
    The Title Guarantee and Trust Co., Plaintiff, v. Lorenz F. J. Weiher, Jr., et al., Defendants.
    (Supreme Court, New York Trial Term,
    January, 1900.)
    1. Principal and surety — When an assignee of a mortgage may hold the mortgagor for a deficiency, although the latter has ceased to be the principal debtor — Parties in foreclosure.
    Where a mortgagor and obligor subsequently conveys the equity of redemption to a grantee who agrees to pay the mortgage ás a part of the consideration, a mesne assignee of the mortgage, a corporation which has had no notice of such assumption of the mortgage beyond a recital thereof in the recorded deed of the mortgaged premises, may hold the mortgagor and obligor, made a party to an action of foreclosure brought, by said assignee, for a deficiency arising thereon, although the time of the payment of the mortgage debt was, in said assignment, extended without the knowledge or consent of the mortgagor and obligor, but without valuable consideration, and although the assignee did not make the grantee of the mortgagor and obligor a party to the action of foreclosure, said grantee having parted with the title.
    
      2. Same — Extension of time of payment — Consideration.
    An extension of the time of the payment of a debt, granted by the creditor to the principal debtor, will not discharge the surety unless such a valuable consideration moves to the creditor as will preclude him from enforcing the debt against the principal debtor.
    An agreement, by an assignee of a mortgage, to extend the time of the payment of the mortgage debt, made upon no other consideration than a continuance of the original terms of the mortgage, is v.oid for want of consideration and ineffectual to discharge the surety.
    Motion to open a judgment of foreclosure.
    Simon Sultan, for motion.
    W. H. Stockwell, opposed.
   Gildersleeve, J.

