McDonald v. Cohen

Lehman, J. (concurring).

From the stipulated facts upon which this proceeding was submitted, it appears that the owner of the premises executed a third mortgage thereon containing a provision for the appointment of a receiver of the rents and profits of the premises. After the execution and recording of the mortgage, the owner leased the premises to the tenant herein for a term of ten' months, beginning February 1, 1909; and the tenant paid the entire rent for the said term. An action was thereafter brought to foreclose the said mortgage; and, on March twentieth, the petitioner herein duly qualified as receiver of the rents and profits appointed in the said action and now has brought summary proceedings against the tenant for the non-payment of the rent for the month of April. It does not appear that the tenant was made a party to the foreclosure proceeding’s, or that he has attorned to the receiver. It is absolutely settled law that, until the mortgage is actually foreclosed, the mortgagor is entitled to the possession of the premises. Mevertheless, under its general equitable power, the court may, prior to the foreclosure and sale, appoint a receiver of the rents, issues and profits of the mortgaged premises and thereby make the decree of foreclosure which shall be finally entered relate back to the time when the foreclosure was begun; and rents accruing subsequently to the appointment of the receiver may be taken and held for application upon the mortgage debt. Hollenbeck v. Donnell, 94 N. Y. 342.

The leases previously made by the mortgagor are not *491made void by such an appointment, but rents then due and unpaid, or thereafter accruing, must be paid to such receiver. Inasmuch as the receiver is entitled to the possession of the premises and the. rents accruing therefrom, I see no reason why he should hot be entitled to enforce these rights by summary proceedings, even though the tenant was not made a party to the foreclosure proceedings nor has attorned to him. In the case of Commonwealth Mortgage Co. v. De Waltoff, 135 App. Div. 33, the court has sustained the right of a purchaser at a foreclosure sale to bring such a proceeding against a tenant not a party to the foreclosure who has not attorned to the purchaser, upon the theory that the lease was not destroyed by .the foreclosure proceedings to which the tenant was not a party; and, in the opinion of the court, attornment was, if not obsolete in this State, at least no longer necessary to establish the relation of landlord and tenant under such circumstances. Under the authority of that case I think that, under similar circumstances, the receiver is also entitled to bring summary proceedings for rent to which he may be entitled.

I do not, however, find that he is entitled to any rent in this case. He relies on this appeal upon the case of Fletcher v. McKeon, 71 App. Div. 278; but that case held only that, since the receiver was entitled to all rents accruing upon the premises, the mortgagor could not defeat this right in equity by a prior grant to a third party of such rents nor, apparently, by receiving payments in advance of rents accruing under the lease thereafter. In the subsequent case of Derby v. Brandt, 99 App. Div. 257, the court carried the rule slightly further and decided that the receiver had a claim to rent, free from all defenses that might be raised against the original landlord. Ho case has, however, gone so far as to hold that, where a lease is made for a term and rent is payable in advance under the lease for the whole term, any rent accrues thereafter which the receiver is entitled to. The Century Dictionary defines the term “ accrue” in law: “to become a present and enforeible right jOr demand.” Under that definition no rent ever accrued I under this lease after the date of its inception. It was *492payable and was paid at that date. Such a lease may be so unusual that by its very terms it appears fraudulent, but in summary proceedings a lease cannot be set aside because of fraud; for such a remedy the petitioner must seek a court of equity.

The final order' should, therefore, be reversed, with costs, and the proceeding dismissed.