Beckhaus v. Ladner

48 N.J. Eq. 152
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 15, 1891
StatusPublished

This text of 48 N.J. Eq. 152 (Beckhaus v. Ladner) 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
Beckhaus v. Ladner, 48 N.J. Eq. 152 (N.J. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Pitney, V. C.

The bill, which was filed by Joseph Beckhaus, the testator, in ¡his lifetime, is founded on a mortgage in the ordinary'form, dated August 21st, 1884, executed by the defendants to the complain.ants’ testator to secure the payment in one year of $14,000, with interest, according to the condition of a bond of even date executed by the defendant William T. Ladner alone to Joseph Beckhaus. It was duly acknowledged on the same day, and recorded on the 22d of August in the clerk’s office of Atlantic •county, in which the lands covered by it lie.

The bill alleges, in the.usual form, that at the date of the mortgage William T. Ladner was indebted to Beckhaus in the sum ■of $14,000, and that the mortgage was given to secure it; it ■.alleges non-payment of either principal or interest, and prays foreclosure jn the usual form and for answer under oath.

The defendants answer jointly, and allege that at the date of the mortgage Mr. Ladner had failed in business; that Mrs. Ladner was the owner of the mortgaged premises, and, for the purpose of raising money for the support of herself and child, and also to assist her husband, caused the bond and mortgage fp be prepared and executed by the parties, and recorded without the .knowledge of the mortgagee, who was her father, and retained possession of them by herself or her husband without actual delivery to her father until about February 1st, 1888 ; that about :a year after their date, and while Mr. Ladner was in prison in Philadelphia, she handed them to him (Ladner), and while in his possession he endorsed upon the mortgage the following:

“ The within mortgage was executed by Mary A. Ladner and William T. Ladner for the purpose of covering a debt due to Joseph Beckhaus, No. 1108 .Shackamaxon street, Philadelphia, Joseph Beckhaus having loaned Ladner [154]*154Brothers twelve hundred dollars in cash, also endorsed for them a note for about forty-two hundred dollars, which was discounted by John Commell, junior, president of Mechanics National Bank. Joseph Beckhaus has never' seen the mortgage, and same can only be claimed if the above amount due Mr.. Beckhaus should not be returned paid,”

which was signed by the two defendants severally; that the sums-mentioned in this memorandum were afterwards paid by Mr. Ladner to the mortgagee, and the mortgage thereby became nugatory; that on the 1st of February, 1888, the Commercial National Bank of Pennsylvania recovered a judgment against Mr. Beckhaus for the amount of principal and interest due upon a-note made by "William T. Ladner for $25,000, dated July 1st,. 1884, at three months, to the order of and endorsed by complainants’ testator; that thereupon he sought an interview with-Mrs. Ladner, in which he informed her of this-judgment, and¡ that its payment would impoverish him and his home would be sold away from him and he driven to the alms-house unless she gave him the mortgage in question ; that he was then seventy-eight years of age and infirm, and his apparent distress affected Mrs. Ladner, and she, believing his statement as to his financial condition to be true, delivered to him the bond and mortgage in question; that shortly afterwards he asked Mrs. Ladner to execute a paper which, as she understood it, revoked the endorsement on the mortgage, which she did, still relying on the truth-of his representations; that shortly afterwards she discovered that her father’s statements were untrue, that he was able to pay the bank judgment without selling his house, and had still left a-large estate and lived in a comfortable manner; and she alleges-that the delivery of ttie bond and mortgage and revocation of the restrictive endorsement were procured from her by fraud.

Mr. Ladner, by a separate clause in the answer, sets up the-same defence.

This answer was filed about November 1st, 1888. The testator, then being the complainant, commenced taking depositions in support of his bill, December 17th, 1888, continued on December 22d and January 5th, 1889, when be closed his case. On March 29th, 1889, he took a-n order on the defendants to-[155]*155close their testimony in thirty days. The defendants 'took no testimony until July 31st, 1890. In the meantime, on April 18th, 1889, complainants’ testator died, and on May 4th, 1889, the usual order of revivor and substitution of his executors was made.

On the 7th of July, 1890, defendants procured leave to Me a supplemental answer, by which they set up that complainants’ testator died testate of a will dated January 16th, 1889, by which the money claimed by the complainant in this cause to be due on the mortgage and other moneys are treated as an advancement to Mrs. Ladner of her share in his estate, and that, for that reason, the executors (now complainants) cannot claim the same.

The defendants then proceeded with their evidence.

The facts developed are as follows: The defendant William T. Ladner and his brother Lewis J. were engaged, at and prior to April, 1884, in business as brokers and bankers, in Philadelphia, under the firm name of Ladner Brothers. The complainants’ testator was a German, with a limited command of the English language, and was a retired man of business, living in Philadelphia. On the 21st of April, 1884, he endorsed, for the accommodation of Ladner Brothers, a note of that date for $4,189.70, at four months, made by Lewis J. Ladner. On the-1st of July, 1884, and shortly after the Grant & Ward failure in Yew York, he was induced by William T. Ladner to endorse for their accommodation the firm note of that date for $25,000, at three months,-under a- sort-of promise-that-it was not to be-used unless there should be a run on the Ladner Brothers’ bank. The complainants’ testator, immediately after signing it, became alarmed and attempted on the same day, in vain, through his wife, to regain possession of it. On the 2d of July he went to-Atlantic City to see his daughter, Mrs. Ladner, and her husband, who were living there in her cottage on the mortgaged premises. He saw them on the 3d, and procured a promise from the husband that he would return the note. He also had an interview with the wife alone, in which he stated to her his situation and1 liability on the $4,189 note and the $25,000 note, and expressed [156]*156his anxiety on account of it. His daughter, as he swears, and I ■adopt his statement, declared that he should not lose a cent, that ■she was worth the seaside cottage, a valuable house and lot in Wallace street, Philadelphia, and personal chattels amounting in all to $85,000, and would make him secure by a mortgage. On the 21st of July Mr. Beckhaus loaned to William T. Ladner his check for $1,200, upon the promise of Ladner that such ■accommodation would enable him to redeem and return the $25,000 endorsement, but he did not do it. On the 21st of August, the failure of Ladner Brothers being imminent, the ibond and mortgage in dispute were executed. On the, 24th of August, the note for $4,189 matured, was protested, and complainants’ testator was obliged to pay it. On the 25th of August Ladner Brothers made an assignment. Immediately after the maturity and protest of the $25,000 note of July 1st, Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
48 N.J. Eq. 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beckhaus-v-ladner-njch-1891.