79-83 Thirteenth Avenue, Ltd. v. DeMarco
79-83 Thirteenth Avenue, Ltd. v. DeMarco
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an action at law for a deficiency following the foreclosure of a first mortgage. The primary feature calling for our attention arises from the fact that the instrument evidencing the debt which the mortgage secured was in form a promissory note rather than the conventional mortgage bond. Defendants, who were the mortgagors and makers of the note, claimed by their answer the benefit of N. J. S. 2A:50-3, originally enacted as L. 1933, c. 82, which provides:
“The obligor in any bond * * * given after March 29, 1933, may file an answer in an action on the bond, disputing the amount of the deficiency sued for. . In that event both parties may introduce, in evidence at the trial of the action on the bond, testimony as to the fair market value of the mortgaged premises at the time of the sale thereof in the foreclosure action, and the court, with or without a jury, shall determine the amount of such deficiency, by deducting from the debt secured by the bond and mortgage the amount determined as the fail-market value of the premises * * (Emphasis supplied)
The trial court granted the plaintiff-mortgagee’s motion for summary judgment, holding that the statute was not applicable where the mortgage debt was represented by a note, 79 N. J. Super. 47 (Law Div. 1963), and the Appellate Division affirmed. 83 N. J. Super. 497 (1964). Certification was
The background facts are simply stated. In 1958 defendants borrowed $18,000 from plaintiff, at 6% interest, repayable at a fixed sum per month with any remaining balance due at the end of approximately 10 years. The document of obligation was a lengthy printed form captioned “Mortgage Note” which, after setting forth the terms of the loan in the usual language of a promissory note, recited that as security for the payment, the makers had delivered a mortgage of even date in the same principal amount on lands in the City of Newark (a store property equipped for the operation of a fish and live poultry market). It went on to set forth most of the customary provisions found in a mortgage bond, including tax, assessment, insurance, repair, default and acceleration clauses. Default not only in the note terms was provided for but also in any of the covenants and conditions of the mortgage. The instrument concluded with a provision for the payment of attorney fees -in the event of institution of suit thereon, with the signatures of the makers under seal—unusual for a note.
Upon default the mortgage was foreclosed in the Chancery Division. The amount found due plaintiff by the judgment therein was $18,898.18. At the Sheriff’s sale, the property was bought in by plaintiff for $11,000. The sale price resulted from competitive bidding in which defendants did not participate, although one of them was present. No objection to the sale was thereafter made by defendants in the foreclosure proceeding. See R. R. 4:83—5. The deficiency sued for in the instant action and for which judgment was entered following plaintiff’s successful motion was $8,481.26, the difference between the sale price and the amount due as fixed by the foreclosure judgment plus Sheriff’s fees on the sale.
We feel compelled, reluctantly, to agree that the fair market value provision may not be utilized in a deficiency suit where the mortgage debt is evidenced by a note. We say compelled for two reasons. First, the language of N. J. S. 2A :50-
Some little explanation of the basis for our conclusion is in order, which will lead into consideration of certain non-legislative aspects of deficiency recoveries dealt with by the trial court and again explored before us. Prior to 1866 a
By the same 1880 statute, as now found in N. J. S. 2A:50—2 after subsequent amendments, the order of proceedings to collect a mortgage debt is specified, but only “[w]here both a bond and a mortgage have been given for the same debt”: First, a foreclosure of the mortgage and, second, an action (at law) on the bond for any deficiency remaining after the foreclosure sale.
Judicial expressions have been in accord. Without delving into great detail, it is safe to say that as a result the bench and bar have uniformly and for many years believed that the effect, for present purposes, of the pattern created by the legislation is as follows: In the case of default on a bond and mortgage, the mortgage must be foreclosed first in the Chancery Division. Suit may then be brought on the deficiency in the Law Division. The judgment there recoverable will, since N. J. S. 2A:50-3, be limited to the difference between the fair market value of the property and the debt re
The mere recital of the differing consequences dependent upon whether a note or a bond is used demonstrates the incongruity and injustice of statutory coverage in one case and not in the other, especially where the lender relies primarily on the value of the mortgaged premises. The discrimination is even more pointed up when we consider the frequent statements that foreclosure procedure statutes and the various measures regulating deficiencies were intended for the benefit of mortgagors, to prevent oppression of them and to make the mortgaged premises primarily answerable for the debt so secured. See, e. g., Knight v. Cape May Sand Co., 83 N. J. L. 597, 601-602 (E. & A. 1912); Montclair
This brings us to a consideration of whether analogous non-statutory relief is available today with respect to a note mortgage deficiency. The question was raised before the trial judge in this action by reason of statements in the affidavits of both sides submitted on the motion for summary judgments (which we permitted the defendants to supplement following the oral argument in this court). The judge decided in effect that the mortgagor may today interpose the equities of the Lowenstein doctrine to seek reduction of the deficiency which might be sued for following the foreclosure of a note mortgage, but that such relief had to be sought in the foreclosure proceeding by objection to the sale, R. R. 4:83-5. He further found that, in any event, defendants had shown no equitable basis to reduce the amount demanded in this suit.
