Roosevelt v. Schile

Laughlin, J. (dissenting):

In each of these cases the plaintiffs have appealed from an order of the Special Term setting aside a judgment of foreclosure and sale and ordering a resale. The plaintiffs were the owners of six mortgages, each being a lien upon two or more of five parcels of land, which for convenience will be designated A, B, C, D and E, situated between One Hundred and Twenty-fifth and One Hundred and Twenty-sixth streets a little west of Third avenue in the city of New York. Two of the lots front on One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street and the other three on One Hundred and Twenth-sixtli street. The plaintiffs instituted a separate foreclosure action on each mortgage and have obtained a separate judgment for the foreclosure and sale of the premises covered by each. The order of priority of these mortgages and the amount due thereon, respectively, at the date of sale, are as follows: Mortgage No. 1, foreclosed by action No. 1, was given in October, 1889, covers lots A and B, and the amount due was $33,725. Mortgage No. 2, foreclosed by action No. 2, was given in April, 1893, covers lots A, B and C, and the amount due was $8,287. Mortgage No. 3, foreclosed by action No. 3, was given in April, 1894, covers the same lots as mortgage No. 1, and the amount due was $9,369. Mortgage No. 4, foreclosed by action No. 4, was given in August, 1895, covers lots O and D, and the amount due was $28,156. Mortgage No. 5, foreclosed by action No. 5, was given in November, 1895, covers lots A, 'O, D and E, and the amount due was $11,258. Mortgage No. 6, foreclosed by action No. 6, was given in July, 1898, covers the same lots as mortgage *529No..5, and the amount due was $22,208. The judgment of foreclosure in action No. 3 was obtained July 3, 1902, in actions Nos. 1, 2 and 4, July seventh, and in actions Nos. 5 and 6, September eleventh of the same year. The interests of many of the defendants are different in the different parcels; but the same parties are owners of the equity of redemption in most instances, although in some their rights are in controversy. The judgment contains no direction with respect to the order of sale of the several parcels, although a request for a direction in that regard was made by some of the defendants. There has been no sale under any of the judgments except those" in actions Nos. 5 and 6, in which the appeals are taken. The sales under these judgments were conducted at the same time and place but by different referees. The referee in action No. 3 first offered lot B for sale subject to the judgments in actions Nos. 1 and 2. Although the sale. was fairly well attended, the only bid offered was by the attorney for the plaintiffs, who bid the amount of the taxes and expenses, and the property was struck off to him/ Parcel A was not offered for sale in action No. 3. The referee in action No. 6 then offered separately for sale the parcels covered by that mortgage, subject to the judgments of foreclosure and sale in the other actions, and the property was struck off .to the attorney for the plaintiffs upon his bid covering merely the taxes and expenses. After the referees filed their respective reports, exceptions were filed thereto by some of the defendants. No motion was made for the confirmation of the report, and it has not been confirmed. A motion was made by the guardian ad litem for certain of the infant defendants in each action, upon affidavits showing that the sale conducted in the manner stated was not calculated to produce the most favorable results, to set aside the sale or sustain" the exceptions filed to the reports of sale, and the motions were granted. It is stated that an appeal has been taken in each case in behalf of certain of the defendants who contend that the plaintiffs were the purchasers on the foreclosure sales and that by purchasing subject to the judgments the judgments became paid and where the purchase .was subject to a judgment which had been thus paid the plaintiffs hold the judgment as trustees for the defendants, and they rely upon the case of Freeman v. Auld (44 *530N. Y. 51) as authority for this proposition; but, as already stated, the only appeal now before us is that taken by the plaintiffs who contend that the sales were regular, were properly conducted and should not have been set aside. The court has a wide discretion on a motion to set aside a sale and may relieve against mere mistakes, accidents or hardships, or oppressive or unfair conduct of others, though such conduct may' not amount to: á violation of law.” (Fisher v. Hersey, 78 N. Y. 387.) It is manifest that the discretion of the court was wisely exercised in setting aside these sales.' The practice pursued was calculated tp needlessly increase the expense of the foreclosure of the mortgages and to prevent competitive bidding at the sale. The mortgages are all owned by the same parties. Those covering the same premises at least should have been foreclosed in the same action, and this not having been done the separate actions to foreclose mortgages on the same premises should havé been consolidated or the plaintiffs should have been denied costs. (Mayor v. Coffin, 90 N. Y. 312; Wooster v. Case, 12 N. Y. Supp. 769 ; Biron v. Edwards and Biron v. Scott, 77 Wis. 477.) The same referee was appointed to conduct the sales in actions Nos. 1 to 4 inclusive, and another referee in actions Nos. 5 and 6. . We think the same referee should have .been appointed, in all.. It was proper to proceed to foreclosure and sale in actions Nos. 3 and 6 because the judgments in those actions, taken together, authorized the, sale of all the parcels, but we think the parcels should have been sold free and clear of incumbrances and not subject to the foreclosure judgments. The plaintiffs have no absolute right to have the sale under one particular judgment made subject to the judgment in another action. All of their rights are subserved if the sales are conducted in such manner that the premises: will bring their full fair value or the largest amounts obtainable upon a foreclosure Sale. The plaintiffs being the owners of all the judgments which affect many of the same parcels, it would have been- competent and proper for the court, if the interests of the defendants required it, as it seems to us they do, and a proper application ,had been made therefor, to have directed that the separate parcels be sold free and clear of the liens of the foreclosure judgments. (Andrews v. O’Mahoney, 112 N. Y. 567.) If the sales had been conducted in this manner they would likely have resulted advantageously by bringing the *531highest price, because then bidders could act intelligently, knowing that if the property should be awarded to them, their bid represented its cost free and clear of incumbrances. Whereas at the sales had the terms of sale were so involved and uncertain that bidders were evidently deterred. The amount realized on each parcel could then be apportioned and distributed according to the rights of the respective parties upon the well-settled principles of equity applicable and as if the sales had been conducted, in the inverse order of alienation. It appears that there was a building on parcels A, E and B, being three stories on One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street and five stories on One Hundred and Twenty-sixth street. If the value of this building'rendered the lots of greater value for sale together, this should have been directed; and for the purpose of, in that event, determining the proportion of the bid to be credited to each parcel, the parcels could have been first offered separately and then together and the amount for which they sold as a whole could be credited to the respective parcels in the proportion that the highest bids for the-respective parcels bore to one another. (Cornell v. McCann, 48 Md. 592.) This method of exposing the property for sale would determine whether the lots would sell to better advantage separately or together and, if the latter, would determine approximately the value of the parcels separately for the purposes of distribution of the proceeds. The referee could either be directed to credit the amounts received properly to the respective parcels and distribute the same to the plaintiffs and parties entitled thereto or to report the same to the court if it was thought that there would be necessity therefor.

