Opinion
October 20, 1917.
Joline, Larkin Rathbone [ Arthur H. Van Brunt of counsel], for the appellant Central Trust Company, trustee.
Moot, Sprague, Brownell Marcy [ Adelbert Moot, Welles V. Moot and James C. Sweeney of counsel], for the appellant Pacific Improvement Company.
Frank Sullivan Smith, receiver, in person [ Alton B. Parker of counsel].
The orders should be reversed so far as they assume to adjudicate and determine that the lien of the receiver's certificates is prior to that of the first mortgage; and the recitals, statements and declarations directed by the orders appealed from to be incorporated in the receiver's certificates, to the effect that such certificates shall be a prior lien to that of the first mortgage, and remain a lien upon the mortgaged property prior to the lien of the first mortgage, until the amount of the principal and interest of such certificates be paid, should be omitted, and all provisions contained in the orders, which, in terms or in effect, declare the certificates to be a lien prior to that of the first mortgage, should be stricken from the orders, upon the ground that the Special Term had no power to determine the question of the priority of the receiver's certificates, upon the motion and the papers before it, as against the first mortgage bondholders or their trustee named in the first mortgage.
Neither the first mortgage bondholders, nor their trustee, are parties to this action, which is brought to foreclose the subsequent mortgage, and neither had judicial notice of the appointment of the receiver, or of any of the applications authorizing the receiver to issue the certificates, which it is proposed to take up with other like certificates, and have adjudged a lien prior to that of the first mortgage. Moreover, the receiver was made a party defendant to the action for the foreclosure of the first mortgage, and the judgment entered therein, in terms, bars all his right and claim to the mortgaged property as well as that of his codefendant, the mortgagor, making no provision for the payment of the obligations of the receiver, although at that time there were outstanding certificates of indebtedness of this receiver amounting to about $200,000. But the judgment in this action, which was entered the same day as that in the action for the foreclosure of the first mortgage, makes provisions for such obligations; it declares that the sale of the mortgaged property shall be subject to the obligations of the receiver, and the purchaser shall assume the payment thereof. While these judgments have lain dormant and unexecuted for over ten years, they have never been modified. The receiver does not ask authority to incur indebtedness; that already exists and the obligations therefor are outstanding. The real controversy here is whether the obligations of the receiver are to have priority over the first mortgage. Indeed, an action is now pending in the Supreme Court to establish such priority to which both the receiver and the first mortgage bondholders are parties and that is what the receiver desires to have established upon these motions and what the orders appealed from assume to adjudge. We are of the opinion that such adjudication cannot be sustained.
A former attempt was made by the receiver to have this question adjudicated against the first mortgage bondholders, upon a motion made in this action to bring in nunc pro tunc the trustee named in the first mortgage as a party to the action, and have the receiver's petitions for authority to issue his certificate of indebtedness amended by showing facts which it is claimed entitle the certificates to priority over that of the first mortgage. But that attempt failed. ( Central Trust Co. v. Pittsburgh, S. N.R.R. Co., 174 App. Div. 800; affd., 220 N.Y. 690.)
We think this attempt must likewise fail. The adjudication here stands upon no better footing than the like adjudication reversed upon the former appeal.
The orders so far as they assume to determine that the lien of the certificates is prior to that of the first mortgage, should be reversed and the orders modified by striking therefrom all provisions to that effect, as above set forth. As so modified, the orders should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements to the appellants. Our order, so far as it reverses or modifies the orders of the Special Term, should state that it is upon the law, and not in the exercise of discretion.
All concurred.
Orders modified in accordance with opinion, and as so modified affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements to appellants.