Board of Chosen Freeholders v. Lindsley

41 N.J. Eq. 189
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 15, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 41 N.J. Eq. 189 (Board of Chosen Freeholders v. Lindsley) 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
Board of Chosen Freeholders v. Lindsley, 41 N.J. Eq. 189 (N.J. Ct. App. 1886).

Opinion

Van Fleet, V. C.

This suit was commenced by bill of interpleader. On the 13th of August, 1881, Frederick "W. Morriss entered into a contract with the board of chosen freeholders of the county of Essex by which he agreed to find all the material necessary to be provided, and to do all the work necessary to be done in the erection and completion of the mason work of the new lunatic asylum building which the board had previously determined to erect in the city of Newark. The price which the board agreed to pay Morriss was $53,000. Eighty per cent, of the value of the work done each month, as estimated by the architects superintending the construction of the building, was to be paid on the [191]*191first of the succeeding month, and the remaining twenty per cent, on the completion of the building.

At the time the contract Avas signed, George Lindsley became one of two sureties on a bond executed by Morriss to the board, in the sum of $26,500, for the faithful performance of his contract. Morriss commenced to perform the contract shortly after its execution, and continued to do so until the 14th of October, 1882, AAdien, for want of means to continue Avork under it, he assigned the contract to Lindsley, together with all the moneys due and to groAv due thereon. Lindsley then completed what remained to be done, expending for that purpose over $8,000. ■On the completion of the building there was due from the county .a balance of $18,560. At the time Morriss assigned the contract to Lindsley, Morriss owed nearly $14,000 for material which he had purchased to perform his contract. The creditors holding these debts, very soon after the assignment, demanded payment of Morriss, and he failing to pay, they gave notice to the board ■of chosen freeholders, pursuant to the third section of the mechanics lien law, that they Avould look to them for payment. The first of these notices was served on the 16th of October, 1882, and the last on the 23d of December following. The •creditors Avho, by force of their notices, asserted a right to the moneys due from the county, denied that the assignment to Lindsley passed any right, as against them, to the fund. This ■denial placed the board of chosen freeholders in a position where they could not, with safety to themselves, pay either Lindsley ■or those who claimed adversely to him. They thereupon filed .a bill of interpleader, and paid the amount due from them into court. A decree was subsequently made, after the defendants had answered, directing the defendants to interplead and settle their respective claims to the fund in controversy in this court. The questions now to be decided arise under the answers filed in pursuance of this decree.

The creditors who claim adversely to Lindsley, contest his right to the fund in dispute on two grounds: first, they say the assignment gives him no right to the fund because it was made to defraud them as creditors of Morriss; and second, that [192]*192if it is honest, it did not pass the fund, as against them, because by a provision of the contract, all moneys earned under it, stood irrevocably pledged for the payment, in the first instance, of the debts incurred by Morriss in its fulfillment, and were inalienable by him until such debts were paid.

The proofs fail to establish the charge of fraud. There is no reason to suspect that the assignment was made for any other than a legitimate and perfectly honest purpose. The circumstances under which it was made may be stated as follows: Lindsley stood liable as endorser for Morriss to the extent of $7,500 on notes on which Morriss had procured the money; Morriss’s pecuniary condition was such that, without further assistance, he could not go on with the work under the contract; he applied to Lindsley for further help, who refused to give it without security; Morriss was unable to give security, and it was then arranged that the contract should be assigned to Lindsley, and that he should do whatever remained to be done to complete the contract, and that whatever had already been earned under the contract, as well as what shoüld thereafter be earned, should stand as security for what Lindsley was then liable for, and also for such expenditures as he should subsequently be required to make. The notes on which Lindsley was liable as endorser were held, at the time the assignment was. made, by the bank which had discounted them; immediately after the assignment, Lindsley took them up with his own notes. The object of the assignment, as understood by the parties, was simply to secure and indemnify Lindsley. This purpose does-not, however, appear on its face; it .is absolute in form, and purports to transfer to Lindsley, unconditionally, all that Morriss had earned under the contract. It was this circumstance which gave birth to the suspicion that the assignment had been executed for a fraudulent purpose. There is no legal evidence showing the exact sum which had been earned under the contract at the time the assignment was made. Mr. Lindsley testified that Morriss told him, during the conferences which immediately preceded the assignment, that there were then $10,000 or $12,000 coming to him from the county, but whether he [193]*193spoke from his own estimate of the value of the work already done or from an estimate made by the architects, does not appear. Morriss’s statement to Lindsley comprehends the whole of the. evidence now before the court on this point.

The argument on the part of the defendants, who claim adversely to Lindsley, proceeds on the assumption that it is an established fact in the case that, at the time the assignment was made, Morriss had earned under the contract over $10,000, and that the purpose intended to be effected by the assignment was to pass to Lindsley Morriss’s right to this large sum, in discharge of a liability for a sum much less in amount. But neither of these facts is proved in such manner as to be the fit basis of a judicial decision. On the contrary, the evidence makes it entirely clear that the assignment was executed simply to secure and indemnify Mr. Lindsley, and that it had no other purpose. The evidence in proof of this fact amounts, in my judgment, to a complete demonstration. It is true, it appears there was no express understanding between Morriss and Lindsley as to what Lindsley should do with the surplus in case he received more money than he should require to re-imburse himself, but the circumstances surrounding the transaction show very clearly that the minds of the parties were agreed on this subject, and that their tacit understanding was in complete harmony. They both understood that if Lindsley should receive more than was sufficient to pay him his debt and to re-imburse him for his outlay in completing the contract, the surplus should go to Morriss’s creditors. One of the defendants, claiming adversely to Lindsley, testified that on the very day the assignment was made Lindsley told him it had been made, and that he would receive more money than would be required to satisfy his claim, and that if he did, the surplus would be turned over to Morriss’s creditors. There is no evidence in the case tending to show that he ever afterwards, by word or act, evinced either a purpose or inclination to defeat the right that he then admitted. Lindsley stood bound as Morriss’s surety for the faithful performance by Morriss of his contract. For Morriss to indemnify him against loss in consequence of that liability was, under the circumstances, not [194]*194only a thing which he might lawfully do, but a thing which a fair sense of honor required him to do.

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Bluebook (online)
41 N.J. Eq. 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-chosen-freeholders-v-lindsley-njch-1886.