White v. Wielandt

259 A.D. 676, 20 N.Y.S.2d 560, 1940 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6237
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 17, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 259 A.D. 676 (White v. Wielandt) 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
White v. Wielandt, 259 A.D. 676, 20 N.Y.S.2d 560, 1940 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6237 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

Johnston, J.

The specific question to be determined may be stated as follows: Where, based upon a default in the payment of principal, interest and taxes, the usual action to foreclose a mortgage is instituted and a deficiency judgment is sought, computed on the total amount due for principal, interest and taxes, is it proper to incorporate in the complaint additional causes of action for a money judgment against the obligors on the bond for the unpaid interest and the taxes paid by the mortgagee?

The complaint contains four causes of action: (1) To foreclose a mortgage given to secure a bond executed by the defendants Wielandt for $30,000, with interest at six per cent payable semiannually; (2) to recover the semi-annual installment of interest amounting to $900, which became due May 1, 1939; (3) to recover town taxes paid by plaintiffs, amounting to $635.97; (4) to recover school taxes paid by plaintiffs, amounting to $132.43. In the first cause of action plaintiffs ask for the usual judgment of foreclosure and sale and the entry of the usual deficiency judgment against the appellants, such deficiency judgment to include principal, interest and taxes. In the second, third and fourth causes of action plaintiffs ask for separate money judgments against the obligors for the amount of the interest and taxes.

In their answer appellants, in effect, admit the allegations of the complaint and set up defenses to the joinder of the second, third and fourth causes of action and challenge plaintiffs’ right to recover thereon while, at the same time, seeking to foreclose the mortgage. Plaintiffs moved to sever these three causes of action and for judgment. Defendants made a cross-motion to dismiss them as insufficient in law. The County Court denied appellants’ cross-motion, granted plaintiffs’ motion, and directed judgment on the said three causes of action for interest and taxes, with a proviso, however, that such judgment shall not forfeit or prejudice the right of plaintiffs, if so advised, to proceed to foreclosure for principal only of the mortgage in the event that the defaults in payment of interest and taxes are not remedied.”

The court, in effect, held (a) that the provisions of sections 1083 and 1083-a of the Civil Practice Act do not prevent plaintiffs in this foreclosure action from incorporating in the complaint separate causes of action for interest and taxes and obtaining a separate judgment thereon; and (b) that, despite the pendency of the foreclosure action,- plaintiffs may prosecute the separate causes of action for interest and taxes without first obtaining the permission of the court, as required by section 1078 of the Civil Practice Act. This holding is on the theory that interest and taxes are separate from the mortgage debt, independent of it and do not constitute any part thereof.

[678]*678In my opinion in this case the interest and taxes constitute an integral part of the mortgage debt and, hence, a separate action for the recovery of such interest and taxes may not be maintained concurrently with the action to foreclose the mortgage, which is predicated on defaults in the payment of principal, interest and taxes.

It has been held that, despite the moratorium statutes (Civ. Prac. Act, §§ 1077-b, 1083-b), the mortgagee may maintain an independent action at law for the recovery of unpaid interest or taxes paid by him; that in such an action the mortgagor may not set off the value of the property; and that the prosecution of such an action is without prejudice to a subsequent action by the mortgagee to recover the principal or to foreclose the mortgage. (Johnson v. Meyer, 242 App. Div. 798; affd., 268 N. Y.. 701; Werbelovsky v. Rosen Bros. News Agency, Inc., 249 App. Div. 758; Buell v. Sullivan, 250 id. 780; Westchester Trust Co. v. Estate of Underhill, Inc., 255 id. 1013; Weinstein v. Empire Title & Guarantee Co., 257 id. 867; Rochester Trust & Safe Deposit Co. v. Hatch, 273 N. Y. 507; Erie County Savings Bank v. Levi, 255 App. Div. 438; Union Trust Co. of Rochester v. Kaplan, 249 id. 280.) In some of these cases causes of action to recover the interest and taxes were alleged in addition to a cause of action to recover the principal, and the three causes of action were incorporated in one complaint. In Rochester Trust & Safe Deposit Co. v. Hatch (supra) it was expressly held that in such a case the defense-or offset of the market value, under section 1083-b of the Civil Practice Act, may be interposed only as against the cause of action for the principal.

In none of these cases, however, was a cause of action to recover interest or taxes joined with a cause of action to foreclose the mortgage in which a deficiency judgment was demanded; and in none of them was the propriety of such a practice raised or decided.

The rationale behind all these cases is that interest and taxes are not affected by the moratorium statutes, which suspend actions on bonds for default in the payment of principal only, and which allow the fair value of the property to be offset when an action is brought to recover the indebtedness secured by a mortgage and which originated simultaneously therewith; that interest and taxes are not affected because they did not originate simultaneously with the indebtedness and, hence, they are not part of such indebtedness within the purview of these statutes, and an action is maintainable for their recovery without prejudice to the mortgagee’s right to maintain a subsequent action to recover the debt. To allow this to be done, it was held, would not result in the splitting [679]*679of a cause of action because the moratorium statutes created an anomalous situation. They prevented the mortgagee from maintaining an action for the principal only; but a default in the payment of interest and taxes was beyond the protection afforded by such moratorium statutes. The statutes thus effected a legal severance to the extent that if interest and taxes are paid, the principal need not be paid. In other words, payment of the interest and taxes suspends the payment of principal. Hence, it was concluded that for a failure to pay the interest and taxes the anomalous situation created by the emergency statutes sanctioned, if it did not authorize, an independent action for the recovery of the interest and taxes. (Union Trust Co. of Rochester v. Kaplan, supra; Westchester Trust Co. v. Estate of Underhill, Inc., supra.)

The emergency statutes were thus construed and these cases were thus decided primarily for the purpose of preventing the owner from keeping the property while, at the same time, evading his responsibility to pay not only the principal but also the interest and taxes — an abuse which necessarily would result from any other interpretation of the moratorium statutes. Therefore, interest and taxes must be deemed severable from and not a part of the mortgage debt only in determining the scope of moratorium statutes.

Under no other circumstances has it been held that interest and taxes are not part of the mortgage debt. It would shock the average mortgagee if he were told that the unpaid interest, and taxes paid by him, were not part of the mortgage debt and not secured by the mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
259 A.D. 676, 20 N.Y.S.2d 560, 1940 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-wielandt-nyappdiv-1940.