Opinion
June, 1905.
Henry D. Merchant, for the appellant.
John M. Rider, for the respondent.
Present — BARTLETT, WOODWARD, RICH and MILLER, JJ.
This was a suit to foreclose a mortgage for $6,500. No answer or demurrer was interposed by any of the defendants. The appellant alone appeared. Her attorney was duly served with a notice of application for the relief demanded in the complaint. On the return day of the motion no one appeared but the attorney for the plaintiff, who took the usual order of reference to compute, with ten dollars costs, and subsequently obtained from the court, as he was entitled to do without further notice, a direction for the entry of final judgment of foreclosure and sale. This judgment awarded to the plaintiff an additional allowance of two and a half per cent on the sum due, under section 3253 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The appellant complains of this allowance as irregular, claiming that it could not be made after the order of reference to compute, without further notice. We think that the notice of application for the relief demanded in the complaint was broad enough to authorize all the steps that were subsequently taken in the action in behalf of the plaintiff. The point is also made that the court had no jurisdiction to grant an additional allowance where no defense had been interposed. This would be true if the allowance were made on the ground that the case was difficult and extraordinary; but section 3253 has been uniformly construed in this department as permitting an extra allowance of two and a half per cent upon the rendition of judgment by default in mortgage foreclosure suits, and the language of the section clearly warrants this construction. So far as the propriety of the allowance in this particular case is concerned we are not willing to interfere with the discretion exercised by the County Court in granting it.
The order appealed from should be affirmed.
Order of the County Court of Kings county affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.