Court Opinion

ID: 3618364
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 00:00:53.50943+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:43:03.749269
License: Public Domain

The petitioner Grace E. Secore occupied an apartment in a tenement house in New York city owned by Loubern Realty Corporation. On this property the Woman's Hospital held a mortgage, and, in an action *Page 125 
in foreclosure instituted by it, Daniel Greenwald was appointed receiver. An order at Special Term granted the petitioner leave to sue the receiver to recover damages for personal injuries and for damage to property sustained by her during the receivership. The receiver's motion to vacate that order was denied at Special Term, but the Appellate Division reversed and granted the motion. The appeal from that order is now before us.
The complaint alleges that the receiver, through his own negligence and carelessness and that of his agents in the management, maintenance and control of the premises, permitted the ceiling in petitioner's apartment to become so defective as to be dangerous; that through such negligence and carelessness plaintiff sustained injury to her person and damage to her property; that by the exercise of due diligence the receiver should have had notice of the defective condition of the premises, and that he did have due notice. Neither in the petition for leave to sue nor in the complaint appears any allegation that the receiver participated in any affirmative act of negligence. The complaint is based wholly on his passivity.
The appointment of the receiver was by an order which recites that he has the usual powers. He is "authorized" by that order to keep the premises in repair, but no withdrawals from the moneys received by him shall be made except as directed by the court or on a draft or check signed by the receiver and countersigned by the surety on his bond.
If no cause of action is alleged against a receiver, obviously no leave to sue him should be granted. In the first department the Appellate Division has ruled for many years that, where no assertion of affirmative negligence is made, leave to sue should be denied. (Matter of Fischer, 168 App. Div. 326; Alta HoldingCo. v. Ninson Realty Corp., 241 App. Div. 166.) In the second department the rule is different. (City Real Estate *Page 126 Co. v. Realty Const. Corp., 240 App. Div. 1000; Krohn v.Silverman, 240 App. Div. 911.) Generally, a receiver of rents and profits in a foreclosure suit has no power without order of the court to lessen the funds in his hands by expenditures for repairs (Wyckoff v. Scofield, 103 N.Y. 630), and an order which empowers him to keep buildings in repair is permissive only and not mandatory. (Ranney v. Peyser, 83 N.Y. 1, 5, 6.) Such authority as has been conferred upon him as an agent of the court imposes no duty to act in respect to making repairs.
The order should be affirmed, with costs.
POUND, Ch. J., CRANE, LEHMAN, HUBBS, CROUCH and LOUGHRAN, JJ., concur.
Order affirmed.