Pratt v. Stiles
This text of 9 Abb. Pr. 150 (Pratt v. Stiles) 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.
Opinion
The decision of the [154]*154referee, that the mortgagor was entitled to redeem, was clearly right. Though the mortgagee has the legal title, and the law-day has passed for the payment of the money specified in the mortgage, yet, until foreclosure or sale, the right of redemption clearly exists in equity. If the mortgagee sells the property, he will be liable to refund the excess over the mortgage debt to the mortgagor. (3 Den., 33 ; 13 Barb., 630 ; 2 Story's Eq. Jur., § 1031.) But the bill to redeem must be brought within a reasonable time. (1 Ves., 278 ; 2 Johns. Ch., 100.)
No error, I think, was committed by the referee on the trial or decision of the cause. The question of costs was within his discretion, and I think it was rightly disposed of by him. The entire difficulty in the case, as now presented to the court, arises from the proceedings subsequent to the decision and report of the referee, upon the merits. The whole action, and all the issues therein, were referred to the referee for trial. He tried the cause upon the issues presented, and determined that the plaintiff was entitled to redeem, and ascertained and declared the amount he should pay to perfect such redemption, and decided that the plaintiff should recover the costs of the suit, and made, and signed, and delivered his report, directing final judgment. This terminated the jurisdiction and powers of the referee.
[155]*155After he had so made and delivered his report, the plaintiff applied to the court, at special term, upon notice and upon an affidavit, simply setting out that the referee had made his report, [156]*156and that it appeared, on the trial, that the defendants had had the possession and use of the horses named in the complaint, since the action was commenced, that the referee had charged the plaintiff with interest on the mortgage debt, but had not allowed any thing or provided any allowance for the use of the horses, and obtained an order referring it back to the referee, to take an account of the reasonable value of the use of the horses in question, from, the time of the commencement of the action.
Such order was executed, and the case on this appeal contains the proceedings and evidence upon such reference. The referee made a second report, in pursuance of such order, and final judgment was entered up, upon his direction contained in the two reports, and in conformity therewith.
The appeal from the judgment necessarily brings up for review the whole proceedings before the referee, and every thing which has entered into or formed part of the judgment, And the defendants’ exceptions are sufficiently broad to cover all the questions relating to such proceedings.
The right to redeem personal property, as much as real estate, carries with it the right to have an account of the rents and profits of the mortgaged property while the mortgagee has been in possession, and pending the litigation up to the time of making the final decree. If this were not so, this right of redemption would, in most cases, prove a very barren right. The claim to redeem would be, in many cases, entirely defeated by a protracted litigation, if the law were otherwise. (II If. Y. If, 84.)
The right to have such an accounting, in respect to the rents and profits of the mortgaged premises or property, is incident to the right of redemption, and is part of the relief ordinarily given in such cases. It was within the scope of the duties of the referee to take such an accounting before the making the final deei’ee. It was part of the proceedings pertaining to the trial of the main issues before him, and essential to enable the refez-ee to do complete justice to the parties. If this case had been tried by one of the judges of this court at special term, I think, where the cause had so far proceeded that the judge was satisfied that the plaintiff was entitled to redeem, he would have made an interlocutoz’y order or decree to that effect, and [157]*157referred it to a referee to take and state an account of the amount due the mortgagor upon the original indebtedness, and an account of the use and profits of the property since the mortgagee took possession thereof. On the coming in of the referee’s report upon these matters, a final decree or judgment would have been ordered.
The difficulty in cases like the present, where the whole issues are referred to a referee, is to determine the manner in which he should proceed. In Palmer a. Palmer (13 Sow. Sr. S., 363), we held that it was within the discretion of the referee, and within his powers in a case in principle like this, to determine how he would conduct the trial.
In that case, which was a case of partnership, I suggested that the referee might make a special or separate report upon [158]*158the main issue before taking the account. In this case, when he had determined that the plaintiff was entitled to redeem, I think he might have announced it, and that it would have been proper practice for him to have done so, and then, upon proper notice to the parties, to have proceeded to take the account in regard to the use and profits of the horses, and report what was due plaintiff, and determine upon the whole account what was justly and equitably due to the defendants, or to either of them upon such redemption, over and above a just allowance for the use of the horses. It does not appear that the referee was asked to take any such account. The plaintiff,'I think, should have offered this proof, and, if the referee had refused to take it, it would have been a good ground of exception.
Hot having made any such offer or request, and having gone through with the trial, and taken the referee’s report upon the issues referred, I do not see any way in which the question can regularly be raised, except upon an application for a new trial. The report of the referee upon the whole case stands as the judgment of the court. It must be reviewed upon exceptions, like any decision of the court, at the circuit or special term, on the trial of a cause. The court, doubtless, had the power to set it aside for any irregularity, or to open the case for retrial before the referee, on the ground of surprise, mistake, or newly-discovered evidence. This is the only mode in which the omission of the referee, to take the account of the use and value of the horses, can now be rectified. The order of the court, referring it back to the referee to take such an account, I think, was an irregularity. The whole case must be opened for retrial before the referee, upon a proper proceeding, on application to the court for that purpose. If the plaintiff seeks to remedy the omission of the referee to take an account of the profits, &c., before the making of his original report, I can see no warrant for the course of proceeding adopted in this case, and think that the judgment should be reversed, and all proceedings, since the original report of the referee, made on the 29th of March, 1858, without prejudice to the rights of the plaintiff, to make such application to the court for relief as he may be advised. The question of costs should be also reserved, to be disposed of by the court upon any such application, if one is made.
J udgment reversed.
Present, T. E. Strong, Johnson, and E, D. Smith, JJ.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
9 Abb. Pr. 150, 17 How. Pr. 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pratt-v-stiles-nysupct-1859.