Briscoe v. O'Connor

179 A. 253, 118 N.J. Eq. 322, 17 Backes 322, 1935 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 76
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJune 6, 1935
StatusPublished

This text of 179 A. 253 (Briscoe v. O'Connor) 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
Briscoe v. O'Connor, 179 A. 253, 118 N.J. Eq. 322, 17 Backes 322, 1935 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 76 (N.J. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

The bill of complaint is brought to enjoin the defendants from prosecuting a deficiency suit at law.

This cause was before the court heretofore on complainant's application for a preliminary injunction. The facts essential to the allowance of such preliminary relief were established by affidavits and are set forth with some detail in the court's opinion. 115 N.J. Eq. 360. Those facts, together with additional facts, have now been established at final hearing by oral testimony and exhibits to a degree that leaves no doubt concerning the complainant's right to relief. It is not necessary to restate such of the facts as appear in the court's earlier opinion. It is deemed sufficient to point out the new and additional facts that were proved.

The controversy resolved itself on final hearing into two questions, viz., (a) whether upon the uncontroverted facts complainant was equitably entitled to the relief sought, and (b) whether the right to such relief was lost by complainant's participation in the foreclosure suit of O'Connor v. *Page 323 Arywitz, decided by Vice-Chancellor Backes, 112 N.J. Eq. 567.

Defendant O'Connor's counsel assumed the position that there was but one factual issue in the case, and that related to the alleged aid and co-operation which complainant, Briscoe, furnished to O'Connor in the foreclosure suit (O'Connor v.Arywitz, supra), where was litigated O'Connor's duty to perform a covenant of subordination, to subordinate his mortgage to "the lien of a new first mortgage to be obtained upon said premises, said new first mortgage to be in a sum not to exceed seventy-five (75) per cent. of the cost of the land and building to be erected upon the same." The record in that suit was offered and received in evidence over the objection of defendants' counsel that it was irrelevant and incompetent except only as to certain petitions and orders which constituted part of the record and which were not specified. The record was received subject to such specific objections as counsel would make before the conclusion of the hearing, the court stating that upon such objections being made it would rule thereon. No objection was thereafter made by counsel to any part of the record; on the contrary, counsel relied heavily on portions of the record and particularly on the finding by Vice-Chancellor Backes that O'Connor was justified in his refusal to subordinate the lien of his mortgage to the extent of $70,000, the principal of the Avon Building and Loan Association mortgage. Both complainant and defendant tried the cause on the theory that the record and decree in the foreclosure suit was res adjudicata and conclusive upon the parties to the instant suit. In their arguments, oral and written, each claimed the earlier findings in O'Connor v. Arywitz, supra, to be conclusive upon the other. Such attitude and contention by both parties gives to those findings the quality of conclusiveness and estops both from questioning the finality of the determination therein. Clark Thread Co. v. William Clark Co., 55 N.J. Eq. 658, approved on this point by court of errors and appeals, although reversed on other grounds, 56 N.J. Eq. 789. Aside from this, all the matters that were litigated in that foreclosure suit are, so far as they touched or involved O'Connor's covenant *Page 324 of subordination and his duty to perform the same, resadjudicata in the present suit. By his bill of complaint in that suit O'Connor asserted priority in his mortgage over that of the Avon Building and Loan Association and sought to cut off its lien. To that bill the present complainant, Briscoe, was made a party defendant. The answer of the Building and Loan Association challenged the priority claimed for O'Connor's mortgage. Thus there was present in that suit, to which Briscoe was a party defendant, a clear issue concerning the relative priorities of the two mortgages, which issue could be resolved only upon a determination of the effect of the covenant of subordination contained in the mortgage made by Briscoe and held by O'Connor. "All that is necessary is that the right to relief in the one suit shall rest upon the same point or question which, in essence and substance, was litigated and determined in the first suit, and in such a case the parties and those in privity with them are concluded, `not only as to every matter which was offered and received to sustain or defeat the claim or demand, but as to any other admissible matter which might have been offered for that purpose.'" In re Walsh, 80 N.J. Eq. 565; Mendel v. BerwynEstates, 109 N.J. Eq. 11.

The uncontradicted evidence before me is that in 1928 when the building was finished and O'Connor refused to subordinate, real estate commanded a ready market, and the mortgaged premises could have been sold at somewhere between $90,000 and $100,000 and this favorable condition continued throughout the year 1929; that in 1930 it would have brought between $85,000 and $90,000; that until 1931 the property was readily saleable and that since 1931 the real estate market has been so paralyzed that there were virtually no buyers for any real estate. It is significant that the defendant offered no evidence to contradict the figures furnished by complainant's two experts, both outstanding men in their craft. I am satisfied that during the years 1928 and 1929 and most of 1930 the property could have been sold for $85,000, had not the litigation provoked by O'Connor's refusal to subordinate been an insurmountable barrier to a sale. *Page 325

When building operations were commenced and the Avon Building and Loan Association placed the $70,000 mortgage on the premises, O'Connor was requested to furnish a formal instrument of postponement. He declined to do so until the building was completed. When the building was completed he pronounced the structure "pretty nearly complete" pointing out minor deficiencies which could be met at a cost of approximately $30. While looking over the building O'Connor said, "well, the amount is there," and agreed to a figure of about $75,000 as representing the cost of the building which, added to $21,000, the undisputed cost of the land, produced a gross figure in relation to which O'Connor became obliged to postpone in favor of any mortgage not exceeding $72,000. The building and loan mortgage was for only $70,000. The following day he was again requested by letter to execute the instrument of postponement theretofore sent him. He did not reply, but the letter and the unexecuted postponement were delivered by O'Connor to his counsel. A few days before his mortgage became due his son, Thomas, wrote a letter demanding payment of it. In matters relating to his mortgage O'Connor was represented by his son, Thomas. Not only was he appointed to act for his father but whatever he did was subsequently ratified by the father.

On September 26th, 1928, when O'Connor's mortgage became due, the building and loan mortgage was already in default and on October 13th, 1928, it filed its bill to foreclose joining O'Connor as a party defendant, alleging, that because of the covenant of subordination in the latter's mortgage the lien thereof was junior to the lien of the building and loan mortgage. Apparently anxious to prosecute its suit to a decree and sale, the building and loan abandoned its suit and raised the issue of priority by answer and counter-claim in O'Connor's suit.

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170 A. 884 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1934)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
179 A. 253, 118 N.J. Eq. 322, 17 Backes 322, 1935 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/briscoe-v-oconnor-njch-1935.