Syracuse City Bank v. Tallman

31 Barb. 201, 1857 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 241
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 7, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 31 Barb. 201 (Syracuse City Bank v. Tallman) 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
Syracuse City Bank v. Tallman, 31 Barb. 201, 1857 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 241 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1857).

Opinion

By the Court, Pratt, J.

If is somewhat difficult to understand upon what principle the decision at special term was based. If I do not mistake the purport of the judgment, the quarter’s rent due May 15th, 1856, was apportioned, the defendant Tallman being allowed rent to April 11th, the day [206]*206upon which the mortgage became due, and the plaintiff the rent for the remainder of the quarter and subsequently. If upon default in paying the money due upon the mortgage on the 11th of April, the hank was entitled to the rents which should subsequently accrue, it was entitled to the amount for the entire quarter ending May 15th. • It was at that time, and not before, that the quarter’s rent accrued. No rent for that quarter could he said to accrue before that time.

Again; costs of the litigation were allowed to Tallman, although he is substantially beaten in the suit. And if he was entitled to costs at all, he should have recovered of the plaintiff; but instead of that, the judgment directs them to be paid out of the fund,' which was substantially directing them to be paid by the Wheatons, who did not litigate at all, but suffered judgment to go by default. Stronger still, the plaintiff is allowed full costs of a litigated suit, with some two or three hundred dollars extra costs to be paid out of the land ;• in other words, to be paid by the Wheatons. Here are two parties getting up a severe litigation on a collateral matter, and both are allowed costs and extra compensation to the amount of four or five hundred dollars, to be paid by the parties that had no interest in the litigation, and who suffered judgment to go against them by default. These matters are not before us upon this appeal, and were undoubtedly the result of some arrangement on the part of the counsel, to which the attention of the court was not probably called. Still they appear in the record. I have attended to them in order that it may ap?pear that such practice does not meet with the approbation of the court.

But the principal question in this case arises out of the claim of the parties to the rents which accrued between the time when the mortgage became due and the time of the actual appointment of a receiver.

At common law the mortgagee was deemed to be vested with the legal title, and had the right to take the immediate possession of the mortgaged premises. The mortgagor in possess[207]*207ion was deemed simply a tenant at will, or rather at sufferance, and hence the mortgagee could sustain ejectment against him to recover possession, without notice to quit. In equity the relations between mortgagor and mortgagee were deemed very different. There the mortgagor was deemed the owner, the mortgage being deemed a mere personal security, and the mortgagee was considered as having merely a lien or security for the payment of the mortgage debt, which he could enforce by foreclosure. These equitable considerations of course were not without their effect upon even the legal rights and remedies of the parties; so that in courts of law the mortgagor in possession could not be deemed a trespasser, nor compelled to account for the rents and profits which he had actually received while in possession. Tet the mortgagee, under his right to enter, could thus intercept at any time the receipt of accruing rents. And when the premises were in possession of a tenant who had entered under the mortgagor, prior to the mortgage, the mortgagee, by giving him notice, could compel him to pay the rent to him. At one time this right was supposed to exist, whether the lease was prior or subsequent to the mortgage; but the later cases make a distinction, holding that without a voluntary attornment to the mortgagee by a tenant under a lease subsequent to the mortgage, there is no relation of landlord and tenant existing between them. In case of a prior lease the mortgagee, by giving the tenant notice of his mortgage, could require the latter to pay him as well unpaid rent which had accrued subsequent to the mortgage as that which should thereafter accrue. (Platt on Leases, 165.) In this state the principles of the rule in English courts of law and equity have been essentially changed. Even before the revised statutes, ejectment could not be sustained in our courts by the mortgagee without notice to quit, and under those statutes the right to maintain ejectment is wholly taken away. The mortgage is now, both at law and in equity, in this state deemed simply a lien for the security of the mortgage debt ; the mortgagor being deemed vested with the legal estate, both [208]*208at law and in equity. (2 Paige, 68. 5 Wend. 602, 2 Barb. Ch. 119. 11 Paige, 503. 3 Denio, 232.) Under this radical change in the relations which formerly existed between the parties, the legal remedies of the parties, as against each other, must necessarily be materially modified from what they were under the English rule.

The power contained in the mortgage simply authorizes the mortgagee, upon default of payment, to sell the premises at public auction, and to apply the proceeds of such sale to the payment of the mortgage debt. Unless there be a special clause to that effect, the mortgagee has no lien upon the rents and profits; and as a general rule the mortgagor, until the sale, is entitled to remain in possession. Hence it was held in Ensign v. Colburn, (11 Paige, 503,) that the mortgagee has no lien upon timber cut upon the premises in good faith, though the latter was at the time insolvent, and the premises were an insufficient security for the mortgage debt. Nor has he at law any remedy for the rents; for until sale he has no legal right to the possession. The power of sale only contemplates an appropriation of the proceeds of the sale of the premises to the payment of the debt. (10 Paige, 44. 5 id. 42. 8 id. 565. 6 Barb. 133.)

But courts of equity, adhering to the ancient practice, under certain circumstances will, after default in an action for foreclosure and sale, anticipate the final judgment of the court by the appointment of a receiver, and in effect put the mortgagee in possession and allow him to divert the rents and profits of the mortgaged premises from the hands of the mortgagor, and hold them as additional security for the payment of the mortgage. To entitle hiip to this species of equitable ejectment it must appear that the mortgaged premises are an inadequate security for the debt, and that the mortgagor or other person liable for the mortgage debt is insolvent. This relief, it will be readily seen from the conditions necessary to its enjoyment, does not grow directly out of the relations of the parties or the stipulations contained in the mortgage, but out of equitable con-. [209]*209siderations alone. It is not therefore a matter of strict right, but is addressed to the sound discretion of the court. When the mortgagor is insolvent and fails to pay at the day appointed, and the mortgaged premises are an inadequate security, as between the mortgagor and mortgagee it might well be deemed within the equitable discretion of the court to allow the latter to intercept the rents and profits, for his better protection from loss. And this simple case seems to me to be the utmost extent to which this relief has been granted by the court in the cases, or to which it can be granted, within any admitted principles of equity.

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Bluebook (online)
31 Barb. 201, 1857 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/syracuse-city-bank-v-tallman-nysupct-1857.