Boylan v. Deinzer

45 N.J. Eq. 485
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 45 N.J. Eq. 485 (Boylan v. Deinzer) 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
Boylan v. Deinzer, 45 N.J. Eq. 485 (N.J. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Van Fleet, V. C.

The principal question presented for decision in this case is, whether the complainants are entitled to recover, as against the defendant, George Deinzer, the rental value of a house and lot, situate in the city of New Brunswick, from May 1st, 1883, to August 1st, 1885.

The complainants are infants, and they rest their right to recover in equity on that fact, and also on the further fact that Deinzer intruded on their lands and took the profits of them for the period above named. They claim that, by force of these-facts, they have a right to regard him as their guardian or trustee, and to compel him to account in equity for whatever he has received from their lands. The lands from which the rents in question were derived were, on the 24th day of April, 1880,. conveyed by William Boylan, the father of the complainants, to John Helm. Helm on the same day conveyed them to Ann Boylan. Ann was then the wife of William Boylan, and she is the mother of the complainant Thomas, and the step-mother of the complainant George. The deed from Helm to Ann is without words of inheritance in the granting clause. Its habendum, however, reads as follows:

[487]*487‘To have and to hold all and singular the above-described land and premises, with the appurtenances, unto the said party of the second part, for and during the term of her natural life, or so long as she remains the widow of the said William Boylan, and if she shall marry again, then at such time as she shall marry after the decease of the said William Boylan, the property hereinbefore described to descend to and become the property of Thomas F. Boylan and George W. Boylan, their heirs and assigns, forever; and in case of her decease without having married, the said property to descend tp and become the property of the said Thomas F. Boylan and George W. Boylan, their heirs and assigns, forever.”

"William Boylan died on the 1st day of September, 1881. His widow, Ann, at the time of his death, was in possession of the house and lot conveyed to her by Helm, and continued in possession of them up to the 1st of May, 1883. She contracted a second marriage in December, 1882, by marrying her step-grandson, the grandson of William Boylan, her. first husband. Just prior to the 1st of May, 1883, Ann let the house and lot, by written lease, to the defendant, Deinzer, for a term of two years, commencing on the 1st of May, 1883, at a rent of $120 a year, and she subsequently granted a further term of one year to Deinzer for a like yearly rent. Deinzer occupied the demised premises up to August 1st, 1885, when he surrendered them to the complainants on demand being made on behalf of complainants for [488]*488their possession. The premises the day previous, July 31st, 1885, had been conveyed to the complainants by John Helm. This deed passed, by express words, all the rents and profits which Helm had been or could be entitled to since the remarriage of Ann Boylan. Deinzer had paid the whole of the rent reserved by both leases to Ann Boylan prior to his surrender, and before he knew that the complainants had any right to or interest in the demised premises. The proofs show that while Deinzer occupied the premises he was ignorant of the complainants’ right to them. His conduct in paying the whole of the rent to Mrs. Boylan, long in advance of the times when by the terms of the leases it would have fallen due, furnishes evidence quite conclusive in its character that he had no doubt or suspicion respecting the validity of her title. In renting the premises he seems to have been actuated by benevolent rather than fraudulent or avaricious motives. His object seems to have been to assist a poor and needy widow to get means to support herself and her child. At the time the leases were made to Deinzer, Mrs. Boylan was not living with her second husband. They separated soon after marriage. They were married by a priest of the Homan Catholic Church. As soon as the priest learned that the wife was the step-grandmother of her husband, and that the husband was the step-grandson of his wife, he went to them and told them their marriage was void by the law of the church, and that they must separate, and they did so at once, and have not since cohabited or lived together. The rents paid by Deinzer to Mrs. Boylan were, with the exception of an inconsiderable part, applied by her to the support of herself and the complainant Thomas. The other part was expended by her for the benefit of the complainant George.

On these facts the complainants ask a decree compelling the defendants to account for and pay over the rents of the premises in question from May 1st, 1883, to August 1st, 1885. No account prior to May 1st, 1883, is asked, although Mrs. Boylan remarried more than a year prior to that date. This suit is aimed mainly, if not exclusively, at Deinzer. Mrs. Boylan is without means, and probably always will be. Deinzer alone has [489]*489answered, and the only question in dispute is whether the complainants are entitled, as against him, to the relief they ask.

The first defence which the defendant, Deinzer, makes to the complainants’ case is, that the marriage of Ann Boylan with her step-grandson was absolutely void. If this is so, she has not, as a matter of law, remarried since the death of her first husband, but is still his widow and a single woman, and she still continues to hold, perfect and complete, the estate granted to her by John Helm. The statute concerning marriages declares, that no man and woman shall intermarry who are related- to each other within the degrees thereinafter specified, and then, in specifying the degrees, says, that no man shall marry his grandfather’s wife, and that no woman shall marry her husband’s daughter’s son, or her husband’s son’s son. Rev. p. 631 § 1. But this statute goes no further. It does not declare that if a man and woman, who are related within the prohibited degrees, marry, their marriage shall be void. On the contrary, the statute concerning divorces declares, that a divorce from the bond of matrimony may be decreed in case the parties are related within the degrees prohibited by law, but that the sentence or decree in such a case shall not render the issue of such marriage illegitimate. Rev. p. 315 § 3. But where either of the parties to a marriage shall have a former husband or wife living, at the time of their marriage, their marriage shall be invalid from the beginning and absolutely void, and the issue thereof shall be deemed to be illegitimate. Rev. p. 315 § 2. When these three provisions are considered together, it is made entirely plain, as I think, that the law-making power meant that a marriage between persons within the prohibited degrees should not be void, but merely voidable, and that until such a marriage is dissolved by a court of competent jurisdiction, in a direct proceeding instituted for that purpose, it shall, in all collateral proceedings, be considered and adjudged to be valid. This is the well-established doctrine of the common law. 1 Bish. Mar. & D. §§ 105, 110, 118. From this view it necessarily follows, that the marriage contracted by Ann Boylan, in December, 1882, put an end to her estate in the lands in question, and for present pur[490]*490poses, I shall assume, that immediately on the termination of her estate, the complainants became entitled in equity to the lands from which the rents in question were derived.

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Bluebook (online)
45 N.J. Eq. 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boylan-v-deinzer-njch-1889.