We do feel, however, that the trial judge was too restrictive in limiting the requisites for such relief to the criteria laid down in Lowenstein. 79 N. J. Super., at pp. 58-59. Those requisites derived from and were built around the economic conditions of a depression era. Today they have lost a good part of their pertinency. General economic conditions are the reverse of those in the 30’s. Times are booming, mortgage loan funds for refinancing are plentiful and lenders are competing for investments. There is an active market for most kinds of real estate and judicial sales attract prospective purchasers who bid competitively for many properties. While it would be unwise for us to attempt to spell out abstractly detailed criteria for deficiency relief, since each case will have to be decided on its own facts, we may mention some considerations which we believe will have pertinency. In this connection it may be initially noted that the fair market value deduction statute is indicative of a broad legislative policy that mortgagors should not be personally liable for more than the difference between that figure and the mortgage debt. Under any circumstances the mortgagor or anyone else liable for the debt should have to show as a prerequisite to any relief that he is personally unable to pay it by some means. Otherwise a solvent debtor would be able to unload an unprofitable investment on his mortgagee. Of course, the party seeking
Since foreclosure of the note mortgage was the initial proceeding in the instant case rather than suit on the note followed by execution levy on the mortgaged premises, we should not deal with the rights or remedies of a mortgagor if the latter course were the one followed. In Silver v. Williams, supra, 72 N. J. Super., at p. 570, the Appellate Division said that no case or statute in this State forbids the mortgagee from levying execution upon the mortgaged premises and, without citation of authority, that there was apparent judicial recognition of the prima facie regularity of the procedure. This court, however, has never expressly passed on it. It is enough to note here that the matter may well not be free from doubt. Among other troublesome aspects, the procedure involves summary extinction of the right of redemption, a right otherwise rather zealously protected by the law. See the discussion in Tischler, supra (86 N. J. L. J. 572).
Finally, we are thoroughly satisfied that, in any event, the defendants here have made out no case at all for equitable intervention in their behalf. The only proof of the fair market value of the property was a vague, nonexpert, conclusory suggestion and only two of the four swore that they had insufficient resources to pay the mortgage debt or protect their interests.
The judgment of the Appellate Division is affirmed.
The Banking Act of 1948 recognizes the distinction between such loans and those where a mortgage is taken only as collateral security in the connotation of the lending powers of banks. See N. J. S. A. 17:9A-64, subd. A(1) and 17:9A-70, subd. B.
The 1880 statute did away with the “one-action rule” prescribed by the 1866 enactment. Such a rule is in force by statute in a number of states today on the thesis that a single proceeding affords greater protection to the mortgagor. 4 American Law of Property (Casner ed. 1951), § 16.201. The separation of mortgage proceedings required by the 1880 act is expressly continued by R. R. 4:31-2 despite the general policy of the rules since 1948 that all claims shall be disposed of in one proceeding in either the Law or Chancery Division even
Concurring Opinion
(concurring). I concur in the result announced in Justice Hall’s opinion. The discussion therein with respect
In the run-of-the-mill mortgage transactions, a great mass of which involves ordinary homeowners, the factor motivating the lender is the value of the property offered as security for the loan. It is common knowledge that persons and corporations in the mortgage lending business usually limit the size of their loans to a certain percentage of the market value of the property. This practice has a twofold purpose: (1) to furnish reasonable assurance to the lender that in the event of default, the security provided by the property will probably be sufficient to make him whole, and (2) to leave the mortgagor sufficient equity in the property above the mortgage to provide substantial incentive for the making and continuance of payments toward satisfaction of the obligation. In short, from its inception the basic nature of the transaction is such that the parties regard the land as the primary security for the debt, and primarily answerable for its satisfaction. Since the land plays such a paramount role it seems reasonable to say in terms of equitable principles that a defaulting mortgagor-owner ought to have an equity in the transaction calling for utilization of the fair value of the land in diminution of the debt.
