Gibbons v. Wasserman

Per Curiam.

The plaintiff, appointed receiver in a suit to foreclose a mortgage, brought this action in the Municipal Court against the defendants, parties to the foreclosure action, to recover for use and occupation of part of the mortgaged premises in possession of the defendants under a lease subsequent to the mortgage.

A chancery, or as it is sometimes called common-law, receiver acquires no title but merely the right of possession as an officer of the court (Stokes v. Hoffman House, 167 N. Y. 554), and the plaintiff as such receiver was not, in the face of the existing lease, vested with any right of action against the defendant for use and occupation. The order appointing the plaintiff receiver, while it authorized and directed him to collect the rents, to make leases for terms not exceeding one year, and to maintain summary proceedings to recover possession, and directed the tenants to attorn and pay all rents due and unpaid and thereafter to become due, does not authorize the receiver to ignore defendants’ lease and bring an action for use and occupation against them.

Whether the case is one wherein a tenant should be required to pay an occupation rental during the pendency of the action rests in the discretion of the court of equity, not in the sanction by any other subordinate tribunal of the receiver’s repudiation of a lease. (Derby v. Brandt, 99 App. Div. 257; Fletcher v. McKeon, 71 id. 278; Stokes v. Hoffman House, supra.)

Judgment affirmed, with twenty-five dollars costs, with leave to plaintiff to appeal to the Appellate Division. •

Bijur and Peters, JJ., concur.