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App. Div.]

Second Department, March, 1910.

On the death of a mortgagor intestate, those taking the lands by descent as well as one entitled to a tenancy by the curtesy must be made defendants in a suit of foreclosure in order to transmit their respective estates to the purchaser.

On a sale on foreclosure the estate of the defendants is not extinguished, but the estate of each is transmitted to the purchaser.

SEPARATE APPEALS by the plaintiff, Sarah Emilie Hope, and the defendant, James Benjamin Oric Shevill, from parts of a judg ment of the Supreme Court, entered in the office of the clerk of the county of Kings on the 26th day of February, 1909, upon the decision of the court rendered after a trial at the Kings County Special Term.

Charles G. F. Wahle [H. Lionel Kringel with him on the brief], for the appellants.

John C. Loud, for the respondents Seaman.

G. P. Foulk, for the respondent Kroos.

THOMAS, J.:

Hope, plaintiff, Shevill, defendant appellant, and three others, their brothers, on February 7, 1875, took by descent from their mother a piece of land in Brooklyn, subject to the tenancy by the curtesy of their father, Benjamin Shevill. May 1, 1874, their mother and father mortgaged the land to one Hoople for $4,000. On June 27, 1885, Hoople, assignee of the mortgage, began foreclosure by action, and judgment was rendered July 14, 1886, whereon sale was made September 15, 1886, to Hoople, who conveyed March 29, 1892, to defendant Seaman, by deed recorded April 1, 1892, who, on April 3, 1903, mortgaged the land to one Kroos, who assigned the mortgage to defendant Kroos. On July 27, 1891, Benjamin Shevill, the husband, died. This action is for partition and an accounting, and was begun in July, 1907. The plaintiff and defendant appellant claim that, although made parties to the foreclosure action, they were not served with. the summons, and that the attorney appeared for them without authority. In this action no evidence of authority to appear is given, but that such anthority existed has been established, as will be later noticed. Hope was under age and lived in New Jersey

Second Department, March, 1910.

[Vol. 137. with her husband. Shevill was of age and was a non-resident of the State. No service was made on Shevill. Service of the summons and complaint was made on Hope in New Jersey, without order of publication, but no guardian ad litem was appointed. Hope understood the meaning of the papers, but did not know of the appearance for her until within a few months previous to this action. Shevill knew nothing of the foreclosure and sale until about the same date.

The defense as to both Hope and Shevill is the Statute of Limitations and laches, and as to Shevill, separately, that he is bound by the appearance of the attorney and barred by an order in the foreclosure action, made on September 9, 1907, denying Shevill's motion, dated July 5, 1907, and returnable and heard July 22, 1907, to set aside the judgment on the ground that the summons was not served and Catlin, the attorney for Shevill, had no power to appear.

The court had no jurisdiction of Shevill, a non-resident, and jurisdiction could not be obtained save by means of service by publication, which was not had, or by his voluntary appearance in person or by attorney.

Without considering the various other matters suggested by counsel, it is considered that the order denying the motion to set aside the judgment is a bar to this action. Shevill did appear in the foreclosure action, without limiting his appearance, and moved to set aside the judgment, and his motion was denied. In Vilas v. Plattsburgh & Montreal R. R. Co. (123 N. Y. 440) Chase, a non-resident, had moved to set aside the judgment against him on the ground that he was never served with process, and that the appearance was unauthorized. The court reversed the judgment of the General Term, which affirmed the order of the Special Term denying the motion, and held that it was proper to seek relief in the action wherein the unauthorized appearance was entered. The opinion states: "The jurisdiction of a court of equity to set aside a judgment at law obtained by fraud or on other grounds of equitable cognizance has been often asserted and is unquestioned, and it is not necessary now to deny that under special circumstances, where the question of the unauthorized appearance is complicated with fraud, or the rights of purchasers, or the circumstances are

App. Div.]

Second Department, March, 1910.

such that the court can see that the right to or measure of relief cannot properly be determined on motion having regard to all interests affected, resort may be had to a bill in equity, or now, in this State, to an equitable action. There are several cases in other courts where jurisdiction in equity by original bill to set aside a judgment entered on an unauthorized appearance by attorney has been entertained. But all of them are marked by peculiar and special features, such as those to which we have adverted. (Shelton v. Tiffin, 6 How. [U. S.] 163; Harshey v. Blackmarr, 20 Iowa, 161; Wiley v. Pratt, 23 Ind. 628.) In Critchfield v. Porter (3 Ohio, 518) the Supreme Court of Ohio dismissed a bill filed for relief against a judgment rendered on an appearance of an attorney without authority, on the express ground that the remedy should be sought by application to the court in which the judgment was rendered. It seems to us that upon considerations, both of principle and policy, relief, except in special cases, should be sought on motion in the action."