The defendant Weiher executed a mortgage on certain real estate to Maud L. Hall and Edith L. Hall. Subsequently he conveyed the said premises to one Burgart. In the said deed, which was duly recorded, appears the following stipulation, viz.: “ Subject, however, to a certain mortgage for $13,000, made by Lorenz F. J. Weiher, Jr.,” etc. (the mortgage in question), * * * “ which mortgage the said party of the second part ” (said Burgart) hereby assumes and agrees to pay as part of the consideration of this grant.” Burgart conveyed the property in turn to one Bohlen, and the said premises passed through several grantees, in each case subject to the said mortgage, until they are now in the name of one Batton. Meanwhile, and after the transfer from Weiher to Burgart and from Burgart to Bohlen, the mortgage was assigned to the plaintiff herein. In said transfer of the mortgage appear the following words, viz.: which said mortgage ” (i. e., the one above referred to) “ is hereby extended to be paid on the 12th of March, A. D. 1899, together with the bond or obligation described in said mortgage, and the moneys due and to grow due thereon, with' the interest.” Thereafter and subsequent to said 12th of March, 1899, the mortgage was foreclosed. The said Weiher was duly served with process and appeared in the action, but allowed his default to be taken. The said Burgart was not made a party to the action. Judgment was duly entered, and said Weiher, as mortgagor, was-charged with any deficiency that might arise upon the sale. The said Weiher now moves to open said judgment, on the ground that-he is not liable for a deficiency, and for leave to come in and defend. It is the theory of the moving party that, by the assumption of the mortgage by Burgart, the latter became the principal debtor and said Weiher a mere surety, and that the extension of the time of payment provided for in the asssignment of the> mortgage operated to discharge Weiher as such surety, for the* reason that the time was so extended without his knowledge or consent. It is also claimed that Burgart was a necessary party to the action. It is a general principle of law that where a deed contains a covenant, upon the part of the grantee, to pay a mortgage upon the premises, executed by the grantor, the relation-of principal and surety is created between the parties, and an agreement by the holder of the mortgage with the grantee to-extend the time of payment, made without the consent of the grantor, discharges the grantor. See Calvo v. Davies, 73 N. Y. 213. However, in the case of Marshall v. Davies, 78 N. Y. 421, Judge Rapallo uses this language, viz.: “ It is very clear however that, in the absence of notice of any change in the position of the-mortgagor, and of any request to foreclose, a mortgagee out of possession may rely upon the personal liability of his debtor,, and is not bound to look after or protect the .mortgaged premises; and that if he forecloses the mortgage, the debtor is entitled to credit only for the net proceeds of sale realized by his creditor, after the deduction of all liens for taxes, etc., and remains liable for the deficiency.” In the case at bar, the only notice to the-holder of the mortgage of the assumption of the mortgage by Burgart was such as may be construed from the fact that the deed, containing the assumption, was placed upon the public-files in the register’s office. It has been held in Mead v. Parker, 29 Hun, 66, that this was no notice, for the purchaser of the-mortgage was not required to inspect the record subsequent to the time when the mortgage was recorded, and that the record of the deed, subsequent to the mortgage, was no notice to theassignee of the mortgage of the existence of such deed. Furthermore, the plaintiff claims that the extension of payment, set forth in the assignment of the mortgage, was without consideration, and void (see Olmstead v. Latimer, 158 N. Y. 313), and that, in point of fact, the extension was not acted upon. It seems that the mortgage was not foreclosed until a considerable time after the expiration-of the date of extension mentioned in the assignment ojf the mortgage. Moreover, the defendant Weiher knew that the complaint asked for a judgment against himself for any deficiency, and also was aware that Burgart was not a party to the action; and, nevertheless, he deliberately allowed his default to be taken, and waited until after the entry of the judgment, and almost until the day of sale, before raising any objection in the action. The plaintiff claims that Burgart was not a necessary party, as he had conveyed all his interest in the premises to Bohlen, who took the premises subject to the mortgage. The plaintiff concedes that, had plaintiff or its assignors had notice of the assumption of the mortgage by Burgart, the latter would certainly have been a necessary party to the action, as he had assumed payment of the mortgage, and become principal debtor, while Weiher had become a mere surety (see Calvo v. Davies, supra; Marshall v. Davies, 78 N. Y. 421); but he claims that, as the mortgagee! does not appear to have had proper notice of the shifting of liability, as principal, from Weiher to Burgart, the holder of the mortgage can, under the -doctrine of Marshall v. Davies, supra, look to Weiher as principal, and Burgart becomes unimportant, having passed the property on to Bohlen, subject to the mortgage; and the plaintiff urges that the extension of the time of payment, therefore, whether with or without consideration, and whether or not acted upon, did not operate to release Weiher from his liability for the -deficiency. Weiher explains his laches by claiming that he did not know of the extension of the time of payment. He had, however, the same notice of that as plaintiff had of the assumption of .the mortgage by Burgart-, as both the assignment, containing the extension, and the deed, containing the assumption, were duly filed in the register’s office. The agreement, made by the mortgagee with the owner of the equity of redemption, who had purchased the premises subject to the mortgage, that the payment of the mortgage debt might be delayed until March 12, 1899, apparently left the owner at liberty to pay off the mortgage at once, if he wished to do so, and was, therefore, without -consideration and not enforcible. See Moser v. Walker, 23 App. Div. 91. This agreement for the extension of the time of pay-meat, being without consideration, was not binding upon the mortgagee, and hence was ineffectual to discharge the obligor on the bond to which the mortgage was collateral. See Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Stimpson, 28 App. Div. 544. To have the effect of discharging the surety, an agreement for the extension of time of payment, made by the creditor with the principal debtor, without the consent of the surety, must be upon a valid consideration, such as will preclude the creditor from enforcing the debt against the principal, and an agreement by a mortgagee to extend the time of payment of the bond and mortgage until a future day, "without other consideration than the continuance of the original terms, including the tax, insurance and interest clauses, is void for want of consideration. See Olmstead v. Latimer, 158 N. Y. 313.

Motion denied, with ten dollars costs.  