Witherell v. Kelly

195 A.D. 227, 187 N.Y.S. 43, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4724
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 25, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 195 A.D. 227 (Witherell v. Kelly) 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
Witherell v. Kelly, 195 A.D. 227, 187 N.Y.S. 43, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4724 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Jenks, P. J.:

The defendant, a resident of New York, owned a country house in Greenwich, Conn., bought in 1908 for $100,000, of which $40,000 was in cash and $60,000 was secured by mortgage. In 1915 or 1916 he was in arrears for the taxes and the interest on the mortgage. In 1918 the mortgagee, this plaintiff, began foreclosure. In general, the practice in. Connecticut is strict foreclosure. If, however, any party to the action moves therein for foreclosure by sale, the court decrees it and appoints both appraisers of the value of the realty in view of the sale, and a committee to conduct the sale. This was done in that foreclosure case. The plaintiff . had not served this defendant, but on December 11, 1918, [229]*229the defendant with others subscribed a stipulation made in that' action. That stipulation consented to foreclosure by sale on January 18, 2 p. m., at Greenwich, Conn., determined the amounts of the judgment debt at $63,671.56, of the attorneys’ fees at $600, consented to the appointment of certain persons as appraisers and as committee to sell, respectively. The appraisers valued the premises at $111,800. At the sale made on the day stipulated, the premises were sold to the mortgagee for $55,000 and a judgment for deficiency was entered against this defendant. This action on that judgment was tried by consent at Special Term. The court made findings of fact and conclusions of law to award judgment to the plaintiff and to dismiss on the merits the defenses of which one at least involved an equitable counterclaim.

The defendant in this action pleads several defenses. The only issue litigated which I shall consider involves conversations between the plaintiff and the defendant in which the plaintiff was represented by Shedd, admittedly her agent for all purposes.

The defendant testifies in part as follows: He had become in default in interest in 1915 or 1916. He did not recollect when he found out that foreclosure proceedings were contemplated. He had five or six conversations with Shedd. At one before January, 1919, Shedd said: If you don’t settle up and pay the back interest and the taxes on the property, we will sell it out.’ I said, ' I don’t care if you sell it out or not. I am sick and tired of the property, and have not got money enough to maintain it, and don’t want to bother with it, but if it is sold I want to be cleared off entirely.’ Q. What did he say? A. Why, he said, 'You will have no trouble about that,’ he says, ‘ the property will bring the money all right.’ He says, ‘ Only we want our money, we want to get our pay, what is due us.’ I said, 'Well, I don’t care what you do, so long as there is no claim against me, no afterclaps about this thing. I want to be through with it when I am done with it, and I will consent to anything you want me to, so far as that is concerned.’ Q. What did he say to that? A. He said, ' There will be no deficiency judgment against you; we won’t bother you any, because v/e think we will get our money out of it.’ ” On one occasion the defendant said to [230]*230Shedd: “ If you sell this property I don’t want any further —■ I am willing you should sell it, and I don’t want to have'any further business with it. I do not want you to get any judgment against me.” Shedd said: Oh, you need not bother about that; we won’t bother you with any judgment.” This was about July, 1918 or 1919.” It could not have been in 1910, because the defendant testified that at the time of that conversation the proceedings to foreclose the mortgage had not been taken. And finally he says that he had several conversations with Shedd between July, 1918, and the sale of the property, which was held in January, 1919. The defendant testified with reference to his conversations with Shedd: Q. Did you believe what he said? A. Certainly; I had no reason not to believe it.” The question as to whether or not the witness could have raised the money to meet the indebtedness if he had believed there was to be a deficiency judgment against him, was objected to and the answer stricken out. Q. You relied on what Mr. Shedd told you about there being no deficiency? A. Certainly; otherwise I would not have consented to sell. Q. And because of your reliance on what he told you about there being no deficiency, what did you do? A. I did not do anything, because I relied upon what he said to me.” The defendant also testified that he relied on Shedd’s statement that he did not want a deficiency judgment against the defendant. The question whether, if he thought that there would be a deficiency judgment against him, he could have done anything to save the property, was objected to as too speculative, the objection sustained and the answer stricken out.

This testimony was not contradicted. Shedd was in court. He was called as a witness by the defendant, but did not testify as to the conversations. He was not called by the plaintiff. The defendant had offered no resistance to foreclosure. He had facilitated it. He had stipulated that the action of strict foreclosure, one wherein there could be no deficiency, should be modified into one of sale. There is nothing improbable that Shedd, with the prospect of a sale of realty officially and conclusively assessed with a view of foreclosure sale at $111,800 to satisfy a debt of $63,000, should have felt it entirely safe to assure the defendant that there would be no [231]*231deficiency judgment against him. And, on the other hand, there is nothing under the circumstance unreasonable in the belief of the defendant of the truth of the assurance that plaintiff would not enter any deficiency judgment against him. The official determination of the value of the property for foreclosure sale was about $38,000 in excess of the debt, and Shedd had assured him that Shedd had received fifty to one hundred inquiries about the property and that the time of sale was “ as good a time as any.”

.."."If the defendant, in reliance upon the assurance of Shedd that there would be no deficiency judgment against him, had just grounds to remain inert and at gaze without further securing himself or without protecting himself against a deficiency, it seems to me that the doctrine of equitable estoppel by representation applies, in that the plaintiff made statements that indicated her abandonment of an existing right of a plaintiff in a foreclosure by sale.

As a rule, to constitute such an estoppel there must be representation as to a fact past or present, but there is a well-recognized exception • that applies in this instance. After statement of the general rule, the court in Insurance Co. v. Mowry (96 U. S. 547) says: “ The only case in which a representation as to the future can be held to operate as an estoppel is where it relates to an intended abandonment of an existing right, and is made to influence others, and by which they have been induced to act. An estoppel cannot arise from a promise as to future action with respect to a right to be acquired upon an agreement not yet made. The doctrine of estoppel is applied with respect to representations of a party, to prevent their operating as a fraud upon one who has been led to rely upon them.” (See, too, Dickerson v. Colgrove, 100 U. S. 578, 580; Trustees, etc., v. Smith, 118 N. Y. 641; Faxton v. Faxton, 28 Mich. 159, a leading case cited in Dickerson v. Colgrove, supra, and Trustees, etc., v. Smith, supra; Harris v. Brooks, 21 Pick. 195; Johnson v. Blair, 132 Ala. 128;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 A.D. 227, 187 N.Y.S. 43, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4724, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/witherell-v-kelly-nyappdiv-1921.