Opinion
November 6, 1908.
Alexander Rosenthal, for the appellants.
Gustavus A. Rogers, for the respondents.
Defendants appeal from an order granting leave to plaintiffs to sue them after foreclosure and sale of mortgaged property, for a deficiency arising upon such sale. The plaintiffs held a mortgage assigned to them by the defendant Frank Slater, to whom it had been given by one Mondshain. Upon the assignment Frank Slater had indorsed a written guaranty of the payment of the mortgage debt, and the defendants Isaac and Joseph Slater, had also jointly indorsed thereon a like guaranty. When the foreclosure action was begun Frank Slater and Isaac Slater were named as defendants. Some difficulty appears to have been found in effecting service upon Frank Slater, although it does not appear very clearly what efforts were made to serve him. At all events he was dropped as a defendant. Isaac Slater was served with a summons and a notice of the object of the action in which it was stated in precise terms that no personal claim was made against him. He served a notice of appearance but took no further steps in the cause. Joseph Slater was neither named as a defendant, nor served with process. The action proceeded to foreclosure and sale resulting in a deficiency of $4,641.72 on a $6,000 mortgage. For this sum the plaintiffs now seek to sue the Slaters, and the order appealed from permits them to do so. (Code Civ. Proc. § 1628.)
It is urged on behalf of the respondents that the guarantors of the debt were not necessary parties to the foreclosure action. This is undoubtedly true in a certain sense because the title of the purchaser upon the sale would not be affected by their absence. There is no doubt, however, that they would have been proper parties, and that, if they had been made parties, a judgment for deficiency might have been taken against them in that action. ( Robert v. Kidansky, 111 App. Div. 475.) Hence the rules of law as to permitting a separate action to be brought against them are precisely as applicable as if they had been obligors on the bond itself instead of guarantors. It has been universally held that section 1628 of the Code of Civil Procedure confers no absolute right upon a plaintiff to sue separately after foreclosure a person liable for the mortgage debt and who might have been made a party to the foreclosure action, but that the right to do so should be granted only when satisfactory reasons are shown why the personal liability was not prosecuted in the foreclosure suit itself. It was pointed out by Judge RAPALLO in Equitable Life Ins. Society v. Stevens ( 63 N.Y. 341, 345) that under the Revised Statutes "so far * * * from its being made compulsory on the court to grant such permission in all cases, the general rule was against it, and special circumstances must be shown to justify a separate proceeding at law." So also it was said in Scofield v. Doscher ( 72 N.Y. 491, 495): "The aim of the statute is to dispose of the matter in one proceeding." In Matter of Marshall ( 53 App. Div. 136) the plaintiff had made the original mortgagors parties defendant but, finding some difficulty in serving them, had entered an order striking their names out, expressing a willingness to forego any right to a deficiency judgment against them for the sake of hastening the case. An order permitting her after sale to sue these same parties for a deficiency was reversed by this court, the rule being reiterated that such leave should be given with caution and especially so when the mortgagees voluntarily refrained from seeking a deficiency judgment in the foreclosure action. An affidavit submitted by one of the plaintiffs shows that in electing not to proceed against Frank Slater in the foreclosure suit he was actuated by much the same considerations which moved the plaintiff in the case last cited, for he says: "I knew that the security that I had against the property was more reliable than the personal responsibility of these defendants and verily believed that if I could hasten the matter to a decree, that the property would bring enough to satisfy the amount of the bond and mortgage." As to Isaac Slater, the reasons against allowing him to be sued seem to be unanswerable, for he was not only made a party to the suit, but was served with process, so that a deficiency judgment could appropriately have been applied for. But not only was no such relief demanded against him, but he was expressly informed that no personal claim was made against him, the natural result of which would be to prevent him from taking any means to protect himself.
There is much reason for considering the service of this notice as an express waiver of any right to hold him for the deficiency. At the least it furnishes sufficient ground for refusing leave to sue him. As to Joseph Slater, no explanation whatever is given why he was not made a party defendant, and it affirmatively appears that no difficulty would have been found in serving him. We are of opinion that no sufficient reason was shown why any of the appellants should now be sued for the deficiency. The order appealed from is, therefore, reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion for leave to sue denied, with ten dollars costs.
INGRAHAM, McLAUGHLIN, CLARKE and HOUGHTON, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs.