Bater v. Cleaver

176 A. 889, 114 N.J.L. 346, 1935 N.J. LEXIS 247
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 24, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 176 A. 889 (Bater v. Cleaver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bater v. Cleaver, 176 A. 889, 114 N.J.L. 346, 1935 N.J. LEXIS 247 (N.J. 1935).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Heher, J.

The judgment tinder attack was entered on a directed verdict for plaintiff. The complaint is in two counts. The gravamen of the first is that a sum of money, $2,131.50, escrowed with appellant, Atlantic Guaranty and Title Insurance Company, became plaintiff’s property by reason of the fulfillment of the stipulated condition. The gist of the second is that the check of plaintiff’s assignor, in the mentioned sum, payable to appellant, was “deposited” with the latter, upon condition that it was not to be “used” until appellant executed an accompanying written stipulation, outlining the terms and *348 conditions oi the deposit; that although appellant refused to assent to the terms of the agreement, and for that reason withheld execution, it cashed the check and still retains the proceeds thereof, although no agreement for the disposition of the fund has been made.

These are the circumstances: On July 22d, 1930, one Joseph S. Byrne, acting for and on behalf of the Atlantic Hotels Corporation, agreed, in writing, to purchase from Morris Elfman a tract of land, situate in the city of Atlantic City, which was encumbered by a mortgage in the sum of $10,000, made to defendant Cleaver, and assigned by her to defendant Margate Trust Company as collateral security for unpaid loans. The mortgage was then in default, and foreclosure proceedings were imminent. There were tax arrears amounting to the first-mentioned sum. The vendee was anxious to avert foreclosure, and he asked for six months’ extension of time for the payment of the mortgage from the date of the consummation of the sale. The contract of sale provided for the delivery of the deed and final settlement on October 1st, 1930, or on November 15th following, in event of the mortgage “being extended to” the date last mentioned, or any period beyond that date.” There was evidence tending to establish that these negotiations eventuated in an agreement to grant the requested extension of time, and, in consideration thereof, to deposit the money in question upon the terms and conditions set forth in the paper which accompanied the deposit and which the depositary refused to execute, viz.: That the depositary would, on December 1st, 1930, “repay the same to Byrne, if on said day the above mentioned mortgage has been satisfied or all taxes, now a lien on the above mentioned premises, have been paid;” that “if said mortgage has not been satisfied or said taxes not paid,” the depositary “is to continue to hold said money until the above mentioned mortgage has been fully satisfied, and if the above mentioned mortgage is foreclosed and the mortgagee does not receive the full amount of the indebtedness, then and in that event so much of the said $2,131.50 as is necessary to fully satisfy said indebtedness shall be paid to the above mentioned *349 mortgagee,” and “the balance, if any, to be returned to the said Byrne, or his assigns.” Counsel for the mortgagee, called as a witness by appellant, testified the understanding was that the deposit in question would be “paid to us in the event we have to foreclose and we buy the properly in at the foreclosure sale and do not realize the money coming to usThe title officer of appellant, so the witness said, participated in the conference that resulted in this agreement. The deposit was made on September 30th, 1930. As pointed out, it was the money equivalent of the taxes then in arrears.

Now, this is what occurred: Byrne and his principal failed to consummate the sale. The taxes in arrears were not paid on December 1st, or thereafter, and the mortgage remaining unsatisfied, the mortgagee, Cleaver, on January 5th, 1931, instituted foreclosure proceedings, which eventuated in the sale of the mortgaged lands to the Margate Trust Company, on May 28th, 1931, for $100. On June 10th following, the sale was confirmed. On that day, Cleaver and the trust company contracted for the sale of the lands to another for $12,000 — $2,000 in cash, and the balance to be secured by a purchase-money mortgage. The amount due on the decree, on the day of sale, was $11,000.01, and there were additional fees due the sheriff of $66.72, making the total amount $11,066.73. The unpaid taxes, then totaling $3,366.75, were paid by the mortgagee-purchaser. The net amount realized by the latter from the subsequent sale, including the mentioned purchase-money mortgage, was $11,633. Immediately after the sheriff’s sale, the mortgagee-purchaser demanded and received from appellant the deposit in question, which, with interest, amounted to $2,447.28. There was no deficiency suit. The mortgagee, on June 10th, 1931, accepted $300 from Elfman — $100 in cash and a note for $200 — in full satisfaction of the obligation evidenced by the bond. It will be observed that the ultimate net lofes to the mortgagee'was $53.20.

Appellant contended, at the trial, that “this money was payable immediately after the foreclosure sale, if the sale did not bring enough to’ satisfy Mrs. Cleaver,” without regard *350 to the mortgagee’s ability to respond for the deficiency. Respondent on the other hand, maintained (1) that there was no contract between the parties; and (2) that, if the so-called es'crow agreement accurately states the contract, the depositor of the fund was responsible, to the extent of the deposit, for the payment of the obligation evidenced by the bond, and secured by the mortgage, “in the event it was not collected from Mr. Elfman,” and this latter obligation having been discharged by the release, the depositor’s assignee was entitled to a return of the fund. Respondent’s counsel stated this issue thus: “I say the release is the important thing, and not his [the obligor’s] responsibility.”

The trial judge determined, as a matter of law, that while the draft of agreement which accompanied the deposit of the check, in form a receipt, was not signed by appellant, it was “expressive of the terms and conditions upon which the maker of the check delivered it to the defendant, and obviously, under the evidence, the only terms upon which the defendant was entitled to retain the check, and thereafter dispose of its proceeds,” and “must be taken as a statement of the terms and conditions of the delivery of the check to this defendant, or that there were no terms and conditions agreed upon between the maker of the check and the title company with respect to the retention of the check by the title company, and the disposal of its proceeds.” He concluded that, in the latter event, the depositary was “simply a holder of the check and of the proceeds thereof for the use of the plaintiff;” that, in the former, “the mortgagee, in legal effect, chose to accept the mortgaged premises, -to retain the premises to the end that she might convey them, and chose also' to release, as a part of this transaction, the obligor from any liability upon the bond, and had thus, in legal effect, acknowledged satisfaction of the mortgage indebtedness;” that the “mortgagee, by her acts, discharged the primary debtor from the very mortgage indebtedness to which the proceeds of this check were to be applied, if necssary;” that “the receipt itself recognizes a primary obligation, evidenced by the bond and mortgage;” that the sum in question “was *351

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
176 A. 889, 114 N.J.L. 346, 1935 N.J. LEXIS 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bater-v-cleaver-nj-1935.