[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 556
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 557 The foregoing statement of the case is taken from the opinion of the presiding justice of the Appellate Division and adopted by us. The principal questions argued on this appeal relate to the award made by the referee to the plaintiff of the sum of ten thousand dollars paid by the receiver to the landlord on account of the rent after the defendant entered into possession of the leasehold premises, and to the refusal of the referee to allow the defendant its counterclaim for some nineteen thousand dollars paid by *Page 558 it on account of the rents accruing during the period of occupation by the receiver. The Appellate Division was unanimous in its approval of the disposition made by the referee of the defendant's counterclaim; but his ruling, that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the payment made by him on account of rent, was affirmed by a divided court. The judgment in the foreclosure action directed that the mortgaged property be sold "subject to all liens of every kind and description." The terms of sale under which the property was sold by the referee, after enumerating the various leases under which the property was held, stated, "unpaid rent, if any, will be allowed to the purchaser." An addendum contained the following provisions: "The purchaser upon payment of the sum bid, shall receive the property free and clear from unpaid rent now due, or taxes, or counsel fees, or other expenses arising from the receivership. All such claims, if assumed by the purchaser, shall be deducted from the price the property brings." It is claimed by the counsel for the respondent that the defendant, after the purchase at the foreclosure sale, assumed the payment of the back rents, and that this fact materially affects the rights of the parties in this litigation. We are of opinion that no agreement to assume such rents was established by the evidence, and our disposition of the case will proceed on that theory. But though the defendant did not personally assume the back rent, it necessarily took the leasehold premises subject to the burdens of such rent and under the hazard of being dispossessed by the landlord and losing the demised term in case the rent was not paid. It is clear that under the terms of the sale the purchaser was to receive the leaseholds free from any back rent, or to have the amount of the back rent allowed him out of the purchase money, which in effect was the same thing. If the purchase had been made by a third party, paying money for the property, the questions before us would be without practical importance, for in one or another way the purchaser would be entitled to reimbursement out of the funds realized by the foreclosure suit, whether by sale or receivership, for all unpaid rent accruing before the time of sale, and we do not say that the fact that the defendant purchased in bonds in any manner affects the rights of the *Page 559 parties. But this consideration does not control the disposition of the case. This action is at law by the receiver to recover money paid by him for the defendant's account. The counterclaim is for money claimed to have been paid by defendant for the plaintiff's use on the debt for which he was primarily liable. We think that the decision of the action must proceed on the same lines as if the defendant had not purchased at the foreclosure sale, and must follow the determination of the question whether the plaintiff was legally liable for the rent accruing while he was in possession of the leasehold premises. When the defendant bought at the foreclosure sale it made no contract with the receiver, so that its right to indemnity for the accrued rent which it was compelled to pay constituted no legal claim against him. Indeed, the purchaser made no contract with the referee. "The sale is made by the court. * * * The purchaser could not sue the court and it could not sue him upon his contract. * * * By bidding he subjects himself to the jurisdiction of the court, and in effect becomes a party to the proceeding, and he may be compelled to complete his purchase by an order of the court and by its process for contempt, if necessary." (Andrews v.O'Mahoney, 112 N.Y. 567. See Miller v. Collyer, 36 Barb. 250.) A purchaser's remedy must, therefore, necessarily be by application in the action in which the sale was had, and as his claim could not be the subject of an affirmative suit on his part, so he is equally precluded from setting it up as a counterclaim in a suit brought against him.
