Aller v. Crouter

54 A. 426, 64 N.J. Eq. 381, 19 Dickinson 381, 1903 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 80
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMarch 7, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 54 A. 426 (Aller v. Crouter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aller v. Crouter, 54 A. 426, 64 N.J. Eq. 381, 19 Dickinson 381, 1903 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 80 (N.J. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Magi®, Cíiaitoelloe.

The labor involved in the examination of this cause has been largely increased by the manner in which it has been presented. No attention seems to have been paid to the rules of pleading or practice in the courts of equity, and I have had extreme difficulty in attempting hr discover whether the case presented admits of determination by decree.

The bill in this cause was filed by Mary Elizabeth Aller, admitted to be a person of unsound mind, by a next friend. It states that she and her husband, Daniel J. Aller, on October 20th, 1876, by deed, with full covenants of warranty and seizin, conveyed to one Peter Ackerman, for the expressed consideration, of $7,500, certain lands in the county of Bergen. It avers that, immediately upon the execution and delivery of the deed, Peter Ackerman, the grantee, went into possession of said lands, and received the rents, and continued in possession until his death, on August 17th, 1901. It proceeds to state that the deed was made upon the express agreement, between the grantors and [383]*383grantee, that Ackerman should hold the same as trustee for Mary Elizabeth Aller, upon a trust thus expressed, viz.:

“Upon the express trust and agreement that said Peter Ackerman should rent said premises and pay the net income derived therefrom, after payment of all charges connected with the management of said property, to said Mary Elizabeth Aller, or use the same for her maintenance and support, and that if said Peter Ackerman should sell said premises, that the proceeds of such sale and all income derived therefrom, after payment of all expenses and charges touching the same, should be used for the support and maintenance of said Mary Elizabeth Aller, and that upon the death of the said Mary Elizabeth Aller any balance remaining in the hands of said Peter Ackerman should be paid to her lawful heirs.”

It is further stated therein that Peter Ackerman, together with his wife, on November 29th, 1876, had conveyed a portion of the said lands to one Mason, at the request of the complainant, and had afterwards died, on August 17th, 1901, leaving a last will and testament, by the residuary clause of which he devised all tire rest, residue and remainder of his estate to, or for, certain persons therein named, all of whom were made parties- to the bill.

The bill expressly- avers that it was the intention and agreement of the parties thereto, at the time of the execution and delivery of the deed, that the same should be considered and treated as a trust deed, and that, through “inadvertence, ignorance and mistake, said deed was drawn as a warranty, and not as a trust, deed.”

The prayer of the bill is for an answer without oath; for an account of the rents and profits, and for a reformation of the deed by the insertion of the words “trustee for Mary Elizabeth Aller” after the words “Peter Ackerman” wherever they occur in the deed, and by the substitution of apt words in the habendum clause, and other clauses, to show that the deed is a trust deed, and intended to convey an estate in trust for the complainant.The prayer also contains the extraordinary request that the warranty clause in the deed should be eliminated, together with all other words purporting to convey an estate in fee-simple to said Ackerman.

[384]*384To this bill the next friend of the unfortunate complainant made parties Cornelius P. Crouter and Peter G-. Zabriskie, who are the executors of the will of Peter Ackerman; James Turner Ackerman, David D. Ackerman, Mabel Harper, Ánnie M. Ackerman and Edwin Ackerman, devisees under the residuary clause of said will; and John Pake, brother of the complainant; John II. Pake, his son, and Louisa Duryea, a niece of complainant, the three last named being made parties apparently on the theory that they are heirs presumptive or apparent J ames T. Ackerman and Edwin Ackerman, and Crouter and Zabriskie, executors, each filed an answer expressing ignorance of the charges made in the bill, and leaving the complainant to make such proof of her allegations as she was advised to do. Louisa Duryea, John Pake and John H. Pake unite in an answer admitting the charges of the bill, and praying for such decree as may be proper. David D. Ackerman, Anna M. Ackerman and May Belle Harper unite in an answer by which they deny the trust set up in the bill, and deny that the complainant has any title to the lands in question, or that the deed was intended to be a deed in trust, or that it was made under any mistake with respect to the form of the deed and its meaning.

To this answer, which denied all the facts upon which the equity of the bill was based, no replication was filed within the time required by the practice.

On April 22d, 1902, an order was made, with the written consent of the solicitors of all the parties. It recited that the matters in controversy were proper subjects of a reference to a special master, and that the parties had agreed that the issues in the cause should be heard by James M. Van Valen, a special master. It directed him to take evidence in respect to the allegations of the bill and answers subject to> objections, and to take and state an account of the transactions between the complainant and Peter Ackerman, and to' report the same, with the evidence.

The special master to whom the reference was thus made has reported to this court the evidence taken before him. Upon his report being filed the cause was set down for hearing, under a [385]*385■written stipulation of all the solicitors, and was submitted on briefs.

When attention was called to the fact that the cause was not at issue, a replication was filed, by the agreement of all the solicitors and the permission, of' the court.

After the evidence had been taken the death of Mary Elizabeth Aller, the complainant, was suggested to the court. The affidavit of her death stated that her sole next of kin were John H. Pake and Louisa Duryea, who wore parties defendant in the cause. Thereupon an' order was made for the amendment of the bill, by admitting them to appear as complainants instead of defendants. As the contest relates to real propert}', and as the evidence discloses that they'are the sole heirs-at-law of the deceased, Mary Elizabeth Aller, this circumstance has not been deemed sufficient to prevent consideration of the cause. As the cause has been thus presented, it has been deemed best to consider it as a cause submitted on evidence taken before an examiner within the practice of the court, and it has been tons considered.

The apparent object of the bill is to reform a certain deed, and the main prayer thereof is for such reformation. But the evidence produced, on the part of the complainant, renders it perfectly clear that such relief cannot be granted, and should not have been asked. In respect to such relief, it has not been contended, nor is it open to doubt, that parol evidence; may be admitted toi establish a case for the reformation of such a deed.

The facts disclosed by the admissible evidence arc, in the main, these: In 1816 the original complainant, Mary Elizabeth Aller, was the owner, in fee-simple, of a tract of land in Bergen count}!, containing about ten acres, which was improved by buildings. She was in possession of the property. She was a married woman, having been married to Daniel J. Aller some years before. The marriage had proved an unhappy one, and after a few months they had separated, and thereafter lived apart.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 A. 426, 64 N.J. Eq. 381, 19 Dickinson 381, 1903 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aller-v-crouter-njch-1903.