United Nat. Bank v. Parish

750 A.2d 238, 330 N.J. Super. 654
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedDecember 3, 1999
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 750 A.2d 238 (United Nat. Bank v. Parish) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United Nat. Bank v. Parish, 750 A.2d 238, 330 N.J. Super. 654 (N.J. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

750 A.2d 238 (1999)
330 N.J. Super. 654

UNITED NATIONAL BANK etc., Plaintiff,
v.
Gary PARISH a/k/a Gary Parish; O'Conco, Inc.; Michael Avalone; and PNC Bank, N.A., Defendants.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division, Monmouth County.

Decided December 3, 1999.

Law Offices of Ralph P. Ferrara, P.C. (Michelle S. Kirmser, appearing), for plaintiff United National Bank.

Newman & Simpson (Michael S. Hanusek, appearing), for defendant PNC Bank, N.A.

No other appearances.

FISHER, P.J.Ch.

Plaintiff United National Bank ("UNB"), the first mortgagee, seeks disgorgement of the rents that defendant PNC Bank ("PNC"), the second mortgagee, obtained after taking possession of the property owned by the mortgagor, but before UNB affirmatively asserted its rights. Because the priority a first mortgagee otherwise enjoys does not apply to income and profits due the mortgaged property, PNC may retain the rents it collected before UNB filed its foreclosure action and asserted its rights.

PNC filed its foreclosure action on April 18, 1999 and, pursuant to an assignment of rents obtained from the mortgagor, began collecting rents in May 1999. UNB did not file this foreclosure action until August 17, 1999. By that time, PNC had collected four monthly payments from mortgagor's tenant in the amount of $7000 each. UNB, the first mortgagee, has now moved for the entry of an order which would (1) require PNC to disgorge those rents received previously and (2) appoint a rent receiver. PNC does not object to the second aspect, recognizing that upon asserting its rights, UNB possessed priority as to future rents and profits. But, as noted previously, PNC does object to turning over the prior rents.

*239 A number of decisions from the courts of this State, not surprisingly emanating from the era of the Great Depression, dealt with this particular problem. See, Berman v. One Forty-Five Belmont Ave. Corp., 109 N.J.Eq. 256, 156 A. 830 (Ch.1931), aff'd o.b. 112 N.J.Eq. 171, 163 A. 893 (E. & A.1933); Westinghouse Elec. & Mfg. Co. v.. Weikel, 110 N.J.Eq. 347, 353-354, 160 A. 48 (Ch.1932), aff'd 112 N.J.Eq. 173, 163 A. 893 (E. & A.1933); Sosnick v. Jesieski, 110 N.J.Eq. 267, 159 A. 630 (Ch.1932); Bermes v. Kelley, 108 N.J.Eq. 289, 154 A. 860 (Ch.1931).[1] The Vice-Chancellors in all those matters concluded that the second, or junior, mortgagee who is quicker to pursue its remedies is entitled to retain such rents or profits. As good a description as any of the respective rights of such mortgagees and the mortgagor is the following:

As between the two, first mortgagee on the one hand, and on the other a junior lienor ... the equitable balance is even, so far as income is concerned. Priority as to lien the first mortgagee has, nor does he forfeit it by delay in foreclosing; but priority as to rents and profits he has not, because he left the mortgagor in possession. If he chooses to foreclose, of course, the first mortgagee should have priority as to rents not yet collected, but he must claim it by way of motion for the appointment of his own receiver.... [T]he fundamental point is that as between the two interests, senior and junior, the former is entitled to demand a receivership of income only from the time when he asserts his right, by commencing foreclosure and demanding the segregation of income. The rule applies regardless of whether the first mortgagee's opponent is the receiver appointed in the suit of a junior lienor, or is a trustee in bankruptcy or other representative of creditors. The first mortgagee, therefore, must assert his right or he will lose it; and income meanwhile collected by the junior lienor's receiver is water over the dam.—gone beyond recall.

Glenn on Mortgages (1943), § 178.1 at pages 933-935 (emphasis added). See also, N.Y. Life Ins. Co. v. Fulton Development Corp., 265 N.Y. 348, 193 N.E. 169 (1934). While the Depression era cases appear to be the most current declarations in this State on the subject, the doctrine as described in the decisions cited above has never been discredited or questioned in this or other jurisdictions and there is no reason to depart from this well-settled rule.

UNB does not question those decisions but rather suggests that because the rent receiver for the junior mortgagee in those cases came about by way of court order those decisions are somehow distinguishable from the present situation. Certainly that is a factual distinction between those decisions and this case, but there is nothing about the holdings of those courts or the salutariness of the rule espoused which would suggest that this distinction was a controlling feature in those cases.[2] In fact, Vice-Chancellor Leaming's dissertation on the subject strongly suggests that a court ordered appointment of a receiver is not the critical fact in the analysis; rather, it is possession that governs:

At default a mortgagee becomes entitled to possession of the mortgaged premises; that possession, if exercised, entitles *240 him to receive the rents. Possession may be taken either personally or through a receiver appointed by the court for that purpose in a suit to foreclose the mortgage. But unless and until that possessory right is exercised by a mortgagee, the mortgagor is entitled to the rents as against the mortgagee. As against the mortgagor, that possessory right and its fruits, if and when exercised, obtains in favor of any mortgagee, irrespective of the rank of the mortgage. As between two successive mortgagees it necessarily follows that when one exercises his possessory right, either personally or through a receiver in foreclosure, and the other does not do so, the one exercising the right becomes entitled to the rents received by him through the medium of his possession. This must be so, because a mortgagee who does not exercise his possessory right acquires no right to receive the rents.

Bermes, supra, 108 N.J.Eq. at 290-291, 154 A. 860 (emphasis added).

Nor, as UNB argues, is there something about the loan documents which would override the common law doctrine described above. In that regard, UNB observes that the assignment of leases it obtained from the mortgagor on January 24, 1994 was recorded on February 8, 1994. PNC's assignment of leases was not recorded until March 10, 1997 and, in light of this sequence of events, UNB asserts that PNC was constructively advised of UNB's prior assignment and, thus, not entitled to any rents received. While this sequence of recordings is demonstrably true, it is also beside the point. The assignment given to UNB was not triggered until a default in the mortgagor's obligations and, as the authorities referred to above demonstrate, the right to collect the rents does not arise until the appointment of a receiver or the mortgagee's taking of possession. Bermes, supra. There was no default by the mortgagor until April 1999, i.e., after PNC obtained its assignment of leases. Indeed, even if the dates of the recording of these assignments and the date of the default were different, the court can see no reason why the well-recognized doctrine that the first in time to collect the rents is the first in right to those rents should not be followed.

As PNC correctly observes, it should not be deprived of the remedy it obtained for itself through the exercise of diligence.[3]

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750 A.2d 238, 330 N.J. Super. 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-nat-bank-v-parish-njsuperctappdiv-1999.