Brinkerhoff v. Vansciven

3 N.J. Eq. 251
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1842
StatusPublished

This text of 3 N.J. Eq. 251 (Brinkerhoff v. Vansciven) 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
Brinkerhoff v. Vansciven, 3 N.J. Eq. 251 (N.J. Ct. App. 1842).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The facts in this case, lie within a very narrow compass. The complainant on the first of June eighteen hundred and thirty-eight, sold to the defendant, Yan sciven, a piece of land in Bergen county, for eleven hundred dollars. He received, at the time of the sale, a cash payment ■of five hundred and fifty dollars, being half of the considera t-ion, and took a note of Yansciven for the remaing half, pay able on the first of May next after its date. The only question involved in the cause is, whether the complainant has a lien in ■equity, under the circumstances of this case, upon the land for the payment of his note.

Abraham Westervelt, at the time of the sale, loaned the five hundred and fifty dollars to Yansciven, (which he paid to com plainant,) and took a bond and mortgage on the property as his security. I do not perceive that the complainant had any thing to do with the loan, or can in any way be involved in it; but he has since paid to Mr. Westervelt the amount due upon his bond and mortgage, and taken an assignment of them, before instituting this suit. This was done, no doubt, to remove out of the way any dispute about the Westervelt mortgage, and [255]*255possibly, as suggested on the argument, to protect himself from costs, if the suit was decided against him. Whatever may have been his object, he had a light to take that course, and to use the mortgage as he has done, so long as the defendant is not obstructed in the course of his defence.

The bill has two objects ; to foreclose the mortgage, and to establish and enforce a lien, insisted upon, for the complainant’s note. There being no dispute on the mortgage, the controversy is alone as to the lien, except it may be about the costs.

At the time of the sale, it does not appear that the complainant took any mortgage or other security for his note, or that there was any special agreement made that the note should or should not remain a lien on the land. There was nothing express on the subject, one way or the other, either affirming or waiving it. It was left to be governed by the operation of law in such cases.

On the sixth of January, eighteen hundred and forty, the defendant, Yansciven, having put improvements on the property sold and conveyed it to the defendant, Cornelius Yanvalen, for the consideration, as stated in the deed, of nine hundred dollars. The mortgage to Westervelt made a pait of the consideration, and was to be paid by Yanvalen. The improvements put on by Yansciven consisted of a small house and kitchen, of the value of four or five hundred dollars. It is charged in the bJl, that when Yanvalen bought, he knew that five hundred dollars of the consideration money of this land, remained unpaid from Yansciven to the complainant, (this being the amount unpaid on the note.) Yansciven in his answer admits, as must necessarily have been the case, that he knew before and at the time of the giving of the deed to Yanvalen, that five hundred dollars was due complainant on his purchase of the property, but whether Yanvalen knew this or not, he says he cannot state. 'The answer of Yanvalen is certainly designed to carry the impression that he knew nothing of this debt, and particularly as •constituting any part of the consideration for the land sold Yansciven. Some very just exceptions are however taken to the [256]*256answer, in meeting this important charge in the bill. The de fendant does not frankly and openly say, that at the time of his-purchase he knew nothing of the existence of this debt, but the-language is, that he had no personal knowledge of it. If he means by this, that he never saw the note, or was not present at the time it was given, or at the making of the agreement between the complainant and Yansciven, then certainly it is no-answer to the bill, for all this may be true, and yet the defendant have had all the knowledge by information, which the case requires. The other parts of the answer, do however, meet the charges more directly and fully, by declaring that the defendant knew Yansciven was indebted to complainant, but not on what account. The defendant further declares, that shortly after the-conveyance of the lands to him, (as he believes,) he was for the first time informed of the existence of the said note, by Abraham Westervelt. The answer might, and should have been certain, on a matter so important and so recent as this, and particularly so, as it lay within the breast of the defendant. But waiving .all further criticism, I take the answer, and shall so be governed by it, as denying any knowledge that complainant held a note or other demand, arising from the sale of the land to Yansciven • that he knew he owed him, but not that he owed him any part of the consideration money on this purchase.

The equitable lien which the vendor has on the lands sold for the consideration moaey, is one of the most familiar and best settled principles of the court. It is founded on the justice and propriety of securing to the man that parts with his property,, the first claim to be paid out of it, before any other person. As-between vendor and vendee, and between vendor and a purchaser from the vendee with notice, the lien clearly obtains. The notice must go farther than that of a mere indebetedness by the vendee to the vendor, it must extend to a knowledge of an indebtedness on the purchase of the property. These are the only facts that he should be notified of; he need not be informed whether such indebtedness constitutes a lien on the property or not; that is matter of law, of which no notice is required. Se [257]*257too, if the vendor take any other than the personal security of the vendee for his money, as the note of a third person, a transfer of stock, or a mortgage for a part only of the consideration money, these or any other circumstances, going to show that he does not look to the land as his security, will be taken to be an implied waiver of the lien, and discharge the land from further liability. Although somewhat disputed, yet upon examining the cases, it is now settled, and upon good reason, I think, that the taking of a mere note or bond of the vendee, will not avoid the lien. If the party looks to the vendee alone for his money, without taking any other or further security, the land is liable.

There need not be any express agreement, at the time of the sale, to create the liability; it results as an incident to the transaction, unless it be expressly waived, or there be such special circumstances as to show that the parties did not intend the lien should remain. The lien exists, unless there is a manifest intention it should not exist. Lord Eldon has reviewed with great pains all the English cases, in the case cited of Mackreth v. Symmons, 15 Vesey, 828. That cautious and learned chancellor has gone over the whole subject, and settled the doctrine in conformity with the general current of authority, on a firm basis, and which is not likely to be again shaken. He designed, no doubt, to put the subject at rest. As applicable to the case under consideration, the language of the chancellor, at the close of his opinion, is very conclusive. He says, “ from all these authorities, the inference is, first, that generally speaking, there is such a lien; secondly, that in those general cases in which there would be the lien, as between vendor and vendee, the vendor will have the lien against a third person who had notice that the money was not paid. These two points seem to be clearly settled.”

In Fish v.

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.J. Eq. 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brinkerhoff-v-vansciven-njch-1842.