The Legislature has recognized the equity where the loan to the property owner is represented by a bond and mortgage. In this situation, in the event of default, not only must the mortgage be foreclosed first and the premises sold, but in the event of a deficiency on a bona fide sale thereof, and a suit to obtain a judgment for the amount of the deficiency, the mortgagee must give credit to the mortgagor in such suit for the fair market value of the premises. N. J. S. 2A :50-2 and 3.
The statute gives recognition to the true character of the transaction and the usual intention of the parties in entering into it. Also it establishes that the public policy of the State
It is fair to say that at the time of enactment of the statute the prevalent practice of mortgage money lenders was to secure themselves by a bond and mortgage. That undoubtedly accounts for the fact that the law was cast in terms of bond and mortgage transactions, and contained no reference to the very same kind of a loan evidenced by a note and mortgage. I cannot believe that a Legislature, motivated as it was by considerations affecting the general welfare of homeowners, and intending to safeguard them against deficiencies on foreclosure sales in excess of the fair value of their property, deliberately set out to protect only those mortgagors who had given bonds and mortgages to secure loans on their property, and to exclude from the protection those whose identical obligations were secured by notes and mortgages. I cannot attribute such a motive to the lawmakers; it had to be inadvertent. If the legislative policy is applicable to one instrument, clearly it ought to be applicable to the other. See Tischler, “Note or Bond With Mortgage—Whither the Difference?,” 86 N. J. L. J. 572 (1963).
We can take judicial notice that the statute is being emptied of its salutary public purpose at a constantly increasing pace. Mortgage lenders are turning away from the time-honored custom of bond and mortgage. Now to avoid and to circumvent the strictures of the statute they alter the form of the loan transaction. The note, with an acceleration clause, is being substituted for the bond and by that simple change the beneficent effect of the legislation is said to be extinguished. On default in payments there is no statutory obligation to foreclose the mortgage before proceeding on the note. Taking advantage of the acceleration provision in the note, suit is brought thereon and judgment taken for the full amount of the debt then due. The noteholder-judgment creditor’s thesis is that after execution is levied, the mortgaged premises may be sold subject to the mortgage; the sale is
The many inequities and financial burdens which may be imposed upon a note and mortgage debtor as contrasted with a bond and mortgage debtor, are obvious. Such burdens and inequities are visited upon homeowner mortgagors, the vast majority of whom do not have the slightest appreciation of the difference between signing a note and signing a bond, to secure which they are giving the mortgage. Nor do they realize that the mortgage holders are employing a form of transaction aimed at nullifying the legislative policy designed to give property owners a measure of protection, and at increasing substantially the burden being assumed.
Without discussing remedies at length, and the means of accomplishing them, it seems sufficient for present purposes to say that absent additional legislation to equate bond and note in the ordinary mortgage transaction, fair application of equitable principles demands:
(1) That if a third person buys in, subject to the mortgage, at an execution sale of the mortgaged premises under the judgment creditor’s (noteholder’s) judgment, it should be assumed that the sum paid for the mortgagor’s equity of redemption represents its value above the outstanding indebtedness on the mortgage. Consequently the mortgage and the judgment should be deemed discharged as between the original parties;
(2) If the mortgagee-judgment creditor buys in at the sale, thereby cutting off the equity of redemption, it should be deemed that the security equals the mortgage or judgment
(3) As a minimum measure of relief in either (1) or (2), equity should require that in any execution sale on a judgment resulting from the usual note and mortgage transaction, the mortgagor should be given a credit of the fair value of the property at the time of the entry of judgment.
Many commentators have said that when injustice presents itself, the ingenuity of equity in devising means of achieving justice is almost boundless. I have no doubt-that in appropriate cases involving notes and mortgages the genius of equity will assert itself to the proper end. The remedy could be facilitated, of course, by the hand which recognized the public need for N. J. S. 2A:50-2 and 3. But that type of remedy rests entirely in the judgment and discretion of the legislative branch of the government.
Eeaecis, J., concurring in result.
For affirmance — Chief Justice Weintbaub, and Justices Jacobs, Ebancis, Pbootoe, Hall, Schettino and Haneman —7.
For reversal—None.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- 79-83 THIRTEENTH AVENUE, LTD., a LIMITED PARTNERSHIP ASSOCIATION OF NEW JERSEY, PLAINTIFFRESPONDENT, v. TERESA DeMARCO, JOSEPH DeMARCO, LOUIS DeMARCO AND DORIS DeMARCO, DEFENDANTSAPPELLANTS
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