To succeed in its appeal the defendant must, therefore, establish the proposition that the accruing rent constituted a legal liability against the receiver. We think that this is not the law. The plaintiff was a chancery or, as it is sometimes called, a common-law receiver, not a statutory one, who, as in case of the sequestration of an insolvent corporation, is in effect a mere assignee. In Keeney v. Home Ins. Co. (71 N.Y. 396) it was held, "A receiver pendente lite is a person appointed to take charge of the fund or property to which the receivership extends while the case remains undecided. The title to the property is not changed by the appointment. The receiver acquires no title but only the right of possession as *Page 560 the officer of the court. The title remains in those in whom it was vested when the appointment was made. The object of the appointment is to secure the property pending the litigation, so that it may be appropriated in accordance with the rights of the parties, as they may be determined by the judgment in the action. The appointment of the plaintiff as receiver, therefore, wrought no change in the title of the property." This statement of the rights and powers of chancery receivers and of the character of their possession and title, or rather lack of title, and the distinction between such receivers and statutory receivers, has been repeated by this court in U.S. Trust Co. v. N.Y., W.S. B. Ry. Co. (101 N.Y. 483) and in Decker v. Gardner (124 N.Y. 334). It was applied in the case of the committee of a lunatic inMatter of Otis (101 N.Y. 580). It was there held that the committee did not by occupation of the premises become liable as assignee of the term. Judge ANDREWS, writing the opinion of the court, said: "But the committee of a lunatic takes no title to the real or personal estate of a lunatic. He is a mere bailiff to take charge of the property of the lunatic, and to administer it subject to the direction of the court. His possession is the possession of the court." This statement, mutatis mutandis, is exactly true of a chancery receiver. Originally neither the receiver nor the committee could sue in his own name, but this power was granted to both by the same statute. (Chap. 112, Laws of 1845.) In the Otis case Judge ANDREWS wrote: "It is well settled that a receiver, or an assignee in bankruptcy, or an assignee for the benefit of creditors, if he elects to accept a lease belonging to the debtor, or assignor, becomes by such election assignee of the lease and personally liable on the covenant to pay rent, of which liability he can only discharge himself by an assignment or surrender." It is plain, however, that in this reference is made only to statutory receivers, for the distinguished judge who wrote in the Otis case also wrote the opinions in the Keeney case and in the U.S. Trust Co. case, the latter being decided at the same term of court as theOtis case. This view of the effect of the appointment of a chancery receiver has been adopted by the Supreme Court of the United States. (Davis v. Gray, 16 *Page 561 Wall. 218; Quincy, M. P.R.R. Co. v. Humphreys,145 U.S. 82.) If it be true that a chancery receiver takes no title to a leasehold estate, but mere possession as an officer of the court, we do not see how any privity of estate can be created between him and the lessor by which he can become liable as assignee of the term upon the covenant to pay rent.
It is contended, however, that whatever be the force of the foregoing argument and whatever the true character of his possession, it is settled by the decided cases that a chancery receiver is liable for the payment of rent accruing during his occupation. Before considering the cases cited in support of this assertion, it is necessary that we should have in mind the clear distinction between the legal liability of the receiver, by virtue of his appointment as such and his possession under his appointment, and the equitable claim which a lessor may have for the application of the fund in court towards the satisfaction of the rent. The first, if it exists, is absolute. The second is qualified and may be destroyed by superior equities of other parties. It is apparent that the claim of the lessor for rent when solely an equitable one, must be established in the action in which a receiver is appointed; for in that form alone can parties having other equities be heard and the superiority of equity among conflicting claimants be determined. Statements concerning the liability of the receiver to pay rent when made in foreclosure suits are not necessarily to be interpreted as laying down a rule of legal liability, but rather as asserting the equitable rights of the lessor. Three cases in this court are relied on by the counsel for the appellant. The first is that ofWoodruff v. Erie Railway Co. (93 N.Y. 609), in which it was held that a receiver must pay the rent of a leased railroad. It is to be first observed that the receiver in that case had been appointed such on a sequestration of the corporation as well as in the foreclosure suit. He was, therefore, a statutory receiver. But beyond this an examination of the record shows that in the first instance the plaintiff made his application in the foreclosure suit to compel the receiver to pay the rent. After consideration the court deemed it wiser that the plaintiff should proceed by suit rather than by summary application *Page 562 and directed him to bring an action. The action brought in pursuance of this direction was not at law but in equity, and to it were made parties not only the receiver, but the plaintiff and defendants in the action in which the receiver had been appointed. It was, therefore, entirely practicable to determine in that action the equities of all parties. The next case is that of Frank v. N.Y., L.E. W.R.R. Co. (122 N.Y. 197), in which were involved the same receivership and the same lease as in the preceding case. But the decision related to the liability of a corporation which had purchased on foreclosure and become assignee of the term. The third is that of Wells v. Higgins (132 N.Y. 459) in which a receiver of leasehold premises was held liable in an action at law for default during his occupation in a covenant to pay rent and taxes. The receiver in that case was a chancery receiver. There may be a question as to whether under the terms of the order appointing him he was directed to pay the rent. However this may be, the decision of this court seems to have proceeded on the ground that the title to the demised premises vested in the receiver. I am frank to say that very probably the point presented on this appeal was involved in the decision of that case. From an examination of the briefs of counsel, it appears that no question was made that a chancery receiver did not take title by his appointment and possession, but it was sought to relieve the defendant on the ground that he was appointed receiver only of the rents and profits, and not of the property itself. We think that case should not control us now.