The court in Washbon v. Cope (144 N. Y. 287) in the opinion states: "We think the objection grounded upon the unauthorized appearance of her attorney and the non-service of any process upon her cannot prevail in this action. It has been settled by an unbroken line of decisions in this State, running many years back, that, unless under some peculiar and extraordinary circumstances, not existing in this case, the objection that a party was not served and an appearance by an attorney in a court of record for such party was unauthorized, and hence, that the judgment was without jurisdiction, cannot be taken in a collateral proceeding or action, and that the party is confined to a motion in the original action in order to obtain relief." (See, also, O'Connor v. Felix, 87 Hun, 179.) But the present question is not whether Shevill could have attacked the judgment in a separate action. He did not prefer such course. He considered that he was entitled to relief in the first action, and so moved, and cannot now assert that the adverse order has not the force of an adjudication. Had he succeeded the opposite party would have been estopped. It was held that such an order was an adjudication in De Biase v. Hartfield (33 Misc. Rep. 316) and RUSSELL, J., said: "In the foreclosure action this court had proceeded to judgment of foreclosure and sale upon the faith

Second Department, March, 1910.

of a supposed proper service of the summons.

[Vol. 137.

It was then called

upon by application of the defendant in that action to consider and determine the question of its own jurisdiction, with that defendant then voluntarily coming into the jurisdiction of the court, and did upon such application adjudicate the question of fact presented, and determined the status of that foreclosure action by final order. There is no reason why that determination should be collaterally attacked by any person who was a party to the proceeding in which this court arrived at its decision. The plaintiff in that action would have been bound for all purposes by the decision, and it is of equal force against the other party." The court at Special Term held that plaintiff could not maintain the action on account of her laches and the Statute of Limitations. The doctrine of laches does not go to the maintenance of the action, but may have application in determining what equitable relief shall be granted with reference to improvements, if any, placed upon the land by a bona fide purchaser. Plaintiff is not barred by the Statute of Limitations. Her claim is that the statute did not begin to run until the death of the husband, Benjamin Shevill, who, subject to the mortgage, held a life estate as tenant by the curtesy. In that case the action was begun within twenty years and was in time. The respondents claim that the statute began to run from the date of sale on foreclosure. This claim is predicated upon the theory that the judg ment and sale accelerated the remainder, if the interests of the heirs may be called such, by destroying the life estate. I think that ingenuity cannot sustain this contention. The purpose of an action to foreclose a mortgage is to extinguish liens and transmit through the mortgage to the purchaser on the sale the fee of the land. If in the present case the mortgagors, Sarah Shevill and her husband, Benjamin Shevill, had been living, they could have been made parties upon due service, and judgment rendered, and by sale pursuant thereto the fee would have been transferred to the purchaser. Such conveyance through the process of law would have carried the whole fee, and extinguished any possible life estate in the husband. But it chanced that the wife, the owner of the fee, had died, and thereby five owners in common of the fee took her place, subject, however, to the tenancy by the curtesy in the husband. What had been an entire fee in one ownership became a fee in five ownerships

App. Div.]

Second Department, March, 1910.

and a life estate carved therefrom by the law. Hence it was necessary to serve each of the persons holding an estate in the land, and every person made a party and so served would be foreclosed of any right to assert title in the land because such person's title would have been conveyed to the purchaser. No estate is extinguished, but every estate is transmitted. Now, the estate in the husband is quite as distinctly an estate in the land as is the fee in the heirs. The estate conveyed to the purchaser is the estate in the heirs plus the estate in the husband, which united, make the whole fee. Assuming that Shevill's interest was properly conveyed on foreclosure it follows that four-fifths of the fee and the life estate in the whole fee were conveyed to the purchaser, and as to such four-fifths the life estate merged in the fee. But the fee of one undivided fifth of the land was outstanding because plaintiff's interest was not transmitted and the life estate as to her interest continued, although it had been conveyed to the purchaser. The purchaser had no interest in which it could merge. So, after the sale on foreclosure Hoople owned the fee of four-fifths of the land and the life estate in one-fifth thereof, the fee of which was in plaintiff. This is the plain operation of the law in the transmission of the estate.

It was as impossible to destroy the life estate as it was to destroy the fee in an undivided fifth of the land. Estates are not destroyed nor barred, but the right of ownership is extinguished by conveyance. What the mortgagor and those succeeding to his interest had the purchaser takes after regular foreclosure. In that way he is connected in title with all previous conveyances, and he holds as if all the owners of estates in the land, brought into the action, had executed conveyances to him. (Code Civ. Proc. § 1632; Fogal v. Pirro, 17 Abb. Pr. 113; Green v. Mussey, 76 App. Div. 174; Marshall v. United States Trust Co., 93 id. 261, 262; Noonan v. Brennemann, 54 N. Y. Super. Ct. 337, 345; Georgia Pacific R. R. Co. v. Walker, 61 Miss. 481.) It follows from this that the Statute of Limitations against plaintiff did not begin to run until the death of Benjamin Shevill, the life tenant, in 1891. (Jefferson v. Bangs, 197 N. Y. 35; Jackson v. Johnson, 5 Cow. 74, 95, 96; Jackson v. Harsen, 7 id. 323, 327; Jackson v. Schoonmaker, 4 Johns. 390; Manolt v. Petrie, 65 How. Pr. 206, 209; Fogal v. Pirro, 17 Abb. Pr. 113; Randall v. Raab, 2 id. 307, 313; Ben

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