Brewster v. Entz

97 A. 156, 85 N.J. Eq. 469, 1915 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 26
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedNovember 10, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 97 A. 156 (Brewster v. Entz) 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
Brewster v. Entz, 97 A. 156, 85 N.J. Eq. 469, 1915 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 26 (N.J. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Grieein, V. C.

The. bill in this cause is filed to have ifi decreed that an assignment dated December 23d, 1910, apparently, acknowledged April 21st, 19 , and recorded dime 28th, 1911, purporting to assign two bonds and mortgages is a forgery, and that the defendant Albertine A. Entz should restore the bonds and mortgages to the complainant.

The forgery is said to be the act of one Paul Walton (now deceased), an attorney-at-law, who was the witness to the signature and signed the certificate of acknowledgment.

Walton was the attorney of the husband of the complainant, who died in 1903, drew his will, attended to its probate, and [470]*470thereafter secured investments for the complainant, collected interest and remitted the same to complainant. She did not entrust him with the keeping of the securities. These she retained and kept, in her safe deposit box.

In November, 1905, Walton secured an investment of $2,500 in a bond and mortgage made by Richard G-. Korkemas, Salih Dabdoub and others to the complainant, which bond and mortgage are dated November .16th, 1905, and the mortgage was recorded December 5th,, 1905.

Another investment of $1,500 was procured by Walton in a bond and mortgage dated June 13th, 1908, made by Salih Dabdoub and others, which mortgage was recorded on September 9th, 1908.

The foregoing bonds and mortgages, shortly after recording, were delivered by Walton to complainant, in whose possession they remained until the spring of 1910, and are the bonds and mortgages mentioned in the assignment attacked.

In the spring of 1910, complainant called on Walton regarding policies of insurance on the mortgaged property. He suggested that she bring all her papers, bonds and mortgages to him to examine, that he would look over them, ascertain what were missing and hand them back in a day or two. She, on the same day, took her papers from her safe deposit box and delivered them to him. She then left the city, and was gone until after July 4th. Within a week after her return she telephoned Walton’s office and was informed that he was not there. About that time Walton suffered a serious injury, and until his death, which occurred August 11th, 1914, remained continuously at his club, and did not again return to his office.

On December 11th, 1911, she received, by messenger from Walton, what purported to be the two bonds and mortgages above mentioned, and,, after an examination, placed them in her safe deposit box, where they remained until about December, 1913.

These bonds and mortgages were complete in every detail, containing signatures of parties and witnesses; and the mortgages had endorsed on them the receipt of the recording officer. They were copies of the original bonds and mortgages, but were delivered to the complainant as the originals.

[471]*471The names of the mortgagors were strange to the- English language; their signatures to the original bonds and mortgages were labored; and in the forged copies an effort was made to •imitate the signatures of the parties, witnesses, officers who took the acknowledgment and the recording officers, to deceive the complainant.

From the date complainant delivered the bonds and mortgages to Walton, in the spring of 1910, until about March, 1913, she received the interest on them regularly from Walton, and on November 19th, 1912 (more than a year after the forged assignment was recorded), he sent her the check of one Wasserman (who was then the owner of one of the parcels covered by one of the mortgages) for $75, drawn to the order of Walton, and by him endorsed to the complainant, in payment of the interest due on the mortgage, which check was given by Wasserman for the purpose.of paying this interest.

In September, 1913, interest on some of the mortgages being overdue, complainant wrote Walton regarding it. Towards tire end of 1913 she says she grew suspicious, because he became slow in his payments of interest and other moneys. There was then $75 due for interest from March -to September. She accordingly asked the opinion of a lawyer, but did not retain one until about January, 1914. In September, 1914, the month following Walton’s .death, she learned of the forgeries and filed her bill October 5 th, 1914.

The defendant purchased the bonds and mortgages, received the genuine ones, and the forged assignment from Walton, to whom she delivered her check to his order a,s attorney, and notified the owners of the mortgaged premises of the assignment. Before making the purchase she inquired into the value of the premises, and made the usual investigation in such cases, but did not communicate with the complainant.

While the assignment, which is in typewriting, is dated December 23d, 1910, it was not actually typed until some time after January, 1911. This is made perfectly clear by tire testimony of one Ivnappen, who typed the assignment and made copies of the bonds and mortgages by filling in the spaces in the printed forms.

[472]*472The defendant primarily denies that the assignment was forged; and, secondarily, if forged, insists that complainant was negligent, which negligence enabled her attorney to perpetrate the fraud, and, therefore, she should be estopped from setting up the forgery.

First, is the instrument forged?

In this case there is the usual conflicting testimony of professional experts—one asserting that the instrument was forged, the other that it was not—both being equally positive. This testimony, standing alone, would leave the fact of forgery in balance. A further conflict arises in tire-testimony of bank tellers. So, that it is important to look to other circumstances in support of these various contentions. That tire complainant did not knowingly assign these mortgages is perfectly-apparent. The circumstances show that Mr. Walton perpetrated a great fraud. He deceived the complainant when he returned these copies of the bonds and mortgages six months after the forged assignment was recorded, and continued paying her interest for almost two years after the assignment was recorded; and, to further carry out the deceit, sent to her, in payment of the interest, on one of the mortgages, the check of the owner of the mortgaged premises.

If this instrument was not forged, it is inconceivable that Mr. Walton should resort to such deceitful practices, if, as a matter of fact, the complainant had executed the assignment; unless he had tricked her into- signing the instrument, she believing it was something else.

Walton resided in a bachelors’ club, where ladies were not admitted. The complainant did not see Walton after the delivery of the bonds and mortgages to him in the spring of 1910. She executed no papers in his presence, nor did she execute or sign any papers coming from him. In fact, there is not the slightest shadow of evidence in the case to raise the suspicion that she was tricked into signing this instrument in the belief that it was something else. ' * -

I am, therefore, of opinion that the signature to the assignment is not the signature of the complainant, but is a forgery.

The next question.to be considered is that of estoppel arising from the alleged negligence on the part of the complainant. [473]*473The complainant trusted Walton, who, so far as there is any testimony in the case, was a respected attorney-at-law, whose integrity was not even suspected.

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Bluebook (online)
97 A. 156, 85 N.J. Eq. 469, 1915 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brewster-v-entz-njch-1915.