Bogert v. Citizens First National Bank & Trust Co.

35 A.2d 706, 131 N.J.L. 218, 1944 N.J. LEXIS 177
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 27, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 35 A.2d 706 (Bogert v. Citizens First National Bank & Trust Co.) 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
Bogert v. Citizens First National Bank & Trust Co., 35 A.2d 706, 131 N.J.L. 218, 1944 N.J. LEXIS 177 (N.J. 1944).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Case, J.

The appeal is from a judgment of nonsuit entered in the Bergen County Circuit Court at the close of plaintiff’s case. On March 21st, 1936, plaintiff and defendant entered into an agreement in writing whereby the defendant undertook to sell and the plaintiff undertook to purchase certain real estate in the Village of Ridgewood. The agreement contained these provisions;

“The, Seller will convey to the Purchaser by Deed of Bargain and Sale free from all encumbrance except as hereinafter mentioned, on or before the fifteenth day of April, Nineteen Hundred and Thirty Six, all that certain lot

*220 “This contract is entered into upon the knowledge of the parties as to the value of the land and whatever buildings are upon the same, and not on any representations made as to character or quality. * * * ,

“It is understood and agreed * * * that the buildings comply with municipal ordinances and regulations and the provisions of the New Jersey State Tenement House Act as enforced by the State Board of Tenement House Supervision, to be shown by the report of the department or board enforcing the same where such ordinances, regulations and said act apply. * * *

“The premises above described are sold subject to zoning ordinances and restrictions of record, if any. * * *

“All sums paid on account of this contract, and the reasonable expense of the examination of the title to said premises are hereby made liens thereon, but such liens shall not continue after default by the purchaser under this contract.”

Title was closed on April 4th, 1936; a bargain and sale deed was given, accepted and recorded. The following facts were stipulated at the trial:

“It is stipulated that the property in question is located in a one-family residence zone in the Tillage of Ridgewood; that in 1931 Lannuier, the then owner, obtained from the Ridgewood Board of Adjustment an exception permitting occupancy by two families, and altered the building for that purpose; that the defendant bank acquired the property by deed from Lannuier in February, 1935, after foreclosure proceedings had been instituted on a mortgage for $10,000 held by the bank; that there were then three families occupying the premises, and such occupancy continued up to April, 1936, when the plaintiff purchased it, and thereafter until the 30th of June, 1941, when the top floor was vacated after proceedings had been commenced by the Tenement House Department against plaintiff.

“It is stipulated that the provisions of the Zoning Ordinance in Ridgewood did not permit three-family occupancy of this building at any of the times hereinbefore mentioned, or at any time thereafter.

“It is further stipulated that the building on the premises *221 did not comply with the provisions of the Tenement House Act at the time the contract was made and the deed delivered.”

The complaint contained four counts. The first count grounded in the allegation that the building did not comply with the regulations and provisions of the New Jersey State Tenement House Act with respect to three family dwellings; the second, in the allegation that the building violated the building code of the Tillage of Ridgewood in the same respect: Hie third, in the allegation that the use of the building as a three-family dwelling was a violation of the zoning ordinance of the Tillage of Ridgewood; and the fourth, in "the allegation that the facts sued upon in the first, second and third counts constituted a breach of the defendant’s contractual duty to convey the property by deed of bargain and sale “free from all encumbrance.” The third count was abandoned.

rFhe plaintiff, at the close of his case, was nonsuited under a ruling that was summarized in its final sentence as follows:

“[The plaintiff] having accepted title, without obtaining such a report [viz., a report of the department or board referred to in the contract], T hold that the covenant merged with the deed, that it was not independent and collateral, and that therefore the plaintiff has failed to establish a cause of action, and a judgment of nonsuit will be entered.”

The question before us is whether the contract, in the respects sued upon, continued as an independent, collateral obligation or was, as the trial court held, merged with the deed.

Perhaps the leading case in this state on the subject of a merger of a contract for the sale of lands with the deed later given to effectuate the contract is Long v. Hartwell, Administrator, 34 N. J. L. 116, wherein (at p. 122), it is said:

“'Where, in the deed there is an absence of covenants against (incumbrances, the vendee cannot resort to the contract. Until consummated, an executory contract is subject to modification. In all cases, the deed when accepted is presumed to express the ultimate intent of the parties with regard to so much of the contract as it purports to execute.”

This court, citing Long v. Hartwell, with approval in Davis v. Clark, 47 N. J. L. 338, said: “Where a deed is *222 made and accepted in pursuance of an executory contract, the law presumes that it fully expresses the final intentions of the parties as to so much of the contract as it purports to execute.” The decision of this court in Blum v. Parson Manufacturing Co., 80 Id. 390, was made to rest upon “the well established rule that the law presumes that a deed made and accepted in fulfillment of an executory contract fully expresses the final intentions of the parties as to so much of the contract as it purports to execute.” To the same effect is Sprague v. Eypper & Beckmann, Inc., 114 N. J. Eq. 445. It is the general rule that the acceptance of a deed for land is to be deemed prima facie full execution of an executory agreement to convey and that thenceforward the agreement becomes void and the rights of the parties are to be determined by the deed, not by the agreement. The deed when accepted is presumed to express the ultimate intent of the parties with regard to so much of the contract as it purports to execute. Covenants collateral to the deed are exceptions to this rule. Dieckman v. Walser, 114 Id. 382.

We have it, therefore, that the acceptance of a deed for land is to be deemed prima facie full execution of an executory contract to convey, unless the contract contains covenants collateral to the deed.

The fourth count in the complaint has no support. It alleges that the seller “failed to conve3r * * * by deed of bargain and sale, free from all encumbrances” and confuses the seller’s duty as to the act of conveyance with his alleged duty under what is said to be a continuing covenant iir the agreement. The deed must be understood to have been accepted as a compliance with the requirements as to what the deed should contain.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 A.2d 706, 131 N.J.L. 218, 1944 N.J. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bogert-v-citizens-first-national-bank-trust-co-nj-1944.