Much stress is also laid upon the case of United States TrustCo. v. Wabash W. Railway Co. (150 U.S. 287). It is there said: "If he elect to adopt a lease, the receiver becomes vested with the title to the leasehold interest, and a privity of estate is thereby created between the lessor and the receiver, by which the latter becomes liable upon the covenant to pay rent." This statement was made on an application in the foreclosure suit in which the receiver was appointed. It may well be, therefore, that the court intended to assert only what would constitute an equitable claim of the lessor upon the funds in court. As a matter of fact the lessors were not allowed the rental of the whole period during which the receiver was in possession *Page 563 of the leased railroad, but only for rent accruing subsequent to an order made by the court on an application of the lessors that the receiver either pay rent or surrender the road. If the right of the lessor to rent depended upon privity of estate between the receiver and the lessor, it is not entirely clear how this result was reached. That the case was really disposed of on equitable considerations appears from the conclusion of the opinion: "As bearing upon the general equities of the case, it may be remarked that, while the proceedings in the foreclosure of the Wabash mortgage did undoubtedly result in the detention of the road from its lawful owners for about fifteen months without the payment of the agreed rent, the road during this time earned nothing beyond its operating expenses, and there is nothing to indicate that it would have done so in the hands of its owners, so that in fact they lost nothing. Indeed, it is scarcely credible that they would have delayed so long to demand possession of the road if in their opinion it could have been operated at a profit."
We also agree with the learned court below that the terms of the order appointing the plaintiff receiver did not require him to pay the accrued rent. Nor can that payment be considered as having been made under the stress of necessity in order to save the mortgaged property. At the time of the payment the sale had been effected and the purchaser was in possession. Though it did not assume the rent in arrears, the defendant was required to pay such rent to save its lease from forfeiture. The act of the receiver was, therefore, an appropriation of a fund in court without the authority of the court, and must be considered to have been so appropriated for the defendant's benefit. It follows that the judgment was correct and should be affirmed.
We do not wish our decision to be misinterpreted. We have discussed the rights of the parties from a technical point of view regardless of the equitable claims of the defendant, simply because we deem that it would set a very bad precedent to attempt to adjust those equities in this action, in which all the facts determining such equities are not and cannot be before us. While we have held that no legal liability for the payment of rent was imposed upon the receiver, either by virtue *Page 564 of his appointment and possession as such, or by the terms of the order appointing him, we have not decided that the lessors had not a most equitable claim to have all the net profits of the operation of the hotel, after the payment of its running expenses, applied to the payment of the rent of the premises, the use of which by the receiver produced the fund in court. InMatter of Otis Judge ANDREWS said: "If the leased premises are occupied by the committee, and such occupation is to the advantage of the estate, as where it was necessary in order to carry on or close up the business of the lunatic, the rent accruing during such occupation would justly be regarded as a reasonable expense incurred by the committee." Nor do we decide that the defendant did not, under the terms of the sale, by which it was to receive the property free and clear of unpaid rent, succeed to the equities of the lessor as well as acquire new equities of its own. The defendant has not been without remedy. During the pendency of this action it could have applied in the foreclosure suit for an order of the court ratifying the payment made by the receiver on account of the rent. If such a motion had been granted it would have disposed of that claim and no recovery for the amount could have been allowed. It is not too late for the defendant now, by application in the foreclosure suit, to have all its equities established and preserved. It may move the court for a ratification for the payment of rents made by the receiver and for a direction to its officer to reduce the judgment by that amount and interest. If the amount of the present recovery is to be ultimately restored to the defendant on account of the unpaid rent which it should have been allowed out of the purchase money, this judgment might be permitted to stand unenforced as settling the accounts between the receiver and the defendant, and to be credited as a payment on such restoration. All these matters, however, are questions which can be determined only in the foreclosure action, and upon which we do not pass.
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs, but without prejudice to a motion by defendant to stay its enforcement pending such application to be made in the action in which the receiver was appointed, as it may be advised. *Page 565