The mortgagee made application for an order directing the Muller Paper Goods Co., Inc., the last record owner of the property covered by the mortgage, to make available to it all records and data showing income and disbursements pursuant to section 1077-c of the Civil Practice Act, so that it might become known whether the mortgaged property produced a surplus over and above taxes, interest and other carrying charges. The real property is improved with a six-story concrete fireproof factory and loft building. A vacant lot adjoining the building is included in the mortgaged premises. Two of the six floors of the building are occupied by a tenant of the owner under a lease and the owner receives substantial rent therefor. Appellant contends that the balance of the building is occupied by the owner in connection with its business of manufacturing paper products. Respondent says that only two floors are occupied by it for that purpose and the other two floors of the building are unoccupied. The examination and inspection disclose that the owner, in reckoning the income from the property, made no allowance for the rental value of that part of the building which it occupies. The mortgagee thereupon made application for another order directing the owner to pay to it the surplus income derived from the premises and in this proceeding proof was offered by the affidavits of real estate experts of the reasonable rental value of that part of the building occupied by the owner in the conduct of its business. The mortgagee urges that such reasonable rental value should be charged as income from the mortgaged premises. If that is done there will be a surplus over and above taxes, interest and other carrying charges, part of which the mortgagee will be entitled to receive under the provisions of section 1077-c of the Civil Practice Act in reduction of the overdue principal sum of the mortgage. The owner opposed the application on the ground that no surplus is available and, because it is the owner of the property, it is not required to list on the income side of the statement furnished under section 1077-c of the Civil Practice Act any amount for rent for that part of the property occupied by it for its business. The motion of the mortgagee was denied, and it appeals from the order of denial.
In the opinion of the court the section (Civ. Prac. Act, § 1077-c) is broad enough to require the owner to render an account of the use being made of the premises and the fair and reasonable rental value of that part thereof which is occupied by it in its business.
The holding in Holmes v. Gravenhorst (263 N. Y. 148) is not inconsistent with this conclusion. There the mortgagee sought to have the owner in possession of his own property during the foreclosure pay the receiver a fair and reasonable amount in the nature of rental or submit to eviction. Here the mortgagee asks only that such part of the surplus issuing out of the mortgaged property as the court may determine be paid to it in partial discharge of the overdue mortgage debt, and not at all in the way of rent.
The order should be reversed on the law and the facts, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, the motion granted and the matter remitted to Special Term to take proof and fix the reasonable rental value of the part of the mortgaged property occupied by the owner in the conduct of its manufacturing business, which rental value so fixed should be included as income received from the property.