Bradley v. Glenmary Co.

53 A. 49, 64 N.J. Eq. 77, 19 Dickinson 77, 1902 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 36
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedSeptember 25, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 53 A. 49 (Bradley v. Glenmary Co.) 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
Bradley v. Glenmary Co., 53 A. 49, 64 N.J. Eq. 77, 19 Dickinson 77, 1902 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 36 (N.J. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Pitney, Y. C.

The bond and mortgage in question were given by the defendant to the complainant as part consideration of a conveyance by the complainant to the defendant of the mortgaged premises on the day of the date of the mortgage.

The property was sold subject to a mortgage made by a former owner to secure the sum of $9,000, referred to in the evidence and known as the Ryerson mortgage.

The defendant is a corporation engaged in maintaining one or more sanitariums or health resorts. Its domicile is at Owego, in the State of New York, where, at one time, it seems to have owned considerable property.

As part of the consideration of the conveyance the complainant, or his father, Mr. Edward A. Bradley, received a large block of stock in the defendant corporation. The amount of cash paid was insignificant.

In October, 1900, a bill was filed to foreclose the first mortgage, to which the complainant herein was made a party as second mortgagee, and such proceedings were had thereon that a decree was made in favor of complainant therein, and the property was advertised for sale for a day in January, 1901.

The defendant employed a Mr. Chatfield, a lawyer of Elatbush, New York, to delay the sale, and he obtained adjournments by making three successive pajanents of $250 each to Major Ryerson, the solicitor of the complainant therein, and finally entered into negotiations on behalf of the defendant for a permanent settlement of the Ryerson mortgage. The result was that Major Ryerson proposed that if the defendant would reduce the amount due on his mortgage to $7,000 he would give n extension of three years.

[79]*79The counsel for the defendant at Owego was a law firm of Clark & Trueman, of whom Mr. Trueman had charge of defendant’s business. He came to Hew York to see the complainant, who is a practicing lawyer there, and arrange for an extension of both mortgages. I am. entirely satisfied that at that time Mr. Trueman supposed that the complainant herein had a decree for the amount of his mortgage embodied in the decree under which the property was advertised. Such was not the fact. An inspection of the papers in the Eyerson foreclosure shows that the Bradley mortgage was handed to Major Eyerson, and by him presented, with his own, to the master, and by him reported upon with the Eyerson mortgage; that Major Eyerson prepared a decree directing execution to issue to raise the amount due on each mortgage. The part of the decree which related to the Bradley mortgage was stricken out in the clerk’s office, and the execution, presumably, Avas worded accordingly. It has never been returned. The reason for this action by the clerk, presumably, Avas that no answer had been filed by Bradley and no order of reference made.

In order to raise the money to reduce the first mortgage it was necessary to get the consent of all the stockholders in the defendant corporation to execute a mortgage on the property in Owego.. Among those stockholders was Mr. E. A. Bradley, the .father of the complainant, to whom, as we have seen, the stock part of the consideration for the conveyance of the premises here in question was issued, and who it now appears is interested financially in the mortgage here under foreclosure. The result of the negotiations was that the money Avas raised and paid to Major Eyerson, and he and the complainants in the foreclosure signed this receipt:

“Beceived in several payments on account of the above decree, interest, taxed costs and sheriff's fees the sum of $2,460.59, in consideration .of which payment we, the undersigned, the complainants above named, do hereby agree not to further prosecute or enforce said decree for three years from the date hereof, provided interest at the rate of five per cent, per annum shall be promptly paid to us on the sum of $7,000, the amount remaining unpaid on said decree, semi-annually, on the 26th day of September and March in each year from the date hereof, or within thirty days after during said period; provided, also, that all taxes and assess[80]*80ments now or that may hereafter during said period become a lien on the lands described in the mortgage upon which said decree is founded, shall be duly paid when due and payable. Dated March 26th, a. d. 1901.”

Added to that is another receipt in the handwriting of Major Ryerson, signed by the complainant herein, in these words:

“I hereby consent to the discontinuance of proceedings to enforce the final decree in the above-stated action, and consent to a return of the execution issued in said cause to the clerk of said court, and to the agreement above set forth. Dated March 26th, 1901.”

Mr. Trueman swears positively that before the payment was made he applied to the complainant herein at his office for an extension of his mortgage; and the fact that the payment of $2,000 on the principal, and all arrears of interest and costs, on the Ryerson mortgage would increase the standing and value of the complainant’s mortgage, was relied upon as a reason for such extension. And it further appears by the evidence of Mr. Chat-field that as none of them was a New Jersey lawyer it was discussed between Trueman, complainant and himself, in complainant’s office, whether, if the extension was signed only by the complainants in the Ryerson foreclosure, he, the complainant herein, would have a right to open and vacate the extension so far as he was concerned, and enforce his mortgage. Mr. True-man further swears positively and distinctly that Mr. Bradley, the complainant herein, agreed orally, to extend his mortgage for the same term as the Ryerson mortgage, and that it was supposed by them and Mr. Chatfield, who was present at some of the interviews,, that the signing of the agreement which complainant did actually sign would have the effect of extending his mortgage.

Further, Mr. Chatfield swears that he had several interviews and conversations with the complainant herein on.the subject, and that the benefit to complainant herein of the reduction of the Ryerson mortgage was naturally a matter of conversation; and the complainant herein desired to have that reduction accomplished; and he says that at the next to the last of those interviews the complainant herein said that before signing any paper or giving any express agreement on the subject he wished [81]*81to consult liis father; and, finally, on the day when the contract of extension was signed, he said that his father was unwilling that he, the complainant, should give an express written extension other than that actually signed, but that the mortgage should stand if the interest and taxes were paid.

The clear effect of the evidence of Mr. Trueman and Mr. Chat-field is that complainant did in effect agree verbally, in addition to signing the writing above recited, that if the first mortgage was reduced to $7,000 and the interest and taxes were paid, the second mortgage might remain until the end of the three years’ extension given by the Ryersons.

On the other hand, the complainant denies this and says that he had no interest in the mortgage; that he held it as trustee for his father, and that he spoke to his father on the subject and that he declined to grant any extension for any definite length of time, but authorized him to say, and that he did say, to the gentlemen just named, that it might remain until they had time to turn themselves and make arrangements to raise the money and pay it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 A. 49, 64 N.J. Eq. 77, 19 Dickinson 77, 1902 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-v-glenmary-co-njch-1902.