It appears that the attorney for the plaintiffs took title from the j'eferee and then conveyed to the plaintiffs who subsequently conveyed parcels O and D for $40,000. The court at first set aside the entire sale, but these facts were made to appear on a motion for a reargument, and the order was modified by confirming the same as to these parcels and directing that $40,000 be credited upon the mortgages. It was further shown on the motion for a reargument that the plain tiffs, after thus obtaining title leased parcels A, E and B for a period of twenty-one years at an annual rental of $6,250, with the privilege to the lessee of purchasing the same for $125,000 prior to the 1st day of January, 1908. The court further modified *532the order by directing that the resale'of these parcels be made subject to this lease. Upon the facts appearing in the record before us I am of the opinion that the sale should have been vacated in toto. The plaintiffs had actual notice and their grantees had constructive notice that the referees’ reports of sale had not been confirmed. Conveyances of premises purchased on a foreclosure sale prior to the confirmation of the report should not be allowed to influence the discretion of the court on an application for a resale involving the rights of parties to the suit. Such purchasers obtain no right except the right to be reimbursed for the amounts paid and interest as against the right of the parties to the suit who move for a resale. (1 Barb. Ch. Pr. 529 ; Brown v. Frost, 10 Paige, 243, 247 ; Peck v. Knickerbocker Ice Co., 18 Hun, 183 ; Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. B. & M. T. Co., 11 Civ. Proc. Rep. 307; New York Eastern C. B. & M. Society v. Bishop, 8 N. Y. Supp. 60.)

Plaintiffs ask that the order be reversed, the motions denied, the exceptions to the referee’s report overruled and that the foreclosure sales be confirmed. I am of opinion that the order should be reversed or modified as to the 'terms of the resale. Wé cannot now decree any relief in favor of the defendants because their appeal is not before us. If, as appears to be, the same should have been conducted in" the manner suggested,, the report of sale not having been confirmed, some of,the parties should move at Special Term for an order that the sales' be conducted as here outlined.

I, therefore, vote for a modification of the order by striking out the terms of resale, without costs to either party, and with leave for" a further application at 'Special Term by any party as herein suggested.

Orders affirmed, with costs.