to the grant of an easement to the ferry company. The proprietor of an easement cannot surely be prejudiced by any one who has subsequently been at an expense for the improvement of the land to which it is attached.

[27]*27But it seems to me that all whose interests may be affected by the proposed subrogation have a right to be heard before it is granted. Although they may have been willing that their interests should be controlled by the plaintiff, so far as the collection of his debt might require, they might have serious, and, in some instances, well founded objections to the transfer of such power to another and rival claimant. It is undoubtedly right that defendants in a suit who do not appear should be concluded, without the service of any other notice upon them than the primary process, in all proceedings which they had reason to anticipate. But the subrogation of one plaintiff for another, and particularly when he who is thus substituted, was originally a defendant, has no identity with the action as it has been instituted and made known to the defendant. He should not, therefore, be affected by the ultra proceedings without having an opportunity to be heard.

The want of a notice for an original hearing to which a party is entitled, cannot be cured by a subsequent motion to vacate an order which may have been made, or by an appeal from such order. There is no rule that such motion or appeal is a waiver of the want of notice, nor should there be.

Both orders should be set aside, for the reason that some of the defendants who now object to them had no notice of the original motion; but with liberty to the Ferry Company to renew the motion at special term on the service of notice upon all their co-defendants, and upon the plaintiff, and the stay of proceedings should be continued until the further order of this court. The Ferry Company should, if required, give to the plaintiff satisfactory security for the eventual payment of his judgment, to be approved by a justice of this court, and a provision for such security should be included in the order. The Ferry Company, as a condition of renewing the motion, must pay the costs and expenses of the advertisement of sale, and the costs of the appellants in the court below, on the appeals.

Birdseye and Brown, JJ., concurred.

II. April, 1857.—Renewal of motion by the Ferry Company for a subrogation.

[28]*28Immediately after the foregoing decision, the Ferry Company renewed its motion at special term pursuant to leave reserved.

John Van Buren and Lot C. Clark, for the motion.

Theodore C. Vermilye and Charles A. Rapallo, opposed.

Birdseye, J.

I do not deem it necessary, in deciding this motion, to make any order which shall dispose finally of the main question which has been argued in the case, viz.: The validity or invalidity of the grant to the Ferry Company under the deed of November 25th, 1853.

As the order first made for the subrogation was originally drawn, it allowed the mortgaged premises, in one event, to be sold subject to the easement claimed by the Ferry Company, under their deed. A purchase on such terms would have estopped the purchaser from ever raising the question of the validity of the grant.

Before such disability could be imposed upon the subsequent encumbrancers, or the mortgagor, it would be necessary to examine the deed, to weigh, with a care commensurate with the importance of the interests and the questions involved, the objections to its validity, and to decide them all in favor of the company. If that course were necessary to the proper decision of this application, I should have great difficulty in retaining the motion for decision. Interests of such magnitude, and equities so complicated ought not to be passed upon on a mere non-enumerated motion. They deserve to be brought before the court by a regular action, in which all the parties in interest shall be joined as parties, and have full opportunities to set forth their rights by pleading, and to sustain them by proofs. It is true there is no defect of power to dispose of such questions on motion. From the very nature of the case, where relief is asked by motion upon a state of facts involving those questions, they must be investigated if the motion is to be decided. Releases may be set aside, deeds, and even judgments, may be overturned by the court, upon the decision of motions and and without the aid of a jury. (Ferris a. Crawford, 2 Den., 604.) But the court may, in its discretion, direct, that instead of the informal procedure by motion, the matter shall be heard [29]*29by action, with all the attendant facilities, afforded by pleadings, and the oral examinations of witnesses, and appeals, for the due administration of justice in cases of difficulty and importance. Such a discretion, as already stated, I should exercise in this case, if the judgment of the court were to follow the arguments of counsel, and decide all the questions which have been discussed.

It seems to me, however, sufficient to hold at present, that the Ferry Company have shown a right, prima facie, to be substituted in the place of the plaintiff with reference to the judgment in this action, on paying him in full the amount due him thereon, for principal, interest, and costs.

When the plaintiff has received that sum, he cannot longer demand the assistance of the court, and may properly be required to yield his place to another claimant. Such claimant, however, can only take the plaintiff’s place and acquire his rights to the security in question. The order which places the Ferry Company in the place of the plaintiff, with respect to the plaintiff’s judgment, only affirms that the Company have an apparent equity which may be saved from sacrifice if they will pay the prior lien. It need not, and it should not, establish ultimately the validity of that equity against all other parties. The Ferry Company, therefore, on being subrogated to the plaintiff’s position, can sell only in the same manner, and on the same terms as the plaintiff can now sell. To allow them to sell subject to the lien sought to be created in and by the deed of November 25, 1853, is to affirm the validity of that lien, as against all the parties to this action, and, though as already stated, that question might be, it ought not to be, disposed of on a motion like the present.

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Bluebook (online)
18 Abb. Pr. 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclean-v-tompkins-nysupct-1857.