Vanderbilt v. . Schreyer

91 N.Y. 392, 12 Abb. N. Cas. 390, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 52
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 6, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by85 cases

This text of 91 N.Y. 392 (Vanderbilt v. . Schreyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vanderbilt v. . Schreyer, 91 N.Y. 392, 12 Abb. N. Cas. 390, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 52 (N.Y. 1883).

Opinion

Ruger, Oh. J.

This was an action to foreclose a mortgage for $5,000 given September 5, 1873, by one James Dunseith and wife to John Schreyer, and by him assigned to the plaintiff on the 5th day of May, 1874.

Schreyer was made a party defendant, and it was sought to charge him with the payment of any deficiency that might arise upon a sale of the mortgaged premises, upon the ground that he had guaranteed the payment of the mortgage debt.

Schreyer answered, and after admitting the assignment and the guaranty of payment alleged by way of defense, that on the 2d day of February, 1874, the plaintiff entered into a contract with George Gebhard and Matthew L. Ritchie for the erection by him of certain buildings for them upon certain lots in the city of Hew York, for which he was to receive $8,175, to be paid as follows: “ When the said houses are topped out, a payment of $5,000 by assignment of a bond and mortgage held by John Schreyer on the property of Anna Maria Schreyer, Ho. 350 West Forty-second street, Hew York *395 city,” and the balance, amounting to $3,175, when the houses should be fully completed. Vanderbilt commenced performance of his contract and continued until he became entitled to the assignment of the $5,000 mortgage. Schreyer thereupon offered to assign it to the plaintiff, but the latter refused to accept an assignment unless Schreyer would also guarantee payment. The defendant refused to do this, and Vanderbilt then suspended work upon ■ the buildings for about two months. The defendant then under protest, and believing as he alleges that he was acting under compulsion, executed the assignment with the guaranty in question. The plaintiff then completed his contract and received the balance of the consideration. The answer further states “ that it was neither under said contract or otherwise made a condition of the plaintiff’s accepting the assignment of said mortgage that this defendant or any other person should guarantee the payment thereof,” and further “that no consideration ever passed to 'him or his principals for such guaranty and the same was and is null and void.”

Upon the trial of the action at Special Term the plaintiff produced and proved the mortgage in question, and also an assignment from defendant to plaintiff' in the usual form, but containing the following clause: “And I hereby guarantee the payment of said bond and mortgage for $5,000 and interest from Hay 5, 1874:, by due foreclosure and sale.” The assignment and guaranty were sealed and executed in the presence of a subscribing witness. The plaintiff thereupon rested, and the defendant offered to prove in substance the facts alleged in his answer, which offer was objected to and excluded upon the ground that such answer did not set up facts constituting a defense. The defendant excepted to such ruling. The court thereupon held that said guaranty was absolute and ordered judgment against Schreyer for the deficiency which had previously been ascertained by a sale of the premises. An appeal was taken to the General Term, which reversed the judgment and directed a dismissal of the complaint upon the ground that Schreyer was improperly made a defendant, because the guaranty in question was in effect a guaranty *396 of collection only, and that no right of action arose thereon until after the amount of the deficiency had been ascertained by a judicial sale of the mortgaged premises.

We differ in our conclusion from that reached by both of the courts below.

The guaranty in question is not an absolute guaranty for the payment of the mortgage, but a guaranty that it shall be paid in a particular manner. In construing it we must give effect not only to the entire instrument but also to all of its language. This requires us to give some effect to the words, “by due foreclosure and sale,” and they can perform no other office in the connection in which they are used than to qualify and limit the operation of the preceding words, I hereby guarantee the payment of said bond and mortgage.” We must conclude that the parties put these words into their contract for some' purpose; and the only purpose they can be made to serve is to make the guaranty a conditional instead of an absolute one. A covenant quite similar to this was held in. the case of Mahaiwe Bank v. Gul/oer (30 1ST. T. 313), to be a covenant to pay any deficiency existing after a foreclosure and sale.

But we suppose it to be immaterial whether this guaranty be called a guaranty of payment or of collection, for in either event the plaintiff was entitled to make Schreyer a party defendant in the foreclosure action and demand and recover a judgment against him therein for any deficiency which might arise on a sale of the mortgaged premises.

The principles applicable to the prosecution of actions against guarantors of the collection of promissory notes and other securities do not apply to actions for the foreclosure of mortgages. In the latter the persons who may be made parties therein are pointed out by statute, and include all who are under obligation to pay the mortgage debt, or any part thereof, whether such obligation be absolute or conditional.

This action was commenced, and tried,' prior to the adoption of section 1621 of the Code of Civil Procedure. It must, therefore, be governed by the provisions of the *397 ¡Revised Statutes. The sections applicable are the following: 2 ¡R. S. (1st ed.), 191, § 154, reads: “If the mortgage debt be secured by the obligation or other evidence of debt hereafter executed, of any other person beside the mortgagor, the complainant may make such person a party to the bill, and the court may decree payment of the balance of such debt remaining unsatisfied after a sale of the mortgaged premises, as well against such other person as the mortgagor, and may enforce such decree as in other cases.” Section 153, same statute, reads: “ After such bill (bill for foreclosure) shall be filed while the same is pending, and after a decree rendered thereon, no proceedings whatever shall be had at law for the recovery of the debt secured by the mortgage or any part thereof unless authorized by the Court of Chancery.”

These provisions of the statute remained without material changes, so far as the question under discussion is concerned, until the adoption in 1880 of the last portion of the Code of Civil Procedure. The scheme of these provisions was stated by this court in the Equitable Life Ins. Soc. v. Stevens (63 N. Y.. 341) to be to prevent oppressive litigation by the multiplication of actions against the several persons who might be liable for the same mortgage debt, and to require all of the parties interested in its payment to be brought into the same suit and thus settle their respective liabilities in one comprehensive action. Previous to the enactment of section 1627 of the” Code of Civil Procedure it was the settled practice of courts of equity to bring all parties who were in any way liable for the payment of the mortgage debt, or any part thereof, and whether liable upon an absolute or conditional undertaking, into the same foreclosure action and decree payment of any deficiency arising on a sale of the mortgaged premises, against any of the parties appearing to be liable therefor, according to the nature and circumstances of such liability.

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Bluebook (online)
91 N.Y. 392, 12 Abb. N. Cas. 390, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vanderbilt-v-schreyer-ny-1883.