Bray v. General Engineering Co.

78 A. 563, 75 N.J. Eq. 443, 5 Buchanan 443, 1909 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 84
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMarch 24, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 78 A. 563 (Bray v. General Engineering 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
Bray v. General Engineering Co., 78 A. 563, 75 N.J. Eq. 443, 5 Buchanan 443, 1909 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 84 (N.J. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Howell, V. C.

This bill is filed to restrain the' further prosecution of an attachment suit in the Hudson circuit court, in which the General Engineering Company is plaintiff and Joseph Bray is defendant.

The facts are that on September 3d, 1907, the complainants Joseph Bray and Mary J., his wife, made a conveyance to the General Engineering Company of a lot of land in the township of Kearny, in the county of Hudson, by a warranty deed in which they covenanted that the land was free of all encumbrances. The title to the lands conveyed was in the wife, so that she was bound by the covenant. Gen. Stat. 2012 § 7.

The grantee in October, 1907, discovered that there were municipal assessments against the property amounting to upwards of $300. On July 21st, 1908, it paid the municipality $328.27 to satisfy these liens.

Joseph Bray, one of the complainants to. this suit, held title to another lot in the same township. At the time of the transactions herein recited he was residing and had for many years been residing in the State of Nevada. The grantee, having-paid the amount of the assessments, in the month of December, 1907, caused the attachment now complained of to be issued out of the Hudson circuit court against Joseph Bray alone to recover the damages which it had suffered by reason of the breach of the covenant against encumbrances contained in the deed above mentioned. The attachment proceeding was taken under the act for the relief of creditors against absent and absconding debtors. P. L. 1901 p. 158. It was begun by the usual affidavit against non-resident debtors, made by Alexander H. Mathesius, president of the engineering company, which stated that the defendant Joseph Bray was a non-resident and was indebted to the General Engineering Company in the sum of $321.33. In due course an auditor was appointed who sold the attached property. It was purchased by the General Engineer[446]*446ing- Company, the plaintiff in attachment, which took a deed for it dated July 20th, 1908.

The proceedings in the attachment suit have not been laid before the court, but it will be assumed not only that they were brought under the act above mentioned, but also that they were entirely regular as an attachment suit under the act above mentioned against Joseph Bray alone. The evidence shows that this lot which is valued by the witnesses at from $750 to $900 was sold at the auditor’s sale and purchased by the General Engineering Company for $25, subject to a municipal levy of some soyt, on which there was due something over a hundred dollars. Notwithstanding the sale of the lot in question and the purchase of it by the General Engineering Company, that company still claims that there is due to it over $400 on account of the judgment recovered by it in the attachment suit, including costs and expenses theteon. The bill alleges and the answer admits that the General Engineering Company is about to take proceedings to include in the attachment other lands belonging to the said Joseph Bray and sell them for the purpose of raising the four hundred odd dollars yet claimed to be in arrear.

This whole attachment proceeding, including the auditor’s sale and the auditor’s deed, is now complained of upon two grounds—first, because the attachment proceeding was against Joseph Bray alone, whereas it was based upon a covenant which was made by Joseph Bray and Mary J., his wife, in the deed above mentioned; second, that the proceeding was surreptitiously and oppressively carried on without the knowledge of the said Joseph Bray, and is, therefore, as to him constructively fraudulent and consequently void.

First. As to the first cause of complaint; assuming for the sake of the argument that an action for damages may be cognizable by the circuit court in an attachment suit upon the ground that the damages in the particular case are mere matter of calculation, can the plaintiff in the attachment suit in question proceed against one of two joint covenantors, or must the action be brought against the two? The statute above quoted (Gen. Stat. 2013 § 7) seems broad enough to permit a married woman to bind herself jointly with her husband in covenants [447]*447against encumbrances, and in Wahl v. Stoy, 72 N. J. Eq. (2 Buch.) 607, Vice-Chancellor Bergen held that a married woman was bound by a restrictive covenant respecting her own land, although she had made the covenant in a deed executed by hex which conveyed lands that belonged to the husband. The husband is liable by reason of his execution of the instrument containing the covenant. It appears on the face of it to be their joint action, and I must therefore hold that the covenant is a joint covenant binding them jointly and not severally. Under these circumstances their liability is joint and they must be jointly used. Barber v. Robeson, 15 N. J. Law (3 Gr.) 17; Curtis v. Hollingshead, 14 N. J. Law (2 Gr.) 402. The principle is a very familiar one. There is, however, an exception to it arising out of section 3 of the Attachment act (P. L. 1901 p. 159), which permits attachments to issue against the separate and joint estate of joint debtors, or any of them, * * * and the estate so attached, whether separate or joint, may be sold oi' assigned for the payment of the joint debt. This statute was co3U3nented upon in the case of Thayer v. Treat, 39 N. J. Law (10 Vr.) 150, where it was held that an attachment might be issued under the section of the Attachment act referred to against 0330 of several joint debtors, but only in a case where all such joint debtors were non-residents. This authority was considered and affirmed by the supreme court in Corbit v. Corbit, 50 N. J. Law (21 Vr.) 363, which held that where there was a proceeding in attachment against one joint debtor who was non-resident, it 33iust affirmatively appear in the p3'oceedings that the other joint debtors were no3i-residents also.

In this case it satisfactorily appears that the wife of Joseph Bray, who was also his joi3it debtor-, continued to reside in this state and to be amenable to the writ of summons until the month of August, 1908, when she went to Nevada to join her husband. It thus appears that there is an irregularity in the attachment proceeding, but whether this court would have jurisdiction to entertain the complaint on that ground alone it is not at this time necessary to decide.

Second. The second objection relates to the manner in which the attachment was issued and the proceedings conducted. It [448]*448is said on the part of the complainants that not only is the proceedings against one joint obligor irregular and void, but also that the attachment proceeding in this case has been used in such a way as to oppress the defendant therein and subject him to real annoyance and loss, and this to such an extent as to be capable of characterization as a direct abuse of the process of the court. It does not appear that the defendant in attachment had any notice whatever of the proceeding. At the time of the issuing of the writ he was residing in Nevada; he has continued to reside there; it appears by the evidence of Mr. Mathesius, the president of the General Engineering Company, that no effort was made on his part as such president to notify Mr. Bray of the pendency of the attachment proceedings. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
78 A. 563, 75 N.J. Eq. 443, 5 Buchanan 443, 1909 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bray-v-general-engineering-co-njch-1909.