United States Trust Co. v. Frelinghuysen

183 Misc. 205, 49 N.Y.S.2d 54, 1944 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2056
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 183 Misc. 205 (United States Trust Co. v. Frelinghuysen) 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
United States Trust Co. v. Frelinghuysen, 183 Misc. 205, 49 N.Y.S.2d 54, 1944 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2056 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1944).

Opinion

Shientag, J.

Plaintiff and defendants move for summary judgment. The action is to recover certain unpaid interest on defendants’ bond, together with the amount of payments made by plaintiff by way of taxes, assessments and insurance premiums. The answer denies that the bond sued on was delivered for a valuable or adequate consideration and, by way of defense, alleges that by the execution of the bond the defendants became sureties only and not principal debtors and the plaintiff must ' resort to the estate of the original mortgagor.

Plaintiff is the holder of a bond for $50,000 and a mortgage for the same amount (reduced by partial payments to $42,000) on the premises 113 East 65th Street, made in 1925 by Charlotte L. Frelinghuysen. She died on -July .18, 193Q, leaving a will [207]*207admitted to probate on October 3, 1930, under which plaintiff was appointed and qualified as executor. Her estate was more than sufficient to pay all the specific legacies, taxes and expenses of administration and also the indebtedness on the decedent’s bond. She devised the house and lot mentioned to the defendant Frederick T. Frelinghuysen, who, on October 27, 1930, conveyed the same to his wife, Katherine Frelinghuysen.

On February 16, 1932, defendants executed and delivered to plaintiff the instrument in respect to which this suit is brought, sometimes referred to as the “ collateral bond ”. It was a formal document under seal. It began by declaring that the makers of the instrument, the defendants herein, “ hereby acknowledge that they are jointly and severally justly indebted ” to plaintiff in the sum of $50,000 “ which sum the obligors hereby covenant to pay to the obligee on demand with interest thereon ” from October 1, 1931, at 5% “to be paid on the first day of April next ensuing and semi-annually thereafter. ’ ’

The instrument then recited that all the provisions of “ the said mortgage ” are made part of the instrument and, in the next paragraph, that it was given as collateral security for the mortgage of 1925 before referred to. Thereafter interest on the mortgage debt was regularly paid by the defendants to April 1, 1939, since which date no interest has been paid; also, default was made in payment of the first half of the 1939-1940 taxes.

Plaintiff, seeking to obtain payment from defendants of the unpaid interest, and repayment to it of any taxes it might pay, brought an action for a declaratory judgment by which it sought ■.to establish that, by bringing an action or obtaining judgment :for interest and unpaid taxes, it would not be precluded from thereafter maintaining an action for the principal or to recover ;any future unpaid interest or taxes, or to foreclose the mortgage, and that its remedies under the bond and mortgage would ■remain in all respects unchanged. Defendants took the position that such an action as contemplated by the plaintiff would defeat a subsequent claim for principal and unpaid future interest and that, in any event, no consideration was given for the execution and delivery of the instrument. The judgment of Special Term which was affirmed by the Court of Appeals determined that the bond in suit was executed and delivered by the defendants for a valuable consideration and that it was .effective as a covenant of assumption.

[208]*208Its rights having been declared under the decision of the Court of Appeals in the prior action (288 N. Y. 463), plaintiff instituted this action to recover pursuant to the terms of the bond. The question here presented, which was not before the Court of Appeals, is whether the defendants are primarily liable or liable only secondarily.

The moving affidavit sets forth that no interest has been paid since April 1, 1939; that by the terms of the original mortgage Charlotte L. Frelinghuysen covenanted and agreed that she would keep the buildings on the premises insured against loss by fife for the benefit of the mortgagee and that the mortgagor would pay all taxes, assessments or water rates. It was then averred that since the defendants, by the terms of the bond, assumed the obligations of the mortgage, they were liable for the payment of interest, insurance premiums, taxes, assessments or water rates. 'The amounts of those payments are set forth and the defendants’ only answer concerning them is that they have no knowledge or information to form a belief as to the amounts alleged to have been paid.

In opposition to the motion for summary judgment and in support of the cross motion for summary judgment, the defendants set forth that by obtaining the bond in suit as a“ collateral bond ’ ’ plaintiff acknowledged and contracted that the bond was merely collateral to the principal bond given plaintiff by the mortgagor — in other words, “ that, as far as the bond in suit was concerned, the relationship of the defendants to the principal obligation was merely that of sureties * * *. It (plaintiff) asked for and got'a ‘ collateral bond ’. It could not thereafter convert that bond into or substitute it for, the principal bond, especially since it, as a creditor of the estate, had, as between itself and the defendants, the power and the means to enforce the principal bond before resorting to the collateral bond.” Thus it is contended by the defendants that since no resort has been had by the plaintiff to the estate of the original mortgagor, plaintiff has lost its right to recover in this action, or, if it has any such right, that such recovery would be offset by a claim of equal extent in favor of defendants — the theory being that the mortgagor’s estate, and not the devisee (the defendants herein) who have expressly assumed this payment, is alone liable for the mortgage debt.

The question, therefore, presented for disposition on these motions is whether, by their execution of the bond here sued on, the defendants became sureties only and not principal debtors and if they are sureties, whether they are exonerated because [209]*209plaintiff should have resorted to the estate of the original mortgagor for payment of the debt.

Under section 250 of the Real Property Law, as between Charlotte L. Frelinghuysen’s estate and her devisee, the latter took the devise, and, if he chose to accept it, charged with the mortgage. That section reads (before the subsequent amendment of 1937, not applicable because not then in existence and not in any way limiting its scope but rather extending it) : “Where real property, subject to a mortgage executed by any ancestor or testator, descends to an heir, or passes to a devisee, such heir or devisee must satisfy and discharge the mortgage out of his own property, without resorting to the executor or administrator of his ancestor or testator, unless there be an express direction in the will of such testator, that such mortgage be otherwise paid.”

In the will of Charlotte L. Frelinghuysen there is no direction or suggestion, express or implied, that the mortgage be paid otherwise than by her devisee.' Section 250 of the Real Property Law is not at all decisive of the question hére presented. It should, however, be considered in connection with the bond executed by these defendants.

By that bond the defendants, by their express contract under seal for a valuable consideration, covenanted to pay the debt and to remain primarily liable therefor. The defendants thus became the principal debtors and the mortgagor’s estate thereafter occupied the position of surety.

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Bluebook (online)
183 Misc. 205, 49 N.Y.S.2d 54, 1944 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2056, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-trust-co-v-frelinghuysen-nysupct-1944.