LaPlaca v. Schell
Edward LaPlaca v. Brian A. Schell
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
In April 1991, defendants purchased a 10-acre parcel of land from Joseph Clark and Colleen Clark, assumed the Clarksā outstanding note and mortgage, and began making payments to Calvin Ayers, Jr. and Ann Marie Ayers, who were the Clarksā
Plaintiff testified that the parties had agreed that once defendants subdivided the parcel, they would give plaintiff the deed to the five acres in exchange for his release from their mortgage. However, according to plaintiff, because defendants were in bankruptcy and did not want to subdivide the property at that point, the exchange was postponed. Plaintiff nevertheless treated the five-acre property as his own, with no objection from defendants. He immediately began making improvements to the property, maintained insurance on it and, at times, occupied or rented it to various tenants.
Defendants never executed a deed conveying title of the five-acre parcel to plaintiff. Plaintiff never demanded that defendants make payments on the mortgage, nor did defendants ever make any. In 2006, plaintiff commenced this action seeking a judgment of foreclosure and the sale of the property. Following a bench trial, Supreme Court dismissed the complaint as time-barred, prompting this appeal by plaintiff. We now reverse.
An action to foreclose on a mortgage is generally governed by a six-year statute of limitations (see CPLR 213 [4]). The mortgage at issue, as assigned to plaintiff, required defendants to make monthly payments, with the last payment due on September 1, 1996. Accordingly, the six-year limitations period expired prior to plaintiffs commencement of this action in 2006. However, the statute of limitations will not run against a mortgagee in possession, the theory being that the mortgagorās acquiescence to that possession is a continuing acknowledgment of the debt (see Holman v Newton, 275 App Div 513, 517 [1949]; Becker v McCrea, 149 App Div 211, 214-215 [1912], affd 214 NY 632 [1915]; 78 NY Jur 2d, Mortgages and Deeds of Trust § 470). Here, Supreme Courtās finding that plaintiff is a mortgagee in possession is supported by record evidence. Plaintiff demonstrated consistent possession of one half of the subject property through his actual occupancy for several years, the time he spent making improvements, his use for storage related to his business and by renting it to others. Indeed, at the time this action was commenced, a tenant residing on the property was paying rent to plaintiff.
Cardona, PJ., Mercure, Malone Jr. and Kavanagh, JJ., concur. Ordered that the order is reversed, on the law, with costs, and matter remitted to the Supreme Court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this Courtās decision.