Stehl v. Uris

210 A.D. 444, 206 N.Y.S. 296, 1924 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6753
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedOctober 31, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 210 A.D. 444 (Stehl v. Uris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stehl v. Uris, 210 A.D. 444, 206 N.Y.S. 296, 1924 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6753 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

McAvoy, J.:

The question here is thus stated by appellant: “ Where foreclosures were begun without claiming an individual liability against an executor, and such foreclosures resulted in sales producing deficiencies; and furthermore the plaintiff’s testator acquired the properties through and subsequent to such foreclosures, more than a decade ago, and not having at any time in such foreclosures suggested any personal claim against these executors, will leave be granted at this late date to begin an action to hold such executors to such alleged personal liability? ”

There are two causes of action stated in the complaint, based on an alleged personal promise to pay contained in mortgage extension agreements, and the causes of action are practically identical.

[445]*445In April, 1907, Isaac Levy and Simon Weinstein jointly executed a bond for $9,000 due in April, 1909. This bond was the usual bond to accompany a mortgage on real estate (507 West One Hundred and Thirty-eighth street, New York city). This Simon Weinstein, one of the obligors, is the testator of defendant (the appellant here). He died on February 19, 1909, and letters testamentary were thereafter issued on April 12, 1909. Appellant Krulewitch and the other executors of Weinstein signed an agreement extending the time for the payment of this $9,000 mortgage for three years, to the 5th day of April, 1912. The procuring of this extension was for the benefit of their testator’s estate and had no personal advantage. The defendant is claimed to be liable for $9,000 and interest on this instrument in the first cause of action, and in the second cause of action there is a similar demand. The instrument shows on its face that these defendants executed the same in their capacity as executors and trustees. It shows on its face that it was an extension of the time to pay a debt created by the testator himself and not by the defendant. The original security is unimpaired.

The debt was not one created by these defendants either individually or as executors. It was a debt originally created by the decedent Weinstein in his lifetime, and these defendants simply agreed, while executors and trustees and in possession of the property as such, to an extension of the time of payment of the mortgage debt, the extension agreement containing nothing to suggest any intent on their part to make themselves personally liable nor any desire on the part of the obligee, the plaintiffs’ testator here, to exact any personal liability from the executors.

On November 29, 1911, plaintiffs’ testator began a foreclosure of said mortgage, filing a notice of pendency of that action on that date for that purpose. The defendants here were described by their names, adding the words “ as executors of and as trustees under the last will and testament of Simon Weinstein, deceased.” The complaint that was filed to accompany this Us pendens contained a caption which- described the defendants in the same manner. Prayer for judgment contained no request to hold these executors to any personal liability based on the extension agreement or any other agreement but on the contrary distinctly showed that any claim for a deficiency was for a deficiency against the estate and the estate only, for they used the following language in the prayer for judgment: “And that the defendant * * * and Emanuel

M. Krulewitch, as executors of and trustees under the last will and testament of Simon Weinstein, deceased, be adjudged to pay any deficiency which may remain * *

The plaintiffs’ testator, Edward It. Stehl, procured the appoint-[446]*446meat of a receiver of the rents. This mortgage was a junior mortgage, and after the receiver was appointed nothing was done except to leave the receiver in possession and collect rents, until about two and one-quarter years thereafter when Benjamin Mordecai, the first mortgagee, started an action to foreclose the first mortgage on the premises.

In the first mortgage foreclosure these defendants were joined only as executors and trustees. This first mortgage foreclosure was prosecuted to a decree of foreclosure and sale. There was a deficiency exceeding $2,000 on the first mortgage. The report of the referee to sell recites: There remains a deficiency * * * for which, according to said judgment, the defendants Harris H. Uris, Adolph Hirshfeld and Emanuel M. Rrulewitch as executors of and under the last will and testament of Simon Weinstein, deceased, are liable.”

No personal judgment has ever been entered on this first mortgage foreclosure for the deficiency, nor has any attempt been made by the plaintiffs’ testator or by the plaintiffs here to prosecute the second mortgage action which he started, to a judgment for a deficiency against these defendants either as executors or individually.

The foreclosure of the other property, 511 West One Hundred and Thirty-eighth street, took the same course. That is, as the record shows, the action to foreclose was started June 24, 1912 (six months after the other one); a receiver was appointed for the rents; no personal judgment for deficiency was claimed; the matter was allowed to rest until 1914, when the first mortgagee on that parcel also started foreclosure, prosecuted same to a sale and deficiency on the first mortgage, making no claim of personal liability against these defendants; and both parcels were sold by the respective referees. As to one parcel, the referee knocked down the property to the plaintiffs’ testator, Edward R. Stehl, who assigned his bid to Lawrence Davis, to whom the referee executed the deed on December 31, 1915. Davis thereafter, within four days, deeded the property over to plaintiffs’ testator, Edward R. Stehl.

As to the other parcel, the referee knocked the property down to Robert C. Baker, who assigned his bid to the same Lawrence Davis; and the referee executed the deed on July 12, 1915, to the said Lawrence Davis. Lawrence Davis on the same day, to wit, July 12, 1915, deeded the property to plaintiffs’ testator, Edward R. Stehl. On July 15, 1915, more than nine years ago, Edward R. Stehl, plaintiffs’ testator here, became the owner of this very property upon which this second mortgage rested. No measures [447]*447to enforce any personal liability against these executors were taken, nor was it endeavored to be shown that they were under any liability to him of an individual character.

These executors have no assets of the deceased. They have no way to reimburse themselves if they were to be held personally liable.

More than six years after the plaintiffs’ testator sold the property to another, approximately nine years after he bought in the property in consequence of the foreclosure, and more than twelve years after the alleged liability now sought to be enforced accrued, an action is brought against these executors to hold them personally liable, although no notice that they were in peril of such personal liability was given to them at the time that the mortgage which created the debt was foreclosed.

We do not think that these facts indicate any equitable considerations which should move a court to grant leave to sue on the bond for the deficiency.

These extension agreements upon which it is sought to hold these defendants liable were executed around April 20, 1909. Under them the two debts of $9,000 each matured, respectively, April 5, 1912, and May 1, 1912, approximately the same time.

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Bluebook (online)
210 A.D. 444, 206 N.Y.S. 296, 1924 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stehl-v-uris-nyappdiv-1924.