Barr v. Chandler

47 N.J. Eq. 532
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1890
StatusPublished

This text of 47 N.J. Eq. 532 (Barr v. Chandler) 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
Barr v. Chandler, 47 N.J. Eq. 532 (N.J. Ct. App. 1890).

Opinion

Green, V. C.

The complainant, David M. Barr, was the lessee from Mrs. Belle Chandler, the owner, of certain premises at Ocean Grove,consisting of three houses, which were occupied by the complainant, under the name of the Ocean Gro.ve Hygienic Institute, where he carried on his business, which was the care and treatment of invalids.

The rent agreed was $1,867.25, payable on the 15th day of July, August, September, October and November, in varying sums.

[533]*533To secure the payment of the rent a chattel mortgage on a steam engine, boiler, steam pipes, connections, radiators, bathtubs and bathing arrangements, electrical machines, apparatus and surgical appliances and furniture, was given by the complainant to the defendant'.

In 1888 the complainant had erected, at his own expense, alongside of and as part of one of the houses of said institute, an elevator, for the purpose of taking sick patients and baggage to the upper stories. This elevator was on the outside of, but attached to, the Neptune House, the largest of the houses occupied by the complainant.

In July of that year the following paper was signed by the defendant Mrs. Chandler :

“ Received, Ocean Grove, June 2d, 1888, of Dr. D. M. Barr, all right, title, claim and interest in the elevator now placed on our house, in consideration cf two hundred dollars, rent due on property, and one dollar paid in her hands.
(Signed)
“Mrs. Hennaed Chandi/ee.”

There is no question but that this paper was antedated, nor of the other fact, that at the time it was actually made the elevator had been in fact erected and1, was attached to the house.

At the time of its execution there was more than $200 rent due from the complainant to Mrs. Chandler.

The complainant has at various times since July, 1888, demanded that an allowance of the amount of this receipt, namely, $200, should be made to him when he has settled for the rent in arrear, but it has been as often disallowed by the defendants, and on their threatening, unless the rent was paid in full, to take proceedings to seize the property of complainant, this bill was died by him for an injunction to restrain the defendants from interfering with or removing the goods of complainant on account of rent due, unless this amount was allowed; and on the payment by him into court of $367.25, the whole amount of rent accrued to that time, to await the determination of the question in dispute, the defendants were enjoined from disturbing complainant in his possession.

[534]*534The answer of Mrs. Chandler denies that she, with knowledge of its contents, ever signed such a paper as the one which is set out in the bill of complaint, and the evidence has, of course, been' directed, in the first place, to the circumstances under which the paper was executed.

The complainant testifies that it was signed by Mrs. Chandler in his presence; that the $200 named in the receipt were to be applied to the rent which was then due on the property.

Mrs. Chandler, in her examination, states that the paper was executed under the following circumstances:

“ I was sitting in our own apartment, our private apartment, in the bay-window, writing, and as I wrote I noticed, on the opposite side of the street,, two men; they passed the house once, twice, probably three times, and the manner of their passing attracted my attention so that I stopped my writing and looked out at them; they disappeared, and in a few minutes, probably not more than half an hour afterwards, I heard a knock at our door — I was. still standing at the desk with my pen in my hand — and Dr. Barr entered the-room, and as he came towards me he appeared to be very much excited, and as he came across the floor he said ‘ Mrs. Chandler ’ — I do not remember his exact language, whether he said the sheriff) constable or officers, were in the house, and they would take the elevator; this paper he held in his hand I understood to be a bill, and he said if I would put my name to that bill that that would become possibly a receipt, and that that would save the elevator from the sheriff or' constable, and would eventuate on the return of my husband ; that that would place it with the chattel mortgage which Judge Black and which my husband held as security for our rent.”

A.nd that she immediately signed the paper, and .that the doctor departed; that the whole transaction oocupied but a few moments.

On re-examination the complainant says:

“ The circumstances under which that memorandum of sale was signed were: I was on the porch when the two officers drove up; I received them- and invited them into the parlor; the constable had been there before, and I had given him a memorandum of the goods covered by the chattel mortgage and he had retired ; I went upstairs to Mrs. Chandler’s room and said: ‘ The sheriff' is here to-day; he has a memorandum of the articles on the chattel mortgage, and I am instructed by the constable that he will go through the house and seize anything belonging to me; the elevator is the only article in the house outside of that chattel mortgage that would be subjected to seizure; it cost nearly $400; if you will buy it, I will sell it to you for $200; it will cost you [535]*535no cash money; - Mrs. Foster, you know, loaned me §200 with which to put it up, and I gave her a note for one year, and the amount can stand until that note is due and be taken out of the rent; Mrs. Chandler says, after thinking a little while, ‘I will buy it, doctor, but say nothing to my husband about it;’ Mrs. Chandler had been sewing, and there was no pen and ink in the room there, and I left her and went to my office and I wrote the receipt and came back to her with the pen in my hand and she signed it, and we went into the presence of the officers; and in the presence of the officers she declared 1 everything in the house belongs to me by purchase or by chattel mortgage, and you cannot go through the house unless you go through over my dead body; ’ then the officers left.”

It will be seen that the dispute between parties is, whether this was an absolute sale or whether it was to operate simply as a chattel mortgage; the complainant insisting that the paper is exactly what it purports to be, while the defendant claims that it should not be considered in any other light than as a mere security.

Much stress has been laid upon the circumstances under which this paper was obtained by the complainant from the defendant; that he secured it from her for a fraudulent purpose, at the time the officers of the law were in the house, almost in the act of levying upon his property to satisfy a judgment. I do not see how this is to be used by the defendant to the detriment of the complainant, for there is no question but that he fully advised Mrs. Chandler of his exact situation with reference to the officers of the law, and if his purpose in procuring the transfer, whatever' its nature,.was to keep the property from the officers, and from his creditors, she, with full knowledge of the facts, in what she did, knowingly' and willingly aided and assisted him in effecting his purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
47 N.J. Eq. 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barr-v-chandler-njch-1890.