Mackenna v. Fidelity Trust Co.

Stover, J.:

This is an action to redeem certain premises in the county of Niagara from the lien of a mortgage, and to require the purchaser at the foreclosure sale to execute a conveyance of the premises to plaintiff.

One Charles M., being the owner of certain premises, mortgaged said premises to one P. to secure the payment of upwards of $23,000. Said mortgage was assigned to the defendant, the Fidelity Trust Company, which was given authority under a trust agreement to collect the principal and interest due upon the bond and mortgage for the benefit of the mortgagee. The premises were thereafter conveyed to Joseph M., and an action to foreclose the said mortgage was subsequently brought, in which Joseph M., Charles M. and the wife of Charles M. were parties, but the plaintiff, who was the wife of Joseph M., was not a party to said action. Said action proceeded to judgment, and upon a sale was purchased by the defendant, who received a deed thereof and entered into possession of the premises. Subsequently the defendant trust company commenced an action to foreclose another mortgage executed by the-plaintiff to said P., the mortgagee in the mortgage above mentioned, *482upon certain other premises, which action proceeded to judgment and sale, and upon the sale oí the premises the defendant trust company recovered a judgment for the sum of $1,019.48 which judgment was duly docketed in the county of Niagara, and is still unsatisfied.

The plaintiff had knowledge of the sale under both foreclosures. Before the commencement of this action the plaintiff tendered to the defendant trust company the amount due at the time of the foreclosure sale with interest to the date of the tender, and offered to pay the taxes paid by the trust company.

The trial court found that the plaintiff had an inchoate right of dower in the premises, and that such inchoate right of dower gave her the right to redeem. It also found that the plaintiff should not be required as a condition of redemption to pay the deficiency judgment of $1,019.48 in favor of the defendant trust company, but directed that redemption should be denied upon defendant’s releasing plaintiff’s right of dower from the mortgage, or upon paying the value of the plaintiff’s inchoate right of dower, the plaintiff to elect which of the alternatives she would avail herself of. If the defendant should fail to satisfy the plaintiff’s dower then it was adjudged that the plaintiff might redeem the premises upon the payment of the amount due on the mortgage, with interest from the 3d day of December, 1898, and the payment of taxes.

Both parties appeal from the judgment; the plaintiff from such part as compels her to elect which relief she shall have, and the defendant from that portion which adjudges that the plaintiff shall not pay the judgment for deficiency.

Upon this appeal it is contended by the defendant that the interest of the plaintiff being an inchoate right of dower, did not give her the right to redeem. We are not cited to any direct authority of the court of last resort upon this proposition, but the plaintiff relies upon the case of Taggart v. Rogers (which is reported in 49 Hun 265 ; sub nom. Taggart v. Wade, 1 N. Y. Supp. 900 ; 3 id. 322; 5 id. 255, and is finally disposed of in sub nom. Taggart v. Rodgers, 34 N. Y. St. Repr. 942). The case cannot be said to be an authority for the broad proposition, for while the General Term upon the first appeal so held, upon a reargument subsequently, it was sent back to the Special Term for the reason as stated by the court that a *483grave doubt existed as to whether the principle announced on the former appeal, namely, that the inchoate right of dower gave the right to redeem, was not erroneous (5 N. Y. Supp. 256). The Special Term, being perhaps bound by the former declaration of the General Term, assumed without discussion that that statement of the law was correct. No appeal was taken by the defendant, and the General Term upon a motion for a' new trial by the plaintiff refused to discuss that question for the reason that “ there is no appeal on the part of the defendant,” at the same time stating: “ In fact there is no necessity for redemption, for her rights have never been invaded by the defendants nor put in jeopardy by the foreclosure proceedings.” (34 N. Y St. Repr. 945.) So that this case can hardly be said to be a controlling adjudication on that subject.

The case of Campbell v. Ellwanger (81 IIun, 259) held that the Statute of Limitations ran against the right to redeem, basing the argument evidently upon the authority of Taggart v. Rogers (supra) and yet the reasoning of the case of Taggart v. Rogers may be said to furnish reason for the contention of the defendant here, for, after assuming that the right to redeem existed, the action was then treated, not as one to redeem, but as an equitable action to recover the interest of the plaintiff in the premises. In the absence of a controlling authority we are not inclined to overrule the holding in Campbell v. Elhoanger (supra), notwithstanding that a holding which permits a present recovery for an interest which may never ripen into any right of possession or enjoyment, is at least, unsatisfactory. But assuming a right to redeem as existing, following the argument in 34 New York State Reporter (supra), “ it seems plain on principle that equity will go only to the extent of protecting the plaintiff’s right and not give her any greater right by reason of the irregular foreclosure than she had before the foreclosure. The rule that a party must l-edeem the entire premises from the lien of the whole mortgage is primarily for the benefit of the mortgagee, and is not of universal application. Here the plaintiff had, before the foreclosure, an inchoate right of dower in the premises. She seeks by redemption to acquire the fee of the premises.” Following the further reasoning of that case, and applying rules of equity as they were there applied, the rights of the purchaser at the foreclosure sale should be protected. The status of the parties is quite different *484from that existing before the sale. It can hardly be said to be equitable to permit the plaintiff in this action to recover the entire value of her interest in the property as if the husband had died. She would be entitled to recover upon the death of the husband only the use of one-third of the value of the estate at the time of the alienation of the estate by the husband, and why should she be permitted to recover in this action any greater sum. Her interest is protected when she receives as great a sum as she would have received had her husband died at the time of the alienation of the property.

As to the judgment for $1,019.48, it is a just debt against the plaintiff, and if the plaintiff had been the.owner of the premises at the time of the entry of the judgment, it would have at once become a lien upon the premises. Had the plaintiff acquired the title from any other source, the judgment would have become a lien upon the premises. There is no reason given for compelling the defendant to resort to the ordinary process for the collection of this judgment, and it would seem to be but just that the plaintiff, before she receives the property, should be obliged to pay the defendant such sum as might be due from her, and which might justly be a lien upon the property in question. There is no reason why the defendant should surrender all of its right as owner of the-premises and then by circumlocution collect a just and equitable lien against the same property and against its grantee. Rather all of the equities should be adjusted now, and all matters in any way connected with the property now finally adjusted between the parties.

We think that the Trial Term was in error in not requiring the plaintiff to pay the judgment for $1,019.48, and that the judgment in this action should be modified by permitting the defendant to take out from the sum to be paid the amount of the judgment and also providing for the alternative payment by the plaintiff in case of redemption.

All concurred, except McLennan, P. J., and Hisoock, J., who dissented from the affirmance of the judgment upon the ground that the plaintiff has an absolute right of redemption and that upon payment of the amount tendered by her she is entitled to a conveyance of the property.

*485Judgment modified by requiring the plaintiff to pay the judgment for $1,019.48 if redemption is had, or in the alternative deducting the amount of the judgment from the sum to be paid by the defendant, and as so modified affirmed, with costs to the defendant trust company. Order to be settled by and before Mr. Justice Stover on two days